Useful scripts to maintain i-doit
i-doit is a software application for IT documentation and a CMDB (Configuration Management Database). This application is very useful to collect all your knowledge about the IT infrastructure you are dealing with. i-doit is a Web application and has an exhausting API which is very useful to automate your infrastructure.
The script idoit-install
allows you to easily install the latest version of
- i-doit EVAL (default) or
- i-doit pro or
- i-doit open
on a fresh installation of a GNU/Linux operating system. Supported OSs are:
- Debian GNU/Linux 10 "buster" , DebianGNU/Linux 11 (bullseye) (recommended)
- Ubuntu Linux 18.04 LTS "bionic", 20.04 LTS "focal fossa" and 22.04 LTS "jammy jellyfish"
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 7 (deprecated) and (RHEL) 8
- CentOS 7 (deprecated) and CentOS 8
- SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15, 15 SP1, 15 SP2 and 15 SP3
- openSUSE "leap" 15, 15.1, 15.2 and 15.3
Before you execute this script you …
- Must install one of the supported operating systems in x86 64 bit based on the requirements mentioned in the i-doit knowledge base (excluding the LAMP stack)
- Should create a backup/snapshot of your system
- Must make sure that the system is allowed to access external Web services, for example package repositories and the i-doit website.
It's written in Bash so it needs Bash version 4 or higher
The script includes several steps which are essential for i-doit:
- Install needed distribution packages (LAMP stack incl. memcached)
- Configure PHP
- Configure Apache Web server (with PHP-FPM and Event MPM)
- Configure MariaDB DBMS
- Download and install the latest version of i-doit pro or open
- Deploy cron jobs and an easy-to-use CLI tool for your i-doit instance
- Deploy scripts to backup and restore your i-doit instance
All steps are based on information provided by the i-doit knowledge base.
Connect to your freshly installed OS, for example via SSH. Download the script idoit-install
and execute it with super-user rights (root
).
Download:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/i-doit/scripts/main/idoit-install
Alternatively, use cURL for the download:
curl -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/i-doit/scripts/main/idoit-install
Make the script executable:
chmod 755 idoit-install
Either run the script as root
:
su -
./idoit-install
Or run it with sudo
if available:
sudo ./idoit-install
The script will ask you several questions. All of them have default answers. This allows you to just hit ENTER
whenever a user interaction is needed.
It's also possible to run this script without any user interaction. For example, use yes
to accept all default answers to automatically install the variant i-doit EVAL:
yes "" | ./idoit-install
Here is an example recording how to install i-doit on a fresh + clean Debian GNU/Linux 9 "stretch" in under 2 minutes (click on the picture):
You should install i-doit with this script if you agree with one or more of the following statements:
- "I need a stable instance of i-doit with a good performance installed on a recommended operating system."
- "I am unsure how to maintain a GNU/Linux operating system."
- "I do not have the time to setup i-doit."
You should not install i-doit with this script if you agree with one or more of the following statements:
- "I am an experienced GNU/Linux system administrator."
- "i-doit will not be the only application on this system."
- "I have special requirements to run i-doit."
There are several steps you still need to do by yourself:
- Install your license (only pro version)
- Document your IT (obviously ;-))
i-doit is shipped with a command-line tool called console.php. It is a little bit complicated to execute it because you have to change to i-doit's installation directory and you need the user rights of the Apache Web server. Additionally, you need to login before using one of the useful "commands".
To make sysadmin's life easier you may wrap the console.php in a separate script called idoit
. It changes to the right directory, gains proper rights and stores your credentials.
This script can be installed with idoit-install
and will be copied to /usr/local/bin/
. Its configuration settings may be altered in a file located under /etc/i-doit/i-doit.sh
.
