Hi.

No trouble with building/installing on Solaris this time. I've started looking 
at gmond and getting familiar with the new configuration format. Can you please 
provide examples of how to use 'allow_ip' and 'allow_mask' to restrict what 
hosts can send data and request data from gmond? 
I'm having trouble with this at the moment. Does it currently function?

----
Yemi

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
> Behalf Of Matt Massie
> Sent: Monday, January 24, 2005 11:31 AM
> To: Ganglia Developers
> Subject: [Ganglia-developers] feature complete 2.6.0. snapshot
> 
> guys-
> 
> i've just finished up a first crack at a feature-complete 
> 2.6.0.  you can upload it from
> 
> http://matt-massie.com/ganglia/ganglia-2.6.0.200501241924.tar.gz
> 
> this snapshot includes code for cleaning up old hosts and old 
> gmetric messages.  the host_dmax value for gmond is set in 
> the globals section of the configuration file.
> 
> globals {
>    host_dmax = 3600 /* if a host hasn't been heard from in an hour,
>                        delete it */
> }
> 
> the gmetric message dmax values are part of the gmetric 
> message (being set on the commandline by gmetric).
> 
> as far as i'm concerned this is a feature-complete snapshot.  
> i will add not more features unless paid 1 billion dollars.
> 
> i will focus over the next week on testing the heck out of it 
> and stomping out any obvious bugs (federico just dropped one 
> into bugzilla about gmetad).
> 
> i want 2.6.0 out the door as soon as possible.  please drop 
> any bug reports into bugzilla.ganglia.info.  send praise and 
> scorn to the developers list.
> 
> looking forward to hearing your experiences -matt
> 
> 
> 
> 
> --
> PGP fingerprint 'A7C2 3C2F 8445 AD3C 135E F40B 242A 5984 ACBC 91D3'
> 
>     They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little
>        temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
>    --Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759
> 

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