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- README file for the Production check & Production monitor Drupal modules.
 
- Introduction
 
- ============
 
- When bringing a site live, you should double check a lot of settings, like the
 
- error logging, site e-mail, disabling the Devel module and so on.
 
- Next to that, you should ensure that all SEO modules are installed and properly
 
- configured (like Google Analytics, Page Title, XML Sitemap etc.). The Production
 
- check module will do all of this checking for you and present the results in a
 
- convenient status page accessible through /admin/reports/prod-check. Through
 
- this status page, you can easily navigate to all the settings pages or the
 
- project pages of the missing modules to rectify all you need to.
 
- It would of course also be nice that these settings remain as you set them up.
 
- In some cases, when multiple developers make updates to a live site or with the
 
- odd client having somehow gotten superadmin access, stuff can get changed,
 
- usually unintended. That's where the Production monitor comes in the picture.
 
- You can open up the Production check's XMLRPC interface through its settings
 
- page and have the Production monitor module connect to it from a 'local'
 
- monitoring site in your development environment. This will allow you to monitor
 
- all your sites from a central server and keep an eye on them. When adding a site
 
- using Production monitor, you can indicate what exactly needs to be monitored
 
- for this site. Updates can be requested manually and are fetched automatically
 
- each cron run.
 
-     "But I like Nagios to monitor my sites!"
 
- If you prefer Nagios monitoring, you can open up Production check's Nagios
 
- integration from its settings page. You can specify what exactly you want to
 
- monitor there. You will obviousely need to install the Nagios module to make
 
- this functionality work.
 
- Remote module update status monitoring
 
- ======================================
 
- Since Production check recommends to turn of the Update module, we have
 
- integrated its functionality in both Production check and Production monitor.
 
- Production check can be configured to allow to transfer its module list with
 
- versioning information once a week at a given time.
 
- Production monitor can be configured to download this data along with all the
 
- rest. It will then, upon your request (still need to add this on cron, but it's
 
- a heavy operation, thinking about the best way to do this: the boost crawler
 
- code makes a good candidate), check for module updates locally for the remote
 
- site. Production check and Production monitor have the necessary code embedded
 
- so you will never need to activate the Update module, not even on the monitor
 
- site!
 
- Performance monitoring
 
- ======================
 
- If you install the performance module on a production site, you can use
 
- Production monitor to remotely monitor the collected performance data. A new
 
- subtab will be available displaying the module data in some nice Google charts.
 
- Be sure to activate the fetching of performance data in the site's config!
 
- Dependencies
 
- ============
 
- - Nagios   http://drupal.org/project/nagios
 
- There are no true dependencies defined in the .info file, but naturally you need
 
- to install the Nagios module if you would like to integrate Production check
 
- with your Nagios monitoring setup.
 
- - Performance logging   http://drupal.org/project/performance
 
- Again, no true dependencies defined, but if you want remote performance logging,
 
- this module can provide it for you! Install it on the remote site and enable the
 
- fetching of it's data when adding a site to Production monitor.
 
- Development
 
- ===========
 
- See prod_check.api.php
 
- Installation
 
- ============
 
- Production check
 
- ----------------
 
- 1. Extract the prod_check module and place it in /sites/all/modules/contrib
 
- 2. Remove the 'prod_monitor' folder and all it's contents
 
- 3. Upload the prod_check folder to the websites you wish to check / monitor,
 
-  enable the module and adjust it's settings using /admin/config/system/prod-check.
 
- 4. You can check the /admin/reports/status page to verify if the Production
 
-  check setup described above was executed correctly and no errors / warnings are
 
-  reported.
 
- 5. You can find the result of the Production check module on
 
-  /admin/reports/prod-check
 
- Production monitor
 
- ------------------
 
- 1. Grab the prod_monitor folder from the package and upload it to your
 
-  'monitoring site' and activate the module.
 
- 2. Make sure that the site you wish to monitor is running the prod_check module
 
- 3. Navigate to the prod_check settings page and activate XMLRPC and add an API
 
-  key to 'secure' the connection. The key is limited to 128 characters.
 
- 4. Add the site to the Production monitor overview page on
 
-  /admin/reports/prod-monitor
 
- 5. Enter the url and the API key and hit 'Get settings'. All available checks
 
-  are now retrieved from the remote site. You can uncheck those that you do not
 
-  wish to monitor.
 
- 6. If you wish to fetch the data immediately, check the appropriate box and save
 
-  the settings. Good to go!
 
- Upgrading
 
- ---------
 
- When upgrading Production monitor to a newer version, always run update.php to
 
- verify if there are database or other updates that need to be applied!
 
- When ignoring this step, you might get errors and/or strange behavior!
 
- Nagios
 
- ------
 
- 1. Download and install the Nagios module from http://drupal.org/project/nagios
 
-  as per its readme instructions
 
- 2. Enable Nagios support in the prod_check module on /admin/settings/prod-check
 
-  by ticking the appropriate box.
 
- 3. Untick the checboxes for those items you do not whish to be monitored by
 
-  Nagios.
 
- 4. Save the settings and you're good to go!
 