To display the usage run:
idoit
Call a handler with optional arguments:
idoit COMMAND [OPTIONS]
For example, use the notifications-send
handler to send emails:
idoit notifications-send
There are some jobs which are essential for keeping your CMDB in a good shape. There is a script called idoit-jobs
to handle some important jobs properly:
- Clean up cache files
- Clean up update packages
- Archive older logbook entries
- Re-create cache for user rights
- Purge "unfinished" objects
- Re-create the search index
- Send notifications by email
This script can be installed with idoit-install
and will be copied to /usr/local/bin/
. Its configuration settings may be altered in a file located under /etc/i-doit/i-doit.sh
.
Manually execute the jobs by running:
sudo idoit-jobs
You may want to execute this script automatically by creating a new cron job. There is already a file for that called cron
which can be copied to /etc/cron.d/i-doit
. Deploy this script and pre-configured cron jobs with idoit-install
to run the jobs every night.
There are two useful scripts to backup (idoit-backup
) and restore (idoit-restore
) your i-doit instance. The backups contain the following data:
- i-doit installation files including uploaded files and installed add-ons
- Dumps of the system database and the first tenant's database
Backups are compressed and stored under /var/backup/i-doit/
. They will be kept for at least 30 days.
Both scripts can easily be installed with idoit-install
and will be copied to /usr/local/bin/
. Their configuration settings may be altered in a file located under /etc/i-doit/i-doit.sh
.
Create a backup manually by running:
sudo idoit-backup
To restore the latest backup run:
sudo idoit-restore
You may automate your backups with a cron job. idoit-install
can handle it (see above).
Keep in mind that these scripts are just a little step for a good backup strategy. Consider to copy those backup files to another location. Additionally, if you installed i-doit within a virtual machine you should create snapshots.
Works smoothly with the i-doit Virtual Appliance:
idoit-support
idoit-pwd
works smoothly with the i-doit Virtual Appliance:
idoit-pwd
Sometimes there is a chance to find an unwanted behavior (a.k.a. bug) within i-doit or its add-ons. You want it to be fixed as soon as possible. You cannot wait for the next release.
For these conditions synetics provides hot fixes. Hot fixes are ZIP files which needs to be extracted in the root location of your i-doit instance. For an easy deployment you may use idoit-hotfix
. Just copy the ZIP file via SSH to your GNU/Linux system, connect to this host via SSH and run the script:
idoit-hotfix /path/to/hotfix.zip
As already mentioned before some scripts provide configuration settings. These settings may be altered in a file located under /etc/i-doit/i-doit.sh
.
There is a default configuration file you may use: i-doit.sh
Setting | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
CONSOLE_BIN |
/usr/local/bin/idoit |
See "Easy-use of the i-doit CLI" |
APACHE_USER |
www-data (Debian/Ubuntu), apache (RHEL/CentOS), wwwrun (SLES) |
User who runs Apache Web server |
SYSTEM_DATABASE |
idoit_system |
i-doit's system database |
TENANT_DATABASE |
idoit_data |
i-doit's tenant database |
TENANT_ID |
1 |
Tenant ID |
MARIADB_USERNAME |
idoit |
MariaDB user for i-doit |
MARIADB_PASSWORD |
idoit |
Password for this user |
MARIADB_HOSTNAME |
localhost |
localhost uses a local UNIX socket for a better performance |
INSTANCE_PATH |
/var/www/html (Debian/Ubuntu/RHEL/CentOS), /srv/www/htdocs (SLES) |
In which directory is i-doit located? |
IDOIT_USERNAME |
admin |
i-doit user who executes CLI commands |
IDOIT_PASSWORD |
admin |
User's password |
BACKUP_DIR |
/var/backups/i-doit |
Directory for local backups |
BACKUP_AGE |
30 |
Max. age of backup files (in days); 0 disables it |
The installation script idoit-install
will ask the user to change most of the default values. Pro tip: You should set your own passwords. ;-) You may alter them with idoit-pwd
.
Please, report any issues to our issue tracker. Pull requests are very welcomed. See CONTRIBUTING.md
for more details.
Copyright (C) 2017-23 synetics GmbH
Licensed under the GNU Affero GPL version 3 or later (AGPLv3+). This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.