Hi Jan, I think what you are saying is definitely true after thinking it
through a bit more. Thank you for replying.
I still would like to know if setting an exact trigger time is possible
within Icinga. Can anyone confirm?
Thanks,
Mark
On , [email protected] wrote:
Hi, I don't think this will be a problem: If next time the nsca fires on
09:05 again, the threshold will NOT wait until 11:00 next day, but will
trigger the alert at 10:05 (after 25 hours), as configured. The gurus
might correct me if I'm wrong. RegardsJan Dreyer From: Mark Creamer
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 4:33 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [icinga-users] Setting "Stale Update" passive check I have some
passive checks set up that currently run a "service_is_stale" command if
a freshness_threshold is reached. So basically, a host that is being
monitored runs a job that includes a command to send an update message to
Icinga via send_nsca. That message gets received, and the
freshness_threshold starts counting down. A typical one is supposed to be
received every 24 hours, so the countdown timer is set to (24x60x60)+3600
seconds, basically 1 hour past the 24 hour deadline. If the message has
not been received in that amount of time, the service_is_stale command is
triggered, causing the monitored service to go critical.
My question is, rather than use a countdown timer, is it possible to tell
Icinga to trigger the alert at an exact time? Example, if a job is
supposed to run every day at 9:00 AM, can I set the service_is_stale
command to run at 10:00 AM every day if the success message has not been
received?
The reason I thought this might be better is, let's say for whatever
reason, the message that should have been received by Icinga was received
at 9:58 AM, rather than around 9:05 as normal. This is still within the
threshold so no alert is triggered, but now the countdown timer is going
to wait for 25 hours from 9:58 AM, not 9:05. If this happens enough
times, pretty soon the freshness interval is way off its intended timing.
I'm fairly new to Icinga/Nagios, so maybe this is an easy thing to do but
I haven't found it yet. Thanks for your assistance.
--
Mark
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