Steve Burton wrote:
Hi Hugo,
Thanks for the reply I am also facing the same issue.
As per you suggestion I have gone through the archieve and found one big
thread regarding Nagios graph gap.
On Dec 8, 2008, at 12:42 AM, Gaurav Ghimire wrote:
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Dear all,
I wanna know more about the Nagios Alert History. What does it log?
Is it only that it logs the downtimes and their corresponding
uptimes? OR it
Typically only state changes
Hi all,
I would like to know if it is possible
to manage access to Nagios using
Shibboleth and the AAI attributes, and if so
whether there is any documentation about it.
Has anyone a similar user case?
As a first example we have turned off
nagios authentication control and configured in
a
-Original Message-
From: Eddie [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To keep services status information up-to-date on the slave the master
sends all service check results to the slave.
I got this set up between my master and slave servers, and then noticed
that comments and other stuff like
Hi list,
I've been investigating this problem for a while, but I couldn't find a
good solution.
* Example situation :
Assume I have one host with 20 service checks.
* Problem :
If the host becomes DOWN, Nagios still continues to do service checks on
this host. So, after a while, all the
On Fri, Dec 5, 2008 at 3:57 PM, David Dyer-Bennet [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Having said that -- can you recommend a site that talks about SNMP and
gives examples at the level of getting information out of a Linux box, and
perhaps some sort of household router/WAP? It'd be good for me to learn,
On Dec 8, 2008, at 11:38 AM, Toussaint OTTAVI wrote:
Hi list,
I've been investigating this problem for a while, but I couldn't
find a good solution.
* Example situation :
Assume I have one host with 20 service checks.
* Problem :
If the host becomes DOWN, Nagios still continues to do
Hello All,
I have about 115 hosts in my nagios pool and I recently added a group of
7 UPSs. I made my own check using the check_snmp to check the load
percentage. Funny thing is, some times they show up in the host detail
and some times they do not. Refreshing a few times will get them to
On Dec 8, 2008, at 2:39 PM, Thomas Donnelly wrote:
Hello All,
I have about 115 hosts in my nagios pool and I recently added a
group of
7 UPSs. I made my own check using the check_snmp to check the load
percentage. Funny thing is, some times they show up in the host detail
and some times
Hi
I am in process of migrating nagios from one server to other server(same OS
but lower version to higher version). Can anyone suggest me what are the steps
to be followed to get same look and feel.
Thanks
You should be fine installing Nagios on the new box and copying your
config files - assuming the path stays the same.
Everything under /usr/local/nagios/etc should suffice.
I've done it before and it worked fine on the new box.
If the path to the config files change, you would need to change
On Dec 8, 2008, at 4:23 PM, XYZ XYZ wrote:
Hi
I am in process of migrating nagios from one server to other
server(same OS but lower version to higher version). Can anyone
suggest me what are the steps to be followed to get same look and
feel.
Feels like homework but...
(assumes
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