server side.
Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device
-Original Message-
From: "Jones, Stuart"
Date: Mon, 30 Aug 2010 09:29:00
To: Nagios Users List
Reply-To: Nagios Users List
Subject: Re: [Nagios-users] Bonding/Teaming
:55 PM
To: Nagios Users List
Subject: [Nagios-users] Bonding/Teaming Monitoring
My current situation is that I have 2 core switches (Cisco 2960G's) in a
failover capability. Every one of our servers (Windows, RHEL & Solaris)
has NIC bonding/teaming enabled and obviously one switch serves net
did you google for check_bonding+Nagios ?
at least for bonding on different linuxes,
you can monitor the bonding state.
regards, peter
Am 17.08.2010 07:55, schrieb Robert Jackson:
> My current situation is that I have 2 core switches (Cisco 2960G’s) in a
> failover capability. Every one of our se
might look at simple event correlator and do it via syslog traps. don't
ask me how to do it. as it's on my list of things to do myself.
Scott
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 10:55 PM, Robert Jackson wrote:
> My current situation is that I have 2 core switches (Cisco 2960G’s) in a
> failover capabilit
On 17 August 2010 06:55, Robert Jackson wrote:
> My current situation is that I have 2 core switches (Cisco 2960G’s) in a
> failover capability. Every one of our servers (Windows, RHEL & Solaris) has
> NIC bonding/teaming enabled and obviously one switch serves network access
> to NIC #0, the othe
My current situation is that I have 2 core switches (Cisco 2960G's) in a
failover capability. Every one of our servers (Windows, RHEL & Solaris)
has NIC bonding/teaming enabled and obviously one switch serves network
access to NIC #0, the other switch serves network access to NIC #1.
I'm looking f