Taylor Dondich wrote: > Hi all, might have seen a bit of an irate email from me regarding > OpMon and it's use of Fruity as it's initial codebase. After > discussing it with the OpMon team, they had good reason to fork the > project. They didn't really ping the user community mailing list or > myself in regards to forking the project, but they did submit patches. > And because of the issue of Fruity being in a stale situation, their > patches could not go into the official codetree. > > I've discussed with them how Fruity is basically no longer supported > and really should not be used for production use. At least not with > Nagios 3.x OpMon team did a good job of adding some initial support > for Nagios 3.x but there would be a lot of work to be done to try and > get the Fruity codebase up to par. The good news is that I've already > done so and built Lilac, which is from the ground-up a major rewrite > of Fruity to support Nagios 3.x and be much more robust. > > I'm now in discussions with the OpMon team in how we can leverage > Lilac for their uses and bring some of the work they've done to Lilac > and it's community. >
Nice :) >From where can one get lilac nowadays? Sourceforge has nothing, and lilacplatform.com doesn't appear to be resolvable anymore. -- Andreas Ericsson [EMAIL PROTECTED] OP5 AB www.op5.se Tel: +46 8-230225 Fax: +46 8-230231 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Moblin Your Move Developer's challenge Build the coolest Linux based applications with Moblin SDK & win great prizes Grand prize is a trip for two to an Open Source event anywhere in the world http://moblin-contest.org/redirect.php?banner_id=100&url=/ _______________________________________________ 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