# Zabbix GraphQL API Cookbook This cookbook provides step-by-step "recipes" for common tasks. These instructions are designed to be easy for humans to follow and structured enough for AI agents (using the MCP server) to generate test cases. ## 🤖 AI-Based Test Generation To generate a test case from a recipe: - Start the `zabbix-graphql` MCP server. - Provide the recipe to your AI agent. - Ask the agent to "Implement a test case for this recipe using the Zabbix GraphQL API". - The agent will use the MCP server to explore the schema and generate appropriate GraphQL operations. --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Executing Zabbix 7.4 Documentation Samples This recipe shows how to execute standard Zabbix 7.4 API examples using their GraphQL equivalents. These samples are directly derived from the official Zabbix documentation and adapted for use with this GraphQL API. ### 📋 Prerequisites - Zabbix GraphQL API is running. - You have a valid Zabbix user account and are logged in (or have an auth token). ### 🛠️ Step 1: Browse Available Samples All samples derived from the Zabbix 7.4 documentation are stored in the following directory: - `docs/queries/from_zabbix_docs/` Each `.graphql` file in this directory contains a reference link to the original Zabbix documentation source. ### ⚙️ Step 2: Extract Query and Variables Each sample file in `docs/queries/from_zabbix_docs/` is structured to include both the GraphQL operation and a corresponding set of sample variables. 1. **Open the Sample**: Open the desired `.graphql` file (e.g. `createHost.graphql`). 2. **Copy the Query**: Copy the GraphQL code block found under the `### Query` header. 3. **Copy the Variables**: Copy the JSON code block found under the `### Variables` header. ### 🚀 Step 3: Execution/Action Choose a sample and execute it against the GraphQL endpoint using your preferred client (like Apollo Studio, GraphiQL, or Postman). - **Configure the Request**: - Paste the **Query** into the operation window. - Paste the **Variables** JSON into the variables window. - **Run the Operation**: Click "Execute" or "Play". #### Example: Creating a Host Using the content from `docs/queries/from_zabbix_docs/createHost.graphql`: **Query**: ```graphql mutation CreateHost($host: String!, $hostgroupids: [Int!]!, $templateids: [Int!]!) { createHost(host: $host, hostgroupids: $hostgroupids, templateids: $templateids) { hostids } } ``` **Variables**: ```json { "host": "Linux server", "hostgroupids": [50], "templateids": [20045] } ``` ### ✅ Step 4: Verification Compare the GraphQL response with the expected output described in the Zabbix documentation. Note that while the field names in GraphQL match the Zabbix API field names (e.g. `hostid`, `host`), the structure is simplified and nested objects (like `hostgroups`) can be queried directly without separate `selectXXX` parameters. - *Reference*: [Zabbix 7.4 API Documentation](https://www.zabbix.com/documentation/7.4/en/manual/api) --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Extending Schema with a New Device Type This recipe shows how to add support for a new specialized device type without modifying the core API code. We will use the `DistanceTrackerDevice` as an example. ### 📋 Prerequisites - Zabbix Template Group `Templates/Roadwork/Devices` exists. - Zabbix GraphQL API is running. ### 🛠️ Step 1: Define the Schema Extension Create a new `.graphql` file in `schema/extensions/` (e.g. `distance_tracker.graphql`). > **Advice**: A new device type must always implement both the `Host` and `Device` interfaces to ensure compatibility with the API's core logic and resolvers. ```graphql type DistanceTrackerDevice implements Host & Device { # Mandatory Host & Device fields hostid: ID! host: String! deviceType: String hostgroups: [HostGroup!] name: String tags: DeviceConfig # Specialized state for this device state: DistanceTrackerState } type DistanceTrackerState implements DeviceState { operational: OperationalDeviceData current: DistanceTrackerValues } type DistanceTrackerValues { timeFrom: Time timeUntil: Time count: Int # The distances are modelled using a type which is already defined in location_tracker_commons.graphql distances: [SensorDistanceValue!] } ``` > **Reference**: