I would not compare binlog positions. I would use mk-heartbeat from
Maatkit. It tells the truth in a much simpler and more direct way.
Instead of checking things that indicate your data is being
replicated, just replicate some data and check the data itself.
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I'd just write a perl script to do it and return the appropriate status
code/message to nagios. Shouldn't be hard at all. PhP or any language that
can talk to mysql would work, too. You just mentioned the position, you'll
have to compare the names of the binlog files as well: position 100 in fil
You could try this:
http://www.consol.de/opensource/nagios/check-mysql-health
(in German but should be self-explanatory).
Cheers,
Andrew
-Original Message-
From: Gabriel - IP Guys [mailto:gabr...@impactteachers.com]
Sent: 15 April 2009 10:12
To: replicat...@lists.mysql.com
Cc: mysql@l