Metadata Horizon supports the assignment of arbitrary metadata to nodes, interfaces and services. You can then use this metadata to dynamically configure service monitoring, performance data collection, service detection, and expression-based thresholds. The metadata is a simple triad of strings containing a context, a key and the associated value. Each node, each interface and each service can have an arbitrary number of metadata elements assigned to it. The only restriction is that the tuple of context and key must be unique in the element with which it is associated. The association of metadata with nodes, interfaces, and services happens during provisioning with the use of detectors. Users can add, query, modify, or delete metadata through the requisition editor in the web UI, or through the ReST endpoints. A simple domain-specific language (DSL) lets users access the metadata associated with the elements they are working on, and use it as a variable in parameters and expressions. There is no limitation in defining metadata: users can decide how to define it and use it in expressions. View metadata currently assigned to nodes, interfaces and services, on the details page associated with that entity in the web UI: Contexts A context distinguishes different kinds of metadata use. Horizon uses several default contexts: pattern (used with polling), requisition, node, interface, and service. Three special contexts provide details about nodes, interfaces and services objects. Each context has keys associated with it that you can use in a metadata expression. You can create user-defined contexts in the ReST API by prefixing the context name with X-. Using an X- prefix can help to avoid future Horizon contexts interfering with a user-defined context, since Horizon contexts are not prefixed in this way. Node context The node context provides details about the node currently processed. The following keys are available under this context: Context:Key Description node:label The node’s label node:foreign-source The node’s foreign source name node:foreign-id The node’s foreign ID node:netbios-domain The NetBIOS domain as provided by SNMP node:netbios-name The NetBIOS name as provided by SNMP node:os The node’s operating system node:sys-name The system name of the node node:sys-location The system location of the node node:sys-contact The system contact specified for the node node:sys-description The system description of the node node:location The node’s monitoring location name node:area The node’s monitoring location area node:geohash A Geohash of the node’s latitude/longitude Interface context The interface context provides details about the interface currently processed. The following keys are available under this context: Context:Key Description interface:hostname The hostname associated with the IP address of the interface interface:address The IP address of the interface interface:netmask The netmask of the interface interface:if-index The SNMP interface index interface:if-alias The SNMP interface alias interface:if-description The SNMP interface description interface:phy-addr The physical address of the interface Service context The service context provides details about the service currently processed. The following key is available under this context: Context:Key Description service:name The full name of the service Adding Metadata through the Web UI You can edit the requisition context in the web UI: Under the admin menu, select Configure OpenNMS. Select Manage Provisioning Requisitions. Click the edit icon beside the requisition you want to work with. Click edit beside the node you want to work with. In the Meta-Data area, click Add Meta-Data. Specify node or interface as the scope of where the metadata will apply. Specify the key and a value and click Save. The Metadata DSL The metadata DSL lets you interpolate metadata into a parameter. The syntax lets you use patterns like ${context:key|context_fallback:key_fallback|…|default} in an expression. Each expression can contain multiple references to metadata that will be replaced with the corresponding value during evaluation. Placeholders start with ${ and end with } containing a reference to a context-key pair. You may choose to define multiple fallback context-key pairs and and an optional trailing default value. Separate context and key by a :. Use a | to separate optional fallback context-key pairs and default value. If the first context:key item is not available (not on a service, interface, node or any other of the special contexts) the next one after the | is used. The last one, the default value, is not interpreted as a context:key but is used as a literal and will always succeed. Examples ${requisition:username} Will resolve to the username as defined in the requisitioning UI or an empty value, if there is no such username defined. A placeholder can contain an optional default value which is separated by a |. ${requisition:username|admin} Will resolve to the username as defined in the requisitioning UI or to the value admin, if there is no such username defined. Use fallback context-key pairs in a placeholder after the primary context-key pair to specify other values if the primary context-key pair is not defined. Separate each fallback context-key-pair by a |. ${requisition:username|requisition:account|admin} Will resolve to the username as defined in the requisitioning UI. If there is no such username defined, the fallback account will be used. If neither exist, the fallback value admin will be used. To resolve the value associated with context-key pair, the DSL uses scopes that determine the resolution order. The last scope will be queried first and if a scope does not contain the queried context-key tuple, the next one will be queried. For example, the resolution of a query on a service entity would be service metadata→interface metatdata→node metadata. On an interface, it is metadata→interface metatdata→node metadata. On the node level, only the node is queried. Which scopes are available depends on the environment for which an expression is evaluated and is documented in the corresponding places elsewhere in this guide. Some environments also provide additional scopes that are not backed by the persisted metadata but provide additional metadata related to the current evaluation. Testing an expression To test an expression, there is a karaf shell command which interpolates a string containing a pattern to the final result: admin@opennms> opennms:metadata-test -n 1 -i 192.168.0.100 -s ICMP '${fruits:apple|fruits:banana|vegetables:tomato|blue}' --- Meta-Data for node (id=1) fruits: apple='green' banana='yellow' vegetables: tomato='red' --- Meta-Data for interface (ipAddress=192.168.0.100): fruits: apple='brown' --- Meta-Data for service (name=ICMP): fruits: apple='red' --- Input: '${fruits:apple|fruits:banana|vegetables:tomato|blue}' Output: 'red' Details: Part: '${fruits:apple|fruits:banana|vegetables:tomato|blue}' => match='fruits:apple', value='red', scope='SERVICE' admin@opennms> Uses The following places allow the use the Metadata DSL: Provisioning Detectors Service Assurance Performance Management Using metadata for TTLs Expression-Based Thresholds Notifications Alarm Correlation SNMP Interface Poller