This example is based on the already prepared sample: [location_tracker_devices.graphql](../../schema/extensions/location_tracker_devices.graphql). ### ⚙️ Step 2: Configure Environment Variables Add the new schema and resolver to your `.env` file: ```env ADDITIONAL_SCHEMAS=./schema/extensions/distance_tracker.graphql,./schema/extensions/location_tracker_commons.graphql ADDITIONAL_RESOLVERS=DistanceTrackerDevice ``` Restart the API server. ### 🚀 Step 3: Execution/Action (Choose Method) #### Method A: Manual Creation in Zabbix If you prefer to configure Zabbix manually: 1. **Create Template**: Create a template named `DISTANCE_TRACKER`. 2. **Create Items**: Add items with keys that match the GraphQL fields (using hierarchical mapping): * `state.current.timeFrom` * `state.current.timeUntil` * `state.current.count` * `state.current.json_distances` (maps to `distances` array via `json_` prefix) 3. **Add Tag**: Add a host tag to the template with name `deviceType` and value `DistanceTrackerDevice`. #### Method B: Automated Import Execute the `importTemplates` mutation to create the template and items automatically. > **Reference**: Use the [Sample: Distance Tracker Import](../../docs/queries/sample_import_distance_tracker_template.graphql) for a complete mutation and variables example. ### ✅ Step 4: Verify the Extension Verify that the new type is available and correctly mapped by creating a test host and querying it. #### 1. Create a Test Host Use the `importHosts` mutation (or `createHost` if IDs are already known) to create a host. Set its `deviceType` to `DistanceTrackerDevice` and link it to the `DISTANCE_TRACKER` template (created in Step 3) using the `templateNames` parameter. ```graphql mutation CreateTestDistanceTracker($host: String!, $groupNames: [String!]!, $templateNames: [String]) { importHosts(hosts: [{ deviceKey: $host, deviceType: "DistanceTrackerDevice", groupNames: $groupNames, templateNames: $templateNames }]) { hostid message } } ``` #### 2. Query the Device Query the newly created device. Use the `tag_deviceType: ["DistanceTrackerDevice"]` argument to ensure you only retrieve devices of this specific type and prevent showing all devices of any type. ```graphql query VerifyNewDeviceType { # 1. Check if the type exists in the schema __type(name: "DistanceTrackerDevice") { name fields { name } } # 2. Query the specific device allDevices(tag_deviceType: ["DistanceTrackerDevice"]) { ... on DistanceTrackerDevice { name state { current { count distances { distance } } } } } } ``` > **Reference**: See how items map to fields in the [Zabbix to GraphQL Mapping](../../README.md#zabbix-to-graphql-mapping). ### 🤖 AI/MCP AI agents can use the generalized `verifySchemaExtension.graphql` operations to automate this step: - **CreateVerificationHost**: Automatically imports a test host with the correct `deviceType`. - **VerifySchemaExtension**: Queries the newly created device to verify it is correctly mapped to the new type. --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Provisioning a New Host ### 📋 Prerequisites - A target Host Group exists in Zabbix. - At least one Template exists in Zabbix. ### 🛠️ Step 1: Prepare the Host Object Define the host name, groups, and templates to link. ### 🚀 Step 2: Execute `createHost` Mutation For more details on the input fields, see the [Reference: createHost](../../schema/mutations.graphql). ### 🤖 AI/MCP AI agents should prefer using the `importHosts` MCP tool for provisioning as it allows using names for host groups instead of IDs. ```graphql mutation CreateNewHost($host: String!, $groups: [Int!]