I'm trying to check for the size of an nfs share that is accessible from a windows host. The windows host is running NSClient++ but there are a number of problems here.
First, the share isn't persistently mapped so at a minimum, I'd have to write a .bat warpper that first mapped it to a letter then ran the disk check. Second, to test this, I mapped the drive to M: then ran on my nagios server check_nt -H ... -p 12489 -s ... -v USEDDISKSPACE -l M -w 80 -c 90 but I got a segfault So I tried another tactic. Install, turned on snmp on the windows host. Mapped the drive to H and tried check_win_snmp_disk.pl $HOSTADDRESS$ $community 6 80 90 I did get information back. The % usage appears correct but the sizes are way off (Gig vs Terabyte). Can I trust the percentages from the above? Is the above script limited in size to Gigabytes? Is there a better/easier way to pull down this info? I tried an snmpwalk but couldn't find anything useful. Otherwise, I'd just call it directly with an snmpget TIA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Come build with us! The BlackBerry(R) Developer Conference in SF, CA is the only developer event you need to attend this year. Jumpstart your developing skills, take BlackBerry mobile applications to market and stay ahead of the curve. Join us from November 9 - 12, 2009. Register now! http://p.sf.net/sfu/devconference _______________________________________________ Nagios-users mailing list [email protected] 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
