* Steve Gran > Looking through the code, it seems to me that this is because --force > is set. I see no place in the code where foporce does anything > reasonable, so for now I have pulled it out of /etc/cron.d/munin. Is > there some reason it is enabled by default?
Well, --force is supposed to send out a trap even if the service was OK to begin with (thus simulating a transition from warning or critical to OK). It is however only supposed to do this for the special Nagios contacts, hence "--contact nagios --contact old-nagios" in the cron job. This works for me. Is your contact by any chance called "nagios" or "old-nagios"? If that is the case, please rename it. If not, please check if /var/lib/munin/limits looks sane with regard to permissions and contents, and report back. Thanks -- Tore Anderson -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

