# State Overrides Business processes utilize their children's states to calculate their own state. While you can influence this with [operators](09-Operators.md), it's also possible to override individual states. (This applies to host and service nodes.) ## Configuring Overrides State overrides get configured per node. When adding or editing a node, you can define which state should be overridden with another one. Below `WARNING` is chosen as a replacement for `CRITICAL`. ![Service State Override Configuration](screenshot/07_state_overrides/0701_override_config.png "Service State Override Configuration") ## Identifying Overrides In tile view overridden states are indicated by an additional state ball in the lower left of a tile. This is then the actual state the object is in. ![Overridden Tile State](screenshot/07_state_overrides/0702_overridden_tile.png "Overridden Tile State") In tree view overridden states are indicated on the very right of a row. There the actual state is shown and which one it is replaced with. ![Overridden Tree State](screenshot/07_state_overrides/0703_overridden_tree.png "Overridden Tree State") ## File Format Extensions The configuration file format has slightly been changed to accommodate state overrides. Though, previous configurations are perfectly upwards compatible. ### New Extra Line For process nodes a new extra line is used to store state overrides. ``` state_overrides dev_database_servers!mysql;mysql|2-1 ``` The full syntax for this is as follows: ``` state_overrides !|n-n[!|n-n[,n-n]] ```