table of contents
- unstable 11.2.1-2
pki-healthcheck(8) | pki-healthcheck CLI | pki-healthcheck(8) |
NAME¶
pki-healthcheck - Command-Line Interface to check health of a PKI installation
SYNOPSIS¶
pki-healthcheck [CLI-options]
DESCRIPTION¶
A PKI installation can be complex, therefore identifying real or potential issues can be difficult and require a lot of analysis. This tool aims to reduce the burden by attempting to identify issues in advance so that they can be corrected, ideally before the issue becomes critical.
ORGANIZATION¶
The areas of the system to check are logically grouped together. This grouping is called a source. A source consists of one or more checks.
A check is as atomic as possible to limit the scope and complexity.
Each check will return a result, either a result of WARNING, ERROR, CRITICAL or SUCCESS. Returning SUCCESS tells you that the check was done and was deemed correct.
Upon failure, the output will include name of the source and name of the check that detected the failure along with a message and name/value pairs indicating the problem. If a check can't make a final determination, it throws WARNING so that it can be examined.
OPTIONS¶
COMMANDS¶
--list-sources
Display a list of the available sources and the checks associated with those
sources.
OPTIONAL ARGUMENTS¶
--source=SOURCE
Execute one or more checks within this given source.
--check=CHECK
Execute this particular check within a source. A source must be
supplied as well with this option.
--output-type=[json|human]
Set the output type. Defaults to JSON.
--failures-only
Exclude SUCCESS results on output.
--severity=SEVERITY
Only report errors in the requested severity of SUCCESS, WARNING, ERROR or
CRITICAL. This can be provided multiple times to search on multiple
levels.
--debug
Generate additional debugging output.
JSON OUTPUT¶
The output is displayed as a list of result messages for each check executed in JSON format. This could be input for a monitoring system.
--output-file=FILENAME
Write the output to this filename rather than stdout.
--indent=INDENT
Pretty-print the JSON with this indention level. This can make the output
more human-readable.
HUMAN-READABLE OUTPUT¶
The results are displayed in a more human-readable format.
--input-file=FILENAME
Take as input a JSON results output and convert it to a more human-readable
form.
EXIT STATUS¶
0 if all checks were successful
1 if any one check failed or the command failed to execute properly
FILES¶
/etc/pki/healthcheck.conf
NOTES¶
CHECKS INCLUDED¶
Certificate sync between CS.cfg and NSS database
Checks whether the system certificates in CS.cfg and NSS database are the
same
System certificate expiry
Checks the expiry status of the installed system certificates
System certificate trust flags
Checks whether the installed system certificates carry the correct Trust
flags
Subsystem connectivity check
Checks whether a subsystem is running and able to respond to requests
EXAMPLES¶
Execute healthcheck with the default JSON output:
pki-healthcheck
Execute healthcheck with a prettier JSON output:
pki-healthcheck --indent 2
Execute healthcheck and only display errors:
pki-healthcheck --failures-only
Execute healthcheck and display results in human-readable format:
pki-healthcheck --output-format human
Execute healthcheck and write results to a file:
pki-healthcheck --output-file /var/log/pki/healthcheck/results.json
Display in the previous report in a human-readable format:
pki-healthcheck --output-format human --input-file
/var/log/pki/healthcheck/results.json
AUTHORS¶
Dinesh Prasanth M K <dmoluguw@redhat.com>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2020 Red Hat, Inc. This is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2 (GPLv2). A copy of this license is available at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt ⟨http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt⟩.
January 16, 2020 | PKI |