Hi Greg,

A limitation in Frederic's link is that the migration script does not migrate services across. This is typically difficult because your service definition could be inconsistent.

We've also been working with a customer on a different migration script which pulls information from the objects.cache file which creates all the host to service links and also adding in appropriate host templates. However, by the nature of it, it is custom to the nagios configuration that was read from. (This import also highlighted inconsistencies in their definitions).

So we can offer you a day's consultancy to migrate your existing nagios configuration into Opsview. Contact us directly if you are interested. It will save you the time of importing manually!

Ton

On 28 May 2009, at 05:24, Frederic Jacquet wrote:

Hello

Migration is pretty easy with this : 
http://docs.opsview.org/doku.php?id=opsview3.0:migrating

Start with version 3 is  preferred IMHO

Have fun
fred

On Thu, May 28, 2009 at 00:47, <[email protected]> wrote:

Hello all,

I just went through the demo VM of Opsview and am suitably impressed. However, I am wary of a complete switchover because of the complexities involved. Currently we have Nagios (single instance) monitoring 312 hosts, 1505 services, and notifying about 60 contacts in about 50 contact groups.

Needless to say, I don't want to input all of this by hand into a new system. So, hopefully someone can give me an idea on the complexities involved in importing the Nagios config into Opsview...a lot of work or not?

Thanks for any resources you can give on this!

Greg Webster

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