On 12.08.2011 11:25, Jim Avery wrote:
On 12 August 2011 08:36, Silver Salonen<sil...@serverock.ee> wrote:
Hello.
I want to check a service only once a day. So I tried this configuration:
define timeperiod {
timeperiod_name once-a-day
alias On mornings
monday 08:00-08:30
tuesday 08:00-08:30
wednesday 08:00-08:30
thursday 08:00-08:30
friday 08:00-08:30
saturday 08:00-08:30
sunday 08:00-08:30
}
define service {
use generic-service
check_period once-a-day
normal_check_interval 1440 ; 24 hours
...
}
Now when I check the service's next schedule time, Nagios is still
showing that the next check is scheduled to 24h after the previous check
and at 22:53 (pm). Restarting Nagios does not change that. Any tips for
what's wrong in the configuration?
If Nagios wants to schedule a check at a certain time, but it's not in
the timeperiod then it won't run it.
That's interesting. Documentation says:
Specifying a timeperiod in the/check_period/directive allows you to
restrict the time that Nagios perform regularly scheduled, active checks
of the host or service. When Nagios attempts to reschedule a host or
service check, it will make sure that the next check falls within a
valid time range within the defined timeperiod. If it doesn't, Nagios
will adjust the next check time to coincide with the next "valid" time
in the specified timeperiod.
So I guess documentation is wrong then?
If you don't mind what time of day your check is run, then use the
standard 24x7 timeperiod.
If you want a check to run at a specific time of day, you need to run
it from cron so it submits the check result to Nagios as a passive
check.
http://nagios.sourceforge.net/docs/nagioscore/3/en/passivechecks.html
Alternatively, if you don't mind your check being run a couple of
times each day, I would think you could leave your config as it is,
but set the normal_check_interval to 12 (minutes) or so to give it a
good chance of being scheduled within your 30-minute window.
Personally I would use cron, but it can be a bit fiddly to set up the
first time you try it.
OK, I guess I'd have to go with the passive checks through crontab then
(because I do mind what time the checks are run).
--
Silver
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