> On 06 Feb 2015, at 15:03, Rory Toma <[email protected]> wrote: > > On 2/6/15 2:45 AM, Martin Pala wrote: >> Hi Rory, >> >> Monit reports process uptime in minutes since Monit 5.4. There is also >> uptime test, example: >> >> check process myapp with pidfile /var/run/myapp.pid >> start program = "/etc/init.d/myapp start" >> stop program = "/etc/init.d/myapp stop" >> if uptime > 3 days then restart >> >> Regards, >> Martin >> >> >>> On 06 Feb 2015, at 00:28, Rory Toma <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Is there a good way for monit to report actual uptime on processes and >>> itself that is not based on the date, but rather the actual passage of time? >>> >>> -- >>> To unsubscribe: >>> https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/monit-general >> >> -- >> To unsubscribe: >> https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/monit-general > SO here's what happens. If monit starts before the time is set, when I run > monit status, monit will report that it has been running for 45 years. 8-)
Fixed in the development version, will be part of next Monit release (5.12) Cheers :) Martin -- To unsubscribe: https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/monit-general
