Re: Suggestions for remote server monitoring
On 5 Jan 2005, at 14:29, John Barton wrote: If you want to monitor resources on a remote system, try cacti. It has great graphing capability using RRD. One of my favorite features is being able to highlight a section of your graph and have it draw a new graph to zoom in on the area of concern. Has anyone got cacti running with Exim mailserver statistics? Regards, Philipp Kern -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [OT] Debian package differences from upstream
On Wednesday 05 January 2005 08:58, Marcin Owsiany wrote: > On Wed, Jan 05, 2005 at 08:40:21AM -0500, Mark Bucciarelli wrote: > > On my Woody box, courier-mta logs pop transactions with the tag > > "courierpop3login:". The logs of other courier users (freebsd, gentoo > > for example) have the string "pop3d:" > > As far as I remember, this string is set in the init.d script... From the diff, I see the courier-pop init script was rewritten for Debian. The custom version script starts courierpop3login directly instead of pop3d, and syslog tags log entries accordingly. Got it, thanks! Regards, Mark
Re: [OT] Debian package differences from upstream
On Wed, Jan 05, 2005 at 08:40:21AM -0500, Mark Bucciarelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote a message of 21 lines which said: > I've done apt-get source and poked around a bit but could not tell > where the Debian patches made to upstream live. $PACKAGE_$VERSION.diff.gz (Some big packages use a more complicated system, with a patch directory, check debian/rules in the patched tree to see what it does.) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [OT] Debian package differences from upstream
On Wed, Jan 05, 2005 at 08:40:21AM -0500, Mark Bucciarelli wrote: > [ Is debian-mentors the proper list for this type of packaging question? ] debian-mentors is meant for people who want to package software, I think. It would probably be best to ask the package maintainer himself ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) > On my Woody box, courier-mta logs pop transactions with the tag > "courierpop3login:". The logs of other courier users (freebsd, gentoo for > example) have the string "pop3d:" As far as I remember, this string is set in the init.d script... > It has been suggested that this is a change the Debian packager made. > > How can I verify this? You need to find out whether the init.d script was supplied or changed by the debian maintainer. > I've done apt-get source and poked around a bit but could not tell where > the Debian patches made to upstream live. See the diff.gz file (BTW vim does nice highligting if you have syntax on), it usually contains all the debian modifications to the upstream tarball. regards, Marcin -- Marcin Owsiany <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://marcin.owsiany.pl/ GnuPG: 1024D/60F41216 FE67 DA2D 0ACA FC5E 3F75 D6F6 3A0D 8AA0 60F4 1216 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [OT] Debian package differences from upstream
Hello On 2005-01-05 Mark Bucciarelli wrote: > [ Is debian-mentors the proper list for this type of packaging question? ] Better write a mail to the package maintainer which you can lookup with "dpkg -s courier-mta". > I've done apt-get source and poked around a bit but could not tell where > the Debian patches made to upstream live. "apt-get source" downloads three files, a .orig.tar.gz, a .diff.gz and a .dsc. The .diff.gz contains all changes, the Debian maintainer made. > Mark bye, -christian- pgpm75dzqngBV.pgp Description: PGP signature
[OT] Debian package differences from upstream
[ Is debian-mentors the proper list for this type of packaging question? ] On my Woody box, courier-mta logs pop transactions with the tag "courierpop3login:". The logs of other courier users (freebsd, gentoo for example) have the string "pop3d:" It has been suggested that this is a change the Debian packager made. How can I verify this? I've done apt-get source and poked around a bit but could not tell where the Debian patches made to upstream live. Regards, Mark -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Suggestions for remote server monitoring
Jacob S wrote: On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 06:50:24 +0300 Peter Clark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: What software would people recommend for remotely monitoring a server? I'm not talking about intrustion detection and whatnot, just keeping an eye on things like CPU load, memory, bandwidth usage, etc. Bonus points if it uses something like RRD--graphs and charts are not just pretty eyecandy for me. apt-cache show nagios Nagios will keep track of all your services - from http, to e-mail, to ftp, etc. as well as the number of running processes, disk usage, etc. It will also e-mail you when it sees a problem. It has a webpage admin interface that's pretty informative. The only thing I think it doesn't do is monitor bandwidth for you; that would require a different program. If you have access to the data, it isn't hard to extend Nagios to handle custom monitoring tasks. Just write a script that returns a status code and some text. We have been using it for several servers at work for a while with good success. Likewise. Regards, Upayavira -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: postfix logs
On Tue, 04 Jan 2005 at 15:37:46 -0600, Rodney Richison wrote: > Am building a new server to replace one. (Trading Redhat for Debian) > > On the new machine, which is only recieving for one domain while in > testing, Logcheck is reporting that postfix has a problem looking up rbl's. > I am not running in a jail. (I still copied resolv.conf to postfix for > giggles. You copied it to /var/spool/postfix (or anything configured as queue_directory), right? > I changed my resolve to have simply this. > nameserver 127.0.0.1 > Any thoughts would be appreciated > dig @cbl.abuseat.org localhost returns results just fine. > > Dec 13 17:04:36 deblists postfix/smtpd[10805]: warning: > 187.170.46.206.cbl.abuseat.org: RBL lookup error: Host or domain name > not found. Name service error for name=187.170.46.206.cbl.abuseat.org > type=A: Host not found, try again > Dec 13 17:04:36 deblists postfix/smtpd[10805]: warning: > 187.170.46.206.dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net: RBL lookup error: Host or domain > name not found. Name service error for > name=187.170.46.206.dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net type=A: Host not found, try again > -- Tomasz Papszun SysAdm @ TP S.A. Lodz, Poland | And it's only [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.lodz.tpsa.pl/iso/ | ones and zeros. [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.ClamAV.net/ A GPL virus scanner -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Suggestions for remote server monitoring
What software would people recommend for remotely monitoring a server? I'm not talking about intrustion detection and whatnot, just keeping an eye on things like CPU load, memory, bandwidth usage, etc. Bonus points if it uses something like RRD--graphs and charts are not just pretty eyecandy for me. If you want to monitor resources on a remote system, try cacti. It has great graphing capability using RRD. One of my favorite features is being able to highlight a section of your graph and have it draw a new graph to zoom in on the area of concern. -- John Barton [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]