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Zabbix 7 IT Infrastructure Monitoring Cookbook

You're reading from   Zabbix 7 IT Infrastructure Monitoring Cookbook Explore the new features of Zabbix 7 for designing, building, and maintaining your Zabbix setup

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801078320
Length 540 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Nathan Liefting Nathan Liefting
Author Profile Icon Nathan Liefting
Nathan Liefting
Brian van Baekel Brian van Baekel
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Brian van Baekel
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Installing Zabbix and Getting Started Using the Frontend 2. Chapter 2: Getting Things Ready with Zabbix User Management FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Setting Up Zabbix Monitoring 4. Chapter 4: Working with Triggers and Alerts 5. Chapter 5: Building Your Own Structured Templates 6. Chapter 6: Visualizing Data, Inventory, and Reporting 7. Chapter 7: Using Discovery for Automatic Creation 8. Chapter 8: Setting Up Zabbix Proxies 9. Chapter 9: Integrating Zabbix with External Services 10. Chapter 10: Extending Zabbix Functionality with Custom Scripts and the Zabbix API 11. Chapter 11: Maintaining Your Zabbix Setup 12. Chapter 12: Advanced Zabbix Database Management 13. Chapter 13: Bringing Zabbix to the Cloud with Zabbix Cloud Integration 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating user groups

To log in to the Zabbix frontend, we are going to need users. Right now, we are logged in with the default user, which is logical because we need a user to create users. This isn’t a safe setup though, because we don’t want to keep using zabbix as a password. So, we are going to learn how to create new users and group them accordingly.

It’s important to choose how you want to manage users in Zabbix before setting up user accounts. If you want to use something such as LDAP or SAML, it’s a smart idea to make the choice to use one of those authentication methods right away, so you won’t have any migration trouble.

Getting ready

Now that we know how the Zabbix UI is structured and how to navigate it, we can start doing some actual configuration. We’ll start out by creating some user groups to get familiar with the process and start using them. This way, our Zabbix setup gets not only more structured but also more secure.

To get started with this, we’ll need a Zabbix server like the one we used in the previous recipes and the knowledge we’ve acquired there to navigate to the correct frontend sections.

Looking at the following figure, we can see how our example company, Cloud Hoster, is set up. We will create the users seen in the diagram to create a structured and solid user setup:

Figure 2.1 – Cloud Hoster department diagram

Figure 2.1 – Cloud Hoster department diagram

So, Cloud Hoster has some departments that need access to the Zabbix frontend and others that don’t need it at all. Let’s say we want to give the following departments access to the Zabbix frontend:

  • Networking: To configure and monitor their network devices
  • Infrastructure: To configure and monitor their Linux servers
  • Buying and Inventory: To look at inventory information and compare it with other internal tools

How to do it…

Let’s get started with creating these three groups in our Zabbix UI:

  1. To do this, navigate to Users | User groups, which will show you the following page:
Figure 2.2 – The Zabbix User groups window

Figure 2.2 – The Zabbix User groups window

  1. Now, let’s start by creating the Networking group by clicking Create user group in the top-right corner. This will bring you to the following screen:
Figure 2.3 – The Zabbix User groups configuration window

Figure 2.3 – The Zabbix User groups configuration window

We will need to fill in the information, starting with Group name, which will of course be Networking. There are no users for this group yet, so we’ll skip that one. Frontend access gives us the option to provide authentication; if you select LDAP here, LDAP authentication will be used for authenticating. We will keep it as System default, which uses the internal Zabbix authentication system.

Multi-factor authentication

New to Zabbix 7.0 is the ability to use multi-factor authentication. If we want users to be forced to use this, we can set that up in the user group here. Before doing that, however, make sure to set up multi-factor authentication under Users | Authentication.

  1. Now, let’s navigate to the next tab on this page, which is Template permissions:
Figure 2.4 – The Zabbix User groups Template permissions configuration window

Figure 2.4 – The Zabbix User groups Template permissions configuration window

Here, we can specify what host groups our group will have access to. There’s a default host group for Network devices already, which we will use in this example.

  1. Click Select to take you to a pop-up window with host groups available. Select Templates/Network devices here and it’ll take you back to the previous window, with the group filled in.
  2. Select Read-write permissions.
  3. We won’t be adding anything else, so click the big blue Add button to finish creating this host group.

Tip

When using Zabbix authentication such as HTTP, LDAP, or SAML, we still need to create our users internally with the right permissions if we do not use JIT user provisioning. To do so, configure your users to match your authentication method’s username in Zabbix and use the authentication method for password management. When using JIT user provisioning, this is not something we have to worry about.

Now we will have a new user group called Networking that is only allowed to read and write to the Templates/Network devices template group:

Figure 2.5 – The Zabbix User groups window

Figure 2.5 – The Zabbix User groups window

  1. Let’s repeat this process to create a new Infrastructure user group, except instead of adding the Templates/Network devices template group, we’ll add the Linux servers host group, like this:
Figure 2.6 – The Zabbix User groups Permissions configuration window with one host group

Figure 2.6 – The Zabbix User groups Permissions configuration window with one host group

  1. Click Add to save this host group.
  2. Repeat the steps again and to add Buying and Inventory user group, we’ll do something differently. We’ll repeat the process we’ve just done except for the part with the permissions. We want Buying and Inventory to be able to read our inventory data, but we don’t want them to actually change our host configuration. Add both the Templates/Network devices template group and Linux servers host group to the user group, but with only Read permissions like this:
Figure 2.7 – The Zabbix User groups Permissions configuration window with two groups

Figure 2.7 – The Zabbix User groups Permissions configuration window with two groups

Congratulations! Finishing this means you’ve ended up with three different user groups and we can continue to create our first new users! Let’s get to it.

There’s more...

Zabbix user groups are quite extensive and there is a lot more to it than there seems at first. As the entire permission system is based on what user group(s) and user role you are part of, it is always a good idea to read the Zabbix documentation first: https://www.zabbix.com/documentation/current/en/manual/config/users_and_usergroups/usergroup.

You have been reading a chapter from
Zabbix 7 IT Infrastructure Monitoring Cookbook - Third Edition
Published in: Jul 2024
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781801078320
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