Meh, call me a quitter... Brought it to 2.9 and it's working like I'm used to :-)
Thanks for the time, but apparently 3.x is going to take some reading... -wil On May 22, 2007, at 9:45 PM, Thomas Guyot-Sionnest wrote: > On 23/05/07 12:11 AM, Wil Schultz wrote: >> On May 22, 2007, at 9:08 PM, Wil Schultz wrote: >> >>> Here is 3 minutes of the log, after i plonked a host: >>> >>> [...] >>> > > According to that log your host went down once and was just > notifying at > the interval you mentioned in the config you posted earlier. > > You can either increase the notification_interval (i.e. 10 minutes if > you want to ceceive notifications every ten minutes) or use > escalations > to get only the first or a certain number of notifications. > >>> So host caching and parallelization(is this a word?), I'm assuming >>> this is in the main config file. What directives should I be >>> looking at? > > This is in Nagios 3, which is still alpha. > > To disable regularly scheduled checks just omit the "check_interval" > option in your host definitions. See the Nagios documentation for more > details... > > Host definitions: > http://nagios.sourceforge.net/docs/2_0/xodtemplate.html#host > > Host checks logic: > http://nagios.sourceforge.net/docs/2_0/ > checkscheduling.html#host_checks > >>> For what it's worth the service checks are working just fine... > > I guess I missed the part where you said you were punting the host ;) > > Thomas > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express Download DB2 Express C - the FREE version of DB2 express and take control of your XML. No limits. Just data. Click to get it now. http://sourceforge.net/powerbar/db2/ _______________________________________________ Nagios-users mailing list Nagios-users@lists.sourceforge.net 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