Sounds line the Nagios process isn't running.
-wil
On Jun 12, 2007, at 3:09 AM, Lalita Drolia wrote:
> --
> ---
> This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express
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There is the "negate" plugin.
bash-3.1# ./negate --help
negate (nagios-plugins 1.4.3) 1.24
Copyright (c) 2002-2004 Nagios Plugin Development Team
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Negates the status of a plugin (returns OK for CRITICAL, and
Blind I am :-)
Thank you!
On Jun 7, 2007, at 11:18 PM, Anthony Mendoza wrote:
> Click "Downtime" and then the Trash can icon to the right of the
> service/host you want to cancel.
>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> [mailto:
IIRC, there used to be a "Cancel Downtime" link, am I blind or did
this go away?
How do you cancel scheduled downtime?
-
This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express
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check_ping is a pig :)
It's okay for services since they can run in parallel but host checks
are serialized which can b0rk your whole system if many hosts go down
at the same time.
A faster way to do this is to use check_icmp, which does 5 pings at
the same time (concurrently) as opposed to
where everthing went wrong and all services notifications
> showing wrong how to fix this problem.
>
> thanks for your time to help me on this
>
> Wil Schultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Some people use an init script, any idea where yours is? How are you
> starting nagios?
Some people use an init script, any idea where yours is? How are you
starting nagios?
Command would be:
/path/to/nagios.init restart
Also there is an option via the web, under process info, to restart
the nagios process.
-wil
On Jun 1, 2007, at 6:07 PM, Sekhar wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I want to re
that also
>
> Do you think if i can empty the nagios log file where nagios is
> writiting the issue will disapear??
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On 5/30/07, Wil Schultz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Considering
> your previous post clearly shows that you are out of
> di
Considering your previous post clearly shows that you are out of
diskspace it would be safe to assume that you would have other
problems, like empty logfiles since there is no room on the disk to
write the logfile.
Fix the disk issue and other problems will magically start to
disappear...
I would suspect that mysql has binary logging turned on, this can
create many files that are around 1G.
Use: du -sh * starting at / (root) to find where your problem lies,
if it's mysql they will be in the form of mysql-bin.XXX (or something
similar)
You obviously will want to backup this d
Do the logs show the notification as being sent?
-wil
On May 23, 2007, at 3:53 PM, Richard Solid wrote:
>
> I have everything configured and working with nagios except the
> notifications. How can I fully test this?
>
> Mail is found in the path and I can send emails manually from the
> mach
Meh, call me a quitter... Brought it to 2.9 and it's working like I'm
used to :-)
Thanks for the time, but apparently 3.x is going to take some reading...
-wil
On May 22, 2007, at 9:45 PM, Thomas Guyot-Sionnest wrote:
> On 23/05/07 12:11 AM, Wil Schultz wrote:
>> On May 2
On May 22, 2007, at 9:08 PM, Wil Schultz wrote:
> Here is 3 minutes of the log, after i plonked a host:
>
> [1179892722] HOST ALERT: myhost;DOWN;SOFT;1;CRITICAL - 1.1.1.1: rta
> nan, lost 100%
> [1179892722] SERVICE ALERT: myhost;ciscoMemory;UNKNOWN;SOFT;
> 1;ERROR: Descri
onsd,r
contact_groups email
register0
}
On May 20, 2007, at 5:45 PM, Wil Schultz wrote:
> I've just installed 3.0a4 and am testing the alerting.
>
> I plonk a host, and I get the HOST DOWN email correctly, but when I
> bring the host bac
I've just installed 3.0a4 and am testing the alerting.
I plonk a host, and I get the HOST DOWN email correctly, but when I
bring the host back up instead of getting the HOST UP email, I get
another HOST DOWN email.
Anyone else seeing this? Or have a suggestion?
FreeBSD 6.2, Nagios 3.0a4
ema
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