Senhores,
gostaria de diminuir o tempo de envio de email quando um serviço ficar down.
Alguem poderia me dizer qual parâmetro alterar?
Obrigado.
--
Write once. Port to many.
Get the SDK and tools to simplify
Jim Avery jim at jimavery.me.uk writes:
Is the the relevant entry for that service check in
your objects.cache file correct?
I believe so. Do you see something out of the ordinary:
host_name xxx
service_description yyy
check_period24x7
On 12/27/2011 9:31 AM, Jatin wrote:
Fedora. I wanted to know if i can follow the same steps for installing
Nagios on CentOS assuming that i have a default CentOS installation.
Yes. I used the Fedora instructions to install Nagios on CentOS myself.
It has been a while since I did it, though.
Hello.
I've installed Nagios Core 3.3.1, and can't get it to run very fast at
all.
Machine specs:
OS: CentOS 5.7
Processor: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5420 @ 2.50GHz (8 cores)
RAM: 8G
HD: 800G, 22G used
Going by top, the load average of the machine hovers around 1.5-2.0. CPU
usage is
Hi
I have earlier used Nagios on Fedora 13 and was successful in installing
Nagios without any hiccups using the quick installation guide meant for
Fedora. I wanted to know if i can follow the same steps for installing
Nagios on CentOS assuming that i have a default CentOS installation.
Also
Hi the List,
I would control if bad packets has been rejected on a given lan for any
or several machines
A command like this :
check_rejected_packets -L lan address, i.e 192.168.0.0, or a lot of
addresses, or an intervall -T elapsed times in seconds
Any ideas? A plugin exists for this
Jim Avery jim at jimavery.me.uk writes:
Can someone tell me why some real services derived from the above template
do not seem to do the freshness checks?
Are you sure they don't do the freshness check?
Definitely, once a trap was received, the state remains critical...
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 08:01:49PM +0530, Jatin wrote:
Hi
I have earlier used Nagios on Fedora 13 and was successful in installing
Nagios without any hiccups using the quick installation guide meant for
Fedora. I wanted to know if i can follow the same steps for installing
Nagios on
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 11:02:51AM -0500, Chris Beattie wrote:
On 12/27/2011 9:31 AM, Jatin wrote:
Fedora. I wanted to know if i can follow the same steps for installing
Nagios on CentOS assuming that i have a default CentOS installation.
Yes. I used the Fedora instructions to install
I would second that, use the RPM's and then it's super-simple RPM installs and
a few tweaks for performance and you should be good.
Dan
-Original Message-
From: Alain Williams [mailto:a...@phcomp.co.uk]
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2011 10:13 AM
To: Nagios Users List
Subject: Re:
Yeah I've been starting to play with using hostgroups to tie them together
since I can't really use hosts, but so far just limited on time due to
holidays, I hope to get more testing done this week but initial testing looks
like if I can specify the hostgroups in these configs then it works.
Not meaning to toot my own horn, but for larger scales I did a presentation
that has config examples and stuff, based on RHEL-5, but should apply the same
to RHEL/CentOS 6 as well.
On 27 December 2011 13:32, JM jm+nagios-us...@roth.lu wrote:
Jim Avery jim at jimavery.me.uk writes:
Is the the relevant entry for that service check in
your objects.cache file correct?
I believe so. Do you see something out of the ordinary:
I can't see anything wrong with that at all, no.
On Tue, 27 Dec 2011 12:25:07 -0500, mpeder...@choopa.com wrote:
Please feel free to toot your own horn there. That's the sort of writeup
I
needed, and I'll be reading it in a lot of detail today.
And now I will sound ungrateful. I've applied the tips in here, and still
others I've found online,
Not at all, we're all here to help...
What are you using for your ping check?
What is the output from 'nagiostats'?
Dan
-Original Message-
From: mpeder...@choopa.com [mailto:mpeder...@choopa.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2011 3:21 PM
To: Nagios Users List
Subject: Re:
Are you using fping instead of regular ping? It is a different package from
ping that needs to be installed separately. Here is an excerpt from its man
page:
fping is a like program which uses the Internet Control Message Proto-
col (ICMP) echo request to determine if a target host is
I have written a number of blog posts about optimizing and tuning
Nagios performance as well - you might find some of them useful:
http://www.semintelligent.com/blog/
- Max
--
Write once. Port to many.
Get the SDK and
On Tue, 27 Dec 2011 21:26:15 +, Daniel Wittenberg
daniel.wittenberg.r...@statefarm.com wrote:
Not at all, we're all here to help...
What are you using for your ping check?
What is the output from 'nagiostats'?
And now I'm going to admit to feeling like a blooming idiot.
As it turns
No prob! Hopefully learned some more about performance tuning while you were
at it!
Dan
-Original Message-
From: mpeder...@choopa.com [mailto:mpeder...@choopa.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2011 4:16 PM
To: Nagios Users List
Subject: Re: [Nagios-users] Nagios Optimization on CentOS
Adding in the hostgroups seems to get things working as I would expect. I
guess this is another case where active checks does not include those
performed by freshness checking. Even though I have execution_failure_criteria
set to not run on warning and critical, it seems freshness checks are
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