On Thu, 2010-06-17 at 03:25, Gius, Mark wrote:
> I had submitted a patch a while back that allows for distinguishing
> between warning and critical. I don't think it's going to be included
> in any 3.0.X releases, because it apparently breaks plugins that access
> Nagios' state data directly.
On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 3:15 PM, Kyle Bader wrote:
> Heyo,
>
> > I’m not too interested in OS file monitoring, mostly user shared files
> and
> > only on Windows. Has anyone done this with Nagios? Aside from watching
> the
> > event log for audit traps I mean.
>
> I haven't implemented it myself
Heyo,
> I’m not too interested in OS file monitoring, mostly user shared files and
> only on Windows. Has anyone done this with Nagios? Aside from watching the
> event log for audit traps I mean.
I haven't implemented it myself but stumbled upon this today and
remembered your post:
http://en.wik
On 17 June 2010 18:18, Gustavo Araujo wrote:
>
> Hello everyone.
>
> I´m monitoring a lot of servers in my nagios.
>
> Today I´m trying to use the "check_nt" plugin.
>
> But when i try to use it i always get the error message.
What does the error message say?
---
Gustavo Araujo wrote:
> Hello everyone.
>
> I´m using ubuntu-server 10.4 with nagios 3.2 (from repository)
>
> Follow down my configurations.
>
> /etc/nagios-plugins/config/nt.cfg:
>
> define command {
> command_namecheck_nt
> command_line/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nt
Hello everyone.
I´m using ubuntu-server 10.4 with nagios 3.2 (from repository)
Follow down my configurations.
/etc/nagios-plugins/config/nt.cfg:
define command {
command_namecheck_nt
command_line/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nt -H '$HOSTADDRESS$'
-v '$ARG1$'
}
define co
Hello everyone.
I´m monitoring a lot of servers in my nagios.
Today I´m trying to use the "check_nt" plugin.
But when i try to use it i always get the error message.
--
Gustavo Campos Araujo
--
ThinkGeek and WIRED's
Hello,
I'm trying to find the best way to monitor several user directories and
files to see who accessed, modified, renamed, or deleted them. File access
is also key because we want to know who is looking at files that they should
not. I know that I can deny access to directories but I would ha
Thanks Assaf
On Thu, Jun 17, 2010 at 5:50 PM, Assaf Flatto wrote:
> James Corteciano wrote:
> > Hi List,
> >
> > How to remove "Service Groups" item page on Nagios? I have no service
> > group define for this.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > James
> in the share directory of your nagios install there is
On 06/17/2010 09:17 AM, Matthew Angelo wrote:
> Hi Nagios Users,
>
> I have an *extremely* modular configuration. My template structure is well
> defined and when it comes to monitoring a host, it's as simple as including
> it as a Member of a Hostgroup.
>
> An example Linux server would be:
>
James Corteciano wrote:
> Hi List,
>
> How to remove "Service Groups" item page on Nagios? I have no service
> group define for this.
>
> Thanks
>
> James
in the share directory of your nagios install there is a file called
side.html
in it is the definition for the servicegroups view .
if you c
Apply the service to the hostgroup AND in the definition of the
service apply it ALSO to the hosts negating them (!) eg:
hostgroup_name HTTP
host_name !host-not-to-apply
Ciao,
Giorgio
Il giorno 17/giu/2010, alle ore 09.17, Matthew Angelo
ha scritto:
> Hi Nagios Users,
>
> I have an *ex
Hi Nagios Users,
I have an *extremely* modular configuration. My template structure is well
defined and when it comes to monitoring a host, it's as simple as including
it as a Member of a Hostgroup.
An example Linux server would be:
# cat ./linux/LINUXSERVER.cfg
define host{
use
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