!, $templates: [Int], $templateNames: [String]) { createHost(host: $host, hostgroupids: $groups, templateids: $templates, templateNames: $templateNames) { hostids error { message } } } ``` ### ✅ Step 3: Verify Host Creation Check if the host is correctly provisioned and linked to groups: ```graphql query VerifyHost($host: String!) { allHosts(filter_host: $host) { hostid host hostgroups { name } } } ``` --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Managing User Permissions ### 🛠️ Step 1: Create Permission Template Group Create a template group with the prefix `Permissions/` in Zabbix (e.g. `Permissions/Read-Only-Access`). ### ⚙️ Step 2: Assign to User Group In Zabbix, give a User Group `Read` access to this template group. ### ✅ Step 3: Verify via API Verify that the current user has the expected permissions: ```graphql query CheckMyPermissions { hasPermissions(permissions: [ { objectName: "Read-Only-Access", permission: READ } ]) } ``` --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Bulk Import of Templates and Hosts This recipe guides you through performing a mass import of multiple templates and hosts in a single operation. ### 🛠️ Step 1: Prepare Template Import Use the `importTemplates` mutation. You can provide multiple template definitions in the `templates` array. ### ⚙️ Step 2: Prepare Host Import Use the `importHosts` mutation. Link them to the newly imported templates using their names or IDs. ### 🚀 Step 3: Combined Operation (Optional) You can execute both mutations in a single GraphQL request to ensure atomic-like provisioning of your infrastructure. ```graphql mutation BulkProvisioning($templates: [CreateTemplate!]!, $hosts: [CreateHost!]!) { importTemplates(templates: $templates) { templateid host message } importHosts(hosts: $hosts) { hostid deviceKey message } } ``` ### ✅ Step 4: Verify Bulk Import Verify that all entities were created and linked correctly: ```graphql query VerifyBulkImport($pattern: String!) { allHosts(name_pattern: $pattern) { hostid host ... on ZabbixHost { parentTemplates { name } } } } ``` For detailed examples of the input structures, refer to [Sample Import Templates](../../docs/queries/sample_import_templates_mutation.graphql) and [Sample Import Hosts](../../docs/queries/sample_import_hosts_mutation.graphql). --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Running the Smoketest via MCP This recipe explains how to execute the end-to-end smoketest using the integrated MCP server. This is the fastest way to verify that your Zabbix GraphQL API is correctly connected to a Zabbix instance and all core features (Groups, Templates, Hosts) are working. ### 📋 Prerequisites - Zabbix GraphQL API is running (`npm run start` or via Docker). - Integrated MCP server is configured in your environment (e.g. registered in **Junie**). ### 🛠️ Step 1: Prompt the AI Agent If you are using **Junie**, you can trigger the smoketest with a single natural language prompt. **Prompt**: > "Run the Zabbix smoketest using the MCP tool. Use 'SMOKE_HOST', 'SMOKE_TEMPLATE', and 'SMOKE_GROUP' for the entity names." ### 🚀 Step 2: Agent Execution The agent will: 1. Identify the `RunSmoketest` tool from the MCP server. 2. Call the tool with the provided arguments. 3. Monitor the progress of each step (Create Template Group -> Create Template -> Create Host Group -> Create and Link Host -> Verify -> Cleanup). ### ✅ Step 3: Verification The agent will report the success or failure of each step. You should see a final message indicating "Smoketest passed successfully". --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Cloning a Template with Items This recipe guides you through cloning an existing Zabbix template, including all its items and their configurations, into a new template using the GraphQL API and MCP. ### 📋 Prerequisites - Zabbix GraphQL API is running. - You have the technical name of the source template. ### 🛠️ Step 1: Query the Source Template Retrieve the source template's details and all its items. **GraphQL Query**: ```graphql query GetSourceTemplate($name: String!) { templates(name_pattern: $name) { host name items { itemid name key_ type_int value_type status_int history delay units description preprocessing tags master_itemid } } } ``` ### ⚙️ Step 2: Prepare the Clone Configuration 1. **Technical Names**: Choose a new technical name (`host`) and visible name (`name`) for the clone. 2. **Item Mapping**: Map the source items to the `items` array in the `importTemplates` mutation. 3. **Resolve Master Items**: For dependent items (where `master_itemid` > 0), find the source item with the matching `itemid` and use its `key_` as the `master_item.key` in the new item definition. ### 🚀 Step 3: Execute `importTemplates` Mutation Execute the mutation to create the clone. ```graphql mutation CloneTemplate($templates: [CreateTemplate!]