On 12 Apr 2007, at 03:39, Thomas Guyot-Sionnest wrote: > On 11/04/07 08:26 PM, Jason Rojas wrote: >> An ex-coworker just brought this to my attention, looks promising: >> >> http://www.opsview.org/ > > Interesting. However it does not seems to be well documented. I'm > particularly wondering what level of flexibility does it gives. > > I'd certainly benefit from this kind of SNMP Trap management, but I > doubt it could be of any help for setting up hosts and services > considering the way wrote my Nagios config (Highly based on > templates in > a way it is very easy to maintain). Is it possible for example to > use it > only for trap management? > > Anyone has experience migrating large distributed setups partly or > completely to Opsview? >
Aahhh! The cat is out of the bag! We will be making a bigger announcement about Opsview shortly as we have a newer version waiting in the wings. But I will answer a few questions now: Q: Is it based on Nagios? A: Yes. Nagios is the world's most popular open source monitoring system, so it would be silly not to. We make a big (http:// altinity.com) deal (http://www.altinity.com/opensourcecommitment) about using Nagios (http://www.opsview.org/), and we continue to publish our changes upstream (http://www.altinity.org) Q: Can I manage Nagios config files using Opsview? A: Yup. We have our web frontend to add or clone hosts, services or contacts. We spend a lot of time making the front end as easy as possible. You don't touch the config files at all Q: Can I do distributed setups? A: Yup, as easy as a drop down selection for a host. Hit reload and we take care of sending all your configs to all the slaves. We even throw in freshness checking and parent child relationships for good measure Q: Do you have a Pro version? A: We only have one version: Opsview. We don't believe in splitting our codebase for marketing reasons - we just want to keep making our core code better. You can call it Pro if you want :) Q: How much does it cost? A: We licence Opsview under the GPL because we believe it is a fundamental right that you can change the code if you want. So the code is free. We make money on support (which you don't have to take) and development (so you can sponsor certain features). Q: So you're open sourcing it? A: That is our plan. We're starting with a publicly available VM, we'll be publishing RPMs and .deb files soon and we will be posting source code releases on Sourceforge. We're already put source code on SF, but they are hard to install or create RPMs. We're getting there. Q: Where can I start? A: I recommend getting the VM image from http:// downloads.opsview.org/ as we've sorted out a lot of the dependency issues. We will have a 2.7 image posted in the next few days, with packages soon after - we'll talk more about that when it is ready. Sign up to our mailing lists at http://opsview.org/mailinglists, and get ready for the announcements! Ton http://www.altinity.com T: +44 (0)870 787 9243 F: +44 (0)845 280 1725 Skype: tonvoon ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Take Surveys. Earn Cash. Influence the Future of IT Join SourceForge.net's Techsay panel and you'll get the chance to share your opinions on IT & business topics through brief surveys-and earn cash http://www.techsay.com/default.php?page=join.php&p=sourceforge&CID=DEVDEV _______________________________________________ Nagios-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nagios-users ::: Please include Nagios version, plugin version (-v) and OS when reporting any issue. ::: Messages without supporting info will risk being sent to /dev/null
