David, Thanks for your explanation; it is much clearer for me now.
Regards, Nicolas. On 12/18/06, David Nolan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Nicolas, > > You want option 1. All periods which match the current time will be > applied, and the settings within one period do not affect the other > periods. > > -David > > On 12/18/06, Nicolas KOWALSKI <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I would like to monitor a service during all day, but when we are out > > of business hours wait some time before sending alert. > > > > In the following configuration, I use these: > > - P_NBH macro defines normal business hours > > - P_OBH macro defines out of business hours > > - P_ALWAYS macro defines everytime > > > > As a new user of mon, I see two possibilities: > > > > 1) declare explicitely periods: > > > > watch my-hostgroup > > service my-service > > interval 5m > > monitor my-monitor > > period nbh: P_NBH > > no_comp_alerts > > upalert my-alert > > alert my-alert > > period obh: P_OBH > > no_comp_alerts > > upalert my-alert > > alert my-alert > > alertafter 20m > > > > > > 2) declare one "always" period, and another "obh" only for the > > alertafter option: > > > > watch my-hostgroup > > service my-service > > interval 5m > > monitor my-monitor > > period always: P_ALWAYS > > no_comp_alerts > > upalert my-alert > > alert my-alert > > period obh: P_OBH > > alertafter 20m > > > > > > Which one 1) or 2) is the good option ? > > > > Thanks, > > -- > > Nicolas > > > > _______________________________________________ > > mon mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://linux.kernel.org/mailman/listinfo/mon > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > mon mailing list > [email protected] > http://linux.kernel.org/mailman/listinfo/mon > _______________________________________________ mon mailing list [email protected] http://linux.kernel.org/mailman/listinfo/mon
