The output of check_disk doesn't seem to be making any sense. Can
someone tell me what's going on here? It looks like it's got it's
gigabytes and terabytes confused, but something is clearly wrong.
Using the -u GB or -u MB switch doesn't help any.
Oh, and this is on a PPC XServe MAC
Hi all,
Okay, here's the problem. I set up nagios to send emails to our RT
system for certain problems. For example:
define serviceescalation{
host_name server
service_description Uptime
contact_groups admins,rt
On May 4, 2009, at 1:46 PM, Marc Powell wrote:
You can't. You can, however, filter out the $NOTIFICATIONTYPE$ of
'ACKNOWLEDGMENT' in the notification script you are calling for that
contact.
Could you provide me with more information on this?
And where did you tell nagios what notification
On Mar 13, 2009, at 5:25 PM, Keith Erekson wrote:
I found this in my mailing list archives, while looking for
information about check_ntp_peer. As far as I can tell, nobody ever
answered you...
I was just looking into this exact problem. If you check the verbose
output, you will
Hello,
I have a kind of custom nagios setup, so maybe this is a byproduct of
that...
I had to reboot my nagios server today, and it didn't come right back
up. By the time it did, it realized that the service checks weren't
fresh, and started sending out lots of notifications. I stopped
On Mar 23, 2009, at 10:52 PM, Charlie Reddington wrote:
You have checked your /var/spool/mqueue and /var/spool/clientmqueue
right?
I have had a few million emails queued up there before.
They were in /var/spool/clientmqueue.
Thanks Charlie!
I've got Nagios monitoring several Macs, and I'd like to know that NTP
is running okay on them, since if the time drifts by a few minutes,
Kerberos Authentication stops working.
It seems that some of the newest Macs work okay, pretty much any of
the Intel Macs running 10.5 Leopard work, but