On Fri, 6 Oct 2006, Matthias Eble wrote: > Andreas Ericsson schrieb: > > Bart van Daal wrote: > >> > >> i've been searching around for a way to define holidays in nagios. The > >> object is > >> to be able to use a 24-7 timeperiod on holidays (e.g. 25 december) and > >> the Tech_hours > >> timeperiod on 'normal' days: > > > > afaik, there are no solutions for this inside Nagios. Most people who > > need this desperately enough have implemented the functionality in the > > notification-script. I believe the reason no solution has been posted > > online is that whatever solution is used isn't sharable across national > > borders. > > In a later version timeperiods can be defined on special date basis. > > I think it was like > > define timeperiod{ > timeperiod_name 24x7 > alias ever > monday 00:00-24:00 > tuesday 00:00-24:00 > ... > 2006-12-25 10:00-17:00 > }
To the best of my knowledge something like this is very much workable across borders. It is the local admin which defines the periods. The way it can be defined can be used anywhere in the world. I think both single date and repeating date entries are required to finish the job. Something like: monday 00:00-07:30 12-05 00:00-24:00 (Sinterklaas indeed ;-) 2007-04-09 00:00-24:00 (Next year Easter eggs) Hugo. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hvdkooij.xs4all.nl/ This message is using 100% recycled electrons. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Take Surveys. Earn Cash. Influence the Future of IT Join SourceForge.net's Techsay panel and you'll get the chance to share your opinions on IT & business topics through brief surveys -- and earn cash http://www.techsay.com/default.php?page=join.php&p=sourceforge&CID=DEVDEV _______________________________________________ Nagios-users mailing list Nagios-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nagios-users ::: Please include Nagios version, plugin version (-v) and OS when reporting any issue. ::: Messages without supporting info will risk being sent to /dev/null