- Performance logging
 
- -------------------
 
- 1. Download and install the Nagios module from http://drupal.org/project/performance
 
-  as per its readme instructions
 
- 2. Enable fetching of performance data on /admin/reports/prod-monitor when
 
-  adding or editing a site.
 
- Drush
 
- -----
 
- You can view the Production Check statuspage using Drush, simply by using this
 
- command:
 
-   $ drush prod-check
 
- or its alias:
 
-   $ drush pchk
 
- A colour coded table will be printed. The information is limited to the name of
 
- the check and the status. In the Drupal version of the status page, you have an
 
- extra line explaining more about the curent status of a specific check.
 
- You can easily make your site 'production ready' by using the following command:
 
-   $ drush prod-check-prodmode
 
- or its alias:
 
-   $ drush pchk-pmode
 
- This will fix most of the problems reported in the status page. You can have
 
- some extra control on the process by adding the --config option:
 
-   $ drush pchk-pmode --config
 
- This will ask for some input before setting up the site.
 
- For Production monitor, these commands are available:
 
-   $ drush prod-monitor [id]
 
-   $ drush prod-monitor-fetch [id]
 
-   $ drush prod-monitor-flush [id]
 
-   $ drush prod-monitor-delete [id]
 
-   $ drush prod-monitor-updates [id] (--check)
 
- or their aliases:
 
-   $ drush pmon [id]
 
-   $ drush pmon-fe [id]
 
-   $ drush pmon-fl [id]
 
-   $ drush pmon-rm [id]
 
-   $ drush pmon-up [id] (--check)
 
- The id parameter is optional for the prod-monitor command. The best usage is to
 
- first get a list of sites:
 
-   $ drush pmon
 
- Now look up the id of a site, then use the other commands to act on that
 
- specific site by passing it the id:
 
-   $ drush pmon 3
 
-   $ drush pmon-fl 3
 
- You can pass multiple ID's by separating them with spaces:
 
-   $ drush pmon 3 6 19
 
-   $ drush pmon-fl 19 4 1
 
- The prod-monitor-updates command acts on one id only!
 
- APC
 
- ---
 
- Production Check complains about APC not being installed or misconfigured. What
 
- is APC you wonder? Well, APC is an opcode caching mechanism that will pre-com-
 
- pile PHP files and keep them stored in memory. The full manual can be found
 
- here: http://php.net/manual/en/book.apc.php .
 
- For Drupal sites, it is important to tune APC in order to achieve maximum per-
 
- formance there. Drupal uses a massive amount of files and therefore you should
 
- assign a proper amount of RAM to APC. For a dedicated setup 64Mb should be
 
- sufficient, in shared setups, you should easily double that!
 
- To tune your setup, you can use the aforementioned hidden link provided by
 
- Production check. You can see the memory usage there, verify your settings and
 
- much more.
 
- To help you out even further, an APC config file can be found in
 
- docs/apc.ini.txt. You must obviousely rename this file and omit the .txt
 
- extension (drupal.org CVS did not seem to accept files with .ini extension?).
 
- Note: This 'hidden link' makes use of the APC supplied PHP code and is subject
 
- to the PHP license: http://www.php.net/license/3_01.txt .
 
- Updates
 
- =======
 
- When new checks are added to the prod_check module, the prod_monitor module will
 
- automatically fetch them from the remote server when you edit the settings. Upon
 
- displaying the edit form, XMLRPC is ALWAYS used to build op the checkboxes array
 
- so that you always have the latest options available.
 
- Cron is NOT used to do this, since we want to keep the transfer to a minimum.
 
- Hidden link
 
- ===========
 
- Production check adds some 'hidden links' to the site where you can check the
 
- APC, Memcache and DB status of your site. These pages can be found on:
 
-   /admin/reports/status/apc
 
-   /admin/reports/status/memcache
 
-   /admin/reports/status/database
 
- This is in analogy with the system module that adds this 'hidden page':
 
-  /admin/reports/status/php
 
- Truely unmissable when setting up your site on a production server to check if
 
- all is well!
 
- The detailed report page
 
- ========================
 
- The page is divided into 4 sections:
 
-  - Settings: checks various Drupal settings
 
-  - Server: checks that are 'outside of Drupal' such as APC and wether or not you
 
-            have removed the release note files from the root.
 
-  - Performance: checks relevant to the performance settings in Drupal such as
 
-                 page / block caching.
 
-  - Modules: checks if certain modules are on / off
 
-  - SEO: performs very basic SEO checks such as 'is Google Analytics activated
 
-         and did you provide a GA account number.
 
- The sections might shift over time (maybe some stuff should go under a
 
- 'Security' section etc.).
 
- The checks itself should be self explanatory to Drupal developers, so they won't
 
- be described in detail here.
 
- Support
 
- =======
 
- For support requests, bug reports, and feature requests, please us the issue cue
 
- of Menu Clone on http://drupal.org/project/issues/prod_check.
 
- Thanks
 
- ======
 
- kbahey (http://drupal.org/user/4063) for making the performance logging
 
- integration possible!
 
- bocaj (http://drupal.org/user/582042) for all the great contributions!
 
 
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