On Sat, 20 Jun 2009, Sriram wrote: > Thanks for all your help, i followed your answers and found on that > nagios was being run as user nagios....and if i executed the last > command it asked for a password [i tried nagios password,root password > etc] but it did not work..it the end i opened nagios.cfg and changed the > NAGIOS_USER to root and changed the ownership permissons on the script > also to root..I now get the correct status on the Nagios interface..
It would be better to run Nagios as nagios and add nagios to sudo so it can execute "asterisk -nrx" as the user executing Asterisk. The following line in /etc/sudoers should do the trick. nagios ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL This, unfortunately, will allow the nagios user (or anybody who hacks into nagios) to execute any command as root, but it is safer than running nagios as root. Sudo has the facility to allow a user to execute a single command as another user, I just don't know the syntax off the top of my head. Google is your friend... Something like: nagios ALL=(user-running-asterisk) NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/asterisk should get you close. Thanks in advance, ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Steve Edwards sedwa...@sedwards.com Voice: +1-760-468-3867 PST Newline Fax: +1-760-731-3000 _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users