
You'll run far less risk to your NMS node if you keep it separate from the other applications performing polling/scanning. Personally though, after many trials and tribulations I've gone through to get integrations to work properly, I find it easier to run the integrations on a separate host altogether. You'll get a much better idea of how to configure LibreNMS to integrate with other applications, and you'll get a better understanding of the workflow. You can install oxidized on the same localhost as LibreNMS and there's a few tutorials that walk you through it. I think it may help you better if you start with a more popular/supported integration such as Oxidized.


The integrations still function independently and require independent configuration - at least for now.

You edit the LibreNMS config files to either display or "connect" via api to those apps in order to display the data. The integrations for LibreNMS are generally just their own self-contained/installed applications.
