Hi
Just curious, why don't you bypass the load balancer and monitor the
individual systems? That may be more reliable and less complicated.
Actually, may easy the process of figuring what has gone wrong when things
break
William
On 11-07-21 12:20 PM, af.at.w...@gmail.com
The individual systems are remote, not publically available, and
monitored by the ISP.
I am looking to see what the end user is seeing for TTFB.
On Fri, Jul 22, 2011 at 10:50 AM, William Muriithi
w.murii...@syncapse.com wrote:
Hi
Just curious, why don't you bypass the load balancer and
Hey gang, I am having some difficulty getting a single host setup that
would have multiple HTTP services attached to it. The scenario is a
load balanced group of web servers and I am looking to monitor
numerous public facing web sites that would be bound to a single load
balanced IP address. Any
One way might be to use the check_http plug-in but
have it look for a specific string in each web-page being hosted
and use the warn/critical-time returns for empirical threshold
On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 9:02 AM, af.at.w...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey gang, I am having some difficulty getting a single
Service:
define service {
use generic-check-store
hostgroup_nameStorefront
service_description storename
check_command
check_store!storename.com!/index.php?product_id=12345!String
to find
contact_groupsUnix,ProductionSupport
notification_interval
Thanks for the tip on that - any way to take it a step further and
monitor a web transaction whilst logged in?
On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 10:26 AM, Gary Every gev...@gmail.com wrote:
Service:
define service {
use generic-check-store
hostgroup_name Storefront
Thanks Dave, that seems to have done the trick perfectly.
On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 9:59 AM, dave stern - e-mail.pluribus.unum
dit.d...@gmail.com wrote:
One way might be to use the check_http plug-in but
have it look for a specific string in each web-page being hosted
and use the