!) { importTemplates(templates: $templates) { host templateid message } } ``` ### ✅ Step 4: Verification Verify that the cloned template exists and has the expected items. ```graphql query VerifyClone($host: String!) { templates(name_pattern: $host) { templateid host items { name key_ } } } ``` ### 🤖 AI/MCP AI agents can use the following MCP tools to automate this: - **GetTemplates**: To fetch the source template and its hierarchical item structure. - **ImportTemplates**: To provision the new cloned template. #### 🤖 Prompting Junie You can ask **Junie** to automate the entire cloning process: > "Using MCP, clone the template 'Generic SNMP' to a new template named 'Custom SNMP v2'. Ensure all items are copied and dependent items have their master item keys correctly mapped." --- ## 🍳 Recipe: Setting up GraphQL MCP for AI Agents This recipe guides you through setting up the Model Context Protocol (MCP) server to enable AI agents like **Junie** or **Claude** to interact with your Zabbix data through the GraphQL API. ### 📋 Prerequisites - **Zabbix GraphQL API**: Ensure the API is running (e.g. `npm run start`). - **Docker**: Installed and running for the MCP server container. ### 🛠️ Step 1: Configure the MCP Server Choose one of the following setups: #### Setup A: JetBrains IDE (AI Chat & Junie) Configure the IDE to use the GraphQL MCP server for both the built-in AI Chat and the **Junie agent**. - **Prerequisite**: Generate the combined schema file (run this in your project root): ```bash cat schema/*.graphql > schema.graphql ``` - **Open Settings**: Navigate to `File` > `Settings` (Windows/Linux) or `IntelliJ IDEA` > `Settings` (macOS). - **Navigate to MCP**: Go to `Tools` > `AI Assistant` > `MCP Servers`. - **Add Server**: Click the **+** button and configure: - **Name**: `Zabbix GraphQL` - **Type**: `Command` - **Command**: `docker` - **Arguments**: ```text run -i --rm -v ${PROJECT_DIR}/mcp-config.yaml:/mcp-config.yaml -v ${PROJECT_DIR}/schema.graphql:/mcp-data/schema.graphql:ro -v ${PROJECT_DIR}/mcp/operations:/mcp/operations -e APOLLO_GRAPH_REF=local@main ghcr.io/apollographql/apollo-mcp-server:latest /mcp-config.yaml ``` #### Setup B: Claude Desktop Connect Claude Desktop to the Zabbix GraphQL API by referring to the [Apollo GraphQL MCP Documentation](https://github.com/apollographql/apollo-mcp-server). - **Prerequisite**: Generate the combined schema file (run this in your project root): ```bash cat schema/*.graphql > schema.graphql ``` - **Edit Configuration**: Open the Claude Desktop configuration file (e.g. `%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json` on Windows). - **Add to mcpServers**: Insert the following configuration in the `mcpServers` section: ```json { "mcpServers": { "zabbix-graphql": { "command": "docker", "args": [ "run", "-i", "--rm", "-v", "C:/path/to/your/project/mcp-config.yaml:/mcp-config.yaml", "-v", "C:/path/to/your/project/schema.graphql:/mcp-data/schema.graphql:ro", "-v", "C:/path/to/your/project/mcp/operations:/mcp/operations", "-e", "APOLLO_GRAPH_REF=local@main", "ghcr.io/apollographql/apollo-mcp-server:latest", "/mcp-config.yaml" ] } } } ``` - **Restart Claude**: Fully restart the Claude Desktop application to apply the changes. ### 🚀 Step 2: Use an AI Agent Provide the recipe to your AI agent and ask it to perform a task. - **Example**: "Use MCP to list the configured Zabbix hosts". ### ✅ Step 3: Verify via Agent Confirm that the agent can successfully interact with the API: - Ask: "What is the current version of the Zabbix API?" - The agent should use the `apiVersion` query and respond with the version number. ### 💡 Alternative: Using Pre-running MCP Server If you already have the MCP server running locally (e.g. via `docker compose`), you can use a simpler configuration. - **Sample Configuration**: See [.ai/mcp/mcp.json](../../.ai/mcp/mcp.json) for a sample that connects to a running MCP server via HTTP. - **Usage**: Use this `url`-based configuration in your Claude Desktop or IDE settings instead of the `command`-based setup if you prefer to manage the MCP server lifecycle separately. > **Reference**: For more details on the benefits of GraphQL for MCP, see the [MCP & Agent Integration Guide](./mcp.md).