I've recently taken over our Nagios config so am still learning, but we
seem to do something similar using two services, they just have the same
description. You can't tell there are two services when looking at the
alerts or web pages.
(example syntax below, probably full or errors)
define s
If Nagwin doesn't do what you want, you can always run Nagios on a linux
virtual machine (assuming they have the free ram)
Robert
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*cores and CRIT to 1.5*cores (for
>> any/all load values). Seems to be working ok. Haven't had any complaints
>> from the NOC for excessive alerting.
>>
>> -f
>>
>> On Wed, 9 Mar 2011, Robert Eden wrote:
>>
>>> Date: Wed, 09 Mar 2011 14:33:13 -0600
I'm currently experimenting with using check_snmp_load.pl to alarm on system
overload.
Monitoring CPU usage is giving me a lot of false alarms due to their
instantaneous nature.
I'm getting good results by using the NETSL option to report load averages.
I'm setting '-c 99,4,10' to basically i