> On Dec 4, 2014, at 2:06 PM, Chris Jones wrote:
>
> This makes no sense. I don't believe I've oversubscribed the number of
> gmond's on my server (around 150 maybe?). The gmetad server is running
> RHEL 6.2, and my two gmond clients are running RHEL 6.5. The strange
> thing is, it appears
Are you afraid that we could see performance data of the Curiosity? :D
First of all I would really suggest you read the "Monitoring with Ganglia"
book (2012). It answers many questions and solves major problems.
About your issue:
1. How do you set "deaf" and "mute" in gmond nodes?
2. How many li
Being that I work at NASA, I'd rather not put entire files out there
with names of hosts and ports and the like. :) My initial post had in
it part of the gmond config's.
My datasource line in my gmetad.conf file (for this one port) is simply
something like this:
data_source "my_name" gmond_
Plz share your configs via pastbin
Cheers,
On December 4, 2014 9:06:08 PM CET, Chris Jones
wrote:
>
>I'm still racking my brain with this problem I'm having. I've even ran
>
>'tcpdump -i any port 8204' on my gmetad server and watched the
>traffic when I've got two gmond clients sending
I'm still racking my brain with this problem I'm having. I've even ran
'tcpdump -i any port 8204' on my gmetad server and watched the
traffic when I've got two gmond clients sending out multicast
packets on port 8204 I can see handshaking between my server and *one*
client. The other cli
I'm still racking my brain with this problem I'm having. I've even
ran 'tcpdump -i any port 8204' on my gmetad server and watched the
traffic when I've got two gmond clients sending out multicast
packets on port 8204 I can see handshaking between my server and
*
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