On 13 May 2011 09:01, Andre Kruger wrote:
> I just read how non-sticky acknowledgments work from 3.2.3. I think this
> solves my problem.
>
> http://wiki.nagios.org/index.php/Acknowledgementlogic
Neat! Thanks I hadn't noticed that.
-
Yes, it was to stop the notifications, but I would then like to receive
notifications again when the service that was acknowledged goes into a critical
state. But non-sticky acknowledgments has solved this problem for me.
I think I am going to change my default to non-sticky.
>>> Yueh-Hung Liu
Andre Kruger [mailto:andre.kru...@trw.com]
Sent: 13 May 2011 08:35
To: nagios-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [Nagios-users] Notification after Acknowledgment
Hi
Can you guys please give me your input on how you handle the following
situation.
Lets take monitoring a disk as an example. Fo
what's the purpose of acknowledging the service problems?
just to suppress the notifications or ?
On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 3:34 PM, Andre Kruger wrote:
> Hi
>
> Can you guys please give me your input on how you handle the following
> situation.
>
> Lets take monitoring a disk as an example. F
Hi
Thanks for that.
I just read how non-sticky acknowledgments work from 3.2.3. I think this solves
my problem.
http://wiki.nagios.org/index.php/Acknowledgementlogic
Assuming you have a service with notifications enabled for all states with a
max retry attempts of 1, these are the notifi
On 13 May 2011 08:34, Andre Kruger wrote:
> Hi
>
> Can you guys please give me your input on how you handle the following
> situation.
>
> Lets take monitoring a disk as an example. For arguments sake lets say when
> the disk reaches 80% capacity I send out a warning and at 90% I send out a
> crit
Hi
Can you guys please give me your input on how you handle the following
situation.
Lets take monitoring a disk as an example. For arguments sake lets say when the
disk reaches 80% capacity I send out a warning and at 90% I send out a
critical. There is also a Service Escalation configured