Thanks for your response. I looked at the docs for that and I'm not sure what
it
does. After experimenting with it, it appears to just disable authentication
for
the cgi, leaving just the apache config to protect you.
Is this the same as disabling authentication in cgi.cfg? Would we still
We use Nagios with normal authentication (the nagios apache config file, much
like
.htaccess combined with Nagios's cgi.cfg) and want to allow a few internal hosts
(with RFC1918 addresses) to access nagios withOUT user authentication. These
are
basically large displays with no keyboard input.
try default_user_name in cgi.cfg
On Wed, Jul 20, 2011 at 3:35 AM, u...@3.am wrote:
We use Nagios with normal authentication (the nagios apache config file, much
like
.htaccess combined with Nagios's cgi.cfg) and want to allow a few internal
hosts
(with RFC1918 addresses) to access nagios