check_mk 1.2.3 should do that for you.
There's a bit of pain migrating your config into check_mk's WATO, but IMHO it's
worth it in the long run.
http://mathias-kettner.com/check_mk.html
It might be prudent to wait for the check_mk 1.2.3i2 before playing with it,
though.
Cheers,
Phil
--
Hi Daniel,
We monitor our VM servers with Nagios but point to their IP addresses in the
hosts.cfg. Since these don't change and Nagios doesn't care what VM host the
server is running it is not a problem. We make the network switch the parent,
not the VMware host.
--
Martin T. Hugo
Network
On 12 Aug 2013 16:50, Daniel Ceola daniel.ce...@occfiber.com wrote:
Hello all,
I have a lot of host servers as VM’s on our ESXi infrastructure, managed
with vCenter. We also use vSphere DRS to help keep the load on host
systems balanced. Due to the DRS, our VM’s can sometimes move around
-users] ESXi/vCenter Monitoring
On 12 Aug 2013 16:50, Daniel Ceola
daniel.ce...@occfiber.commailto:daniel.ce...@occfiber.com wrote:
Hello all,
I have a lot of host servers as VM's on our ESXi infrastructure, managed with
vCenter. We also use vSphere DRS to help keep the load on host
On 12 Aug 2013 21:49, Daniel Ceola daniel.ce...@occfiber.com wrote:
I did that, but it made the map a complete mess of lines that I couldn’t
make out.
Yes. The map doesn't scale well. I haven't used it for some years now.
On 8/12/2013 4:04 PM, Daniel Ceola wrote: I did that, but it made the map a
complete mess of lines that I couldn't
make out.
Try check_cluster. Check_cluster aggregates the status of individual ESX
hosts. The clusters here have three or four ESX hosts each. If one ESX host
in the cluster