I use it heavily and do not see any issues.
On 10/2/06, Steven C. Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has anyone seen as to where using check_http to monitor the IIS server
causes serious issues?
I figure since all it's doing is mapping port 80 for livelyihood, it
should be okay. (At this point,
Okay, I have went word for word on the installation of Nagios, but I still am getting errors like no Lock File and numerous others.
My first question is, how much stuff do I need to manually edit to get this to work?? Do I have manually create all these extra files? Alls I want is something to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 02/10/2006 19:23:02:
Hi all,
I need to generate a report for a given month (the files in the
archive) that will detail the date, host/service, the start time for
the outage, and the end time for the outage. The CGI does not seem to
give me the full detail that I
Hi All;
I'm pulling out what little is left over my hair on this one:(
I've got a setup where a nagios host at data center A is monitoring
services on 30+ hosts at data center B. The bulk of the monitoring is
via nrpe.
Once every blue moon or so I lose connectivity between the two data
David Miller wrote:
Hi All;
I'm pulling out what little is left over my hair on this one:(
I've got a setup where a nagios host at data center A is monitoring
services on 30+ hosts at data center B. The bulk of the monitoring is
via nrpe.
Once every blue moon or so I lose
Title: NRPE and Check_disk error
Hey List,
Current setup.
Nagios 2.5 - Standard install to /usr/local/nagios/*
Nagios Plugins 1.4.3 - Standard install to /usr/local/nagios/libexec
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 sp2 - Disks partitioned with LVM ( yes I have taken that into account in
Hugo van der Kooij wrote:
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006, Ugo Bellavance wrote:
Timothy Lane wrote:
To all: BTW, is it the case also with the source install?
If yes, would it be possible to fix it so that one can install, then
start the service and have a working config doing only local checks?
Title: Delay hostchecks?
Hello,
Is it possible to delay hostchecks until after you've done all retries stated in the service defintion? If for example a service check fails once Nagios will immediately start doing hostchecks. This is not very good because a short reboot/power failure/ etc
There are times when we have a lot of services that go down at once,
like IIS sites for example. It's a pain to go through and
ackknowledge each one individually. Any tricks to this?
-
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Am Mittwoch, 4. Oktober 2006 20:55 schrieb Fredrik Vöcks:
Hello,
Is it possible to delay hostchecks until after you've done all retries
stated in the service defintion? If for example a service check fails once
Nagios will immediately start doing hostchecks. This is not very good
because a
Set up some service dependencies. Have all of your URL checks dependent
on, say, a positive check for IIS running. That way you only get one
alert.
http://nagios.sourceforge.net/docs/2_0/dependencies.html
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Good idea, will have to think about that. What I gave was just an
example and the reason for those outages is more complex. However,
that got me thinking, thanks.
On 10/4/06, Aaron Segura [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Set up some service dependencies. Have all of your URL checks dependent
on,
I need to generate a report for a given month (the files in the
archive) that will detail the date, host/service, the start time for
the outage, and the end time for the outage. The CGI does not seem to
give me the full detail that I need. How do I go about building this
report?
Management had two choices -
1) Fix the configuration of the IIS server
2) Stop monitoring it altogether
Which do you think they chose? Sigh.
Since they're management, they actually had more choices:
3) Buy a new web-server and a loadbalancer, clone the old
configuration
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