I have check_disk setup to do monitor all local disks so that I don't have to make edits everytime I add a new filesystem or mount point. Unfortunately, on Solaris, mounted CD's and DVD's show as local volumes and as 100% full. Unfortunately, check_disk (the stock one) is not a simple shell script that I can edit to throw in a "grep -v cdrom" line. I'm curious how you guys are handling this? Do you define all your filesystems manually for Solaris hosts? Are you using an alternate test? Any suggestions would be much appreciated...

BTW: please don't remind me of the joys of the open source community and how I can just edit the code. I'm a sysadmin with lots of perl and shell scripting experience, but no C experience so I'd be more inclined to do the work of manually defining all the filesystems to be monitored than I am to figure out how to edit the code. Of course, if one of you knows how to make the edit and wants to send over your .c file for me to compile, I wouldn't complain... :)

--


 A. Davis
 Email:     ncc...@gmail.com

 "There is no limit to what a man can accomplish
  if he doesn't care who gets the credit." - Ronald Reagan

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Register Now & Save for Velocity, the Web Performance & Operations 
Conference from O'Reilly Media. Velocity features a full day of 
expert-led, hands-on workshops and two days of sessions from industry 
leaders in dedicated Performance & Operations tracks. Use code vel09scf 
and Save an extra 15% before 5/3. http://p.sf.net/sfu/velocityconf
_______________________________________________
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

Reply via email to