On 19 September 2011 11:43, Lingan Vairavamoorthy <lin...@avantiagroup.co.uk> wrote: > I’ve looked through the posts and haven’t seen anything on full logging > information. > > > > What we are looking for is the ability to view all the checks that have > occurred on a host/service regardless if there was a change of state. > > > > This will enable us to do graphing on performance data and look at trends > when states would not have changed. > > > > i.e. We are checking a response to a web page and we only warn on large > delays – but we would like to actually record all the timings it takes to > visit that web page regardless if the state changed from OK to WARN. So that > we would have a entry in the historical logs for every check. Is that > feasible?
Nagios itself doesn't usually write the check result to the log if the service is in a hard state and the state hasn't changed. You can configure it to do that, but for best performance I wouldn't recommend it. To store, process and graph performance data, you are probably best off using PNP4Nagios http://docs.pnp4nagios.org/pnp-0.6/start . It's quite easy to extract data from the .rrd databases created by PNP4Nagios using rrdexport if you need it in xml format or similar. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1 _______________________________________________ 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