On Sep 5, 2008, at 3:48 AM, J. Bakshi wrote:
> Assaf Flatto wrote:
>> when using inheritance from templates , there is a partial
>> inheritance, and any definition you put
>> in the service declaration overrides the template definitions .
>
> Great, can I simply add the *normal_check_interval*
Assaf Flatto wrote:
> First - please answer to the list directly , and not to me off list.
>
Sorry, but I have no intention to skip the list and send you direct mail.
It was my mistake. I'm really sorry
> second - you just copy the normal_check_interval directive and place it in
> the service
First - please answer to the list directly , and not to me off list.
second - you just copy the normal_check_interval directive and place it in the
service declaration
and define the interval you want for the service .
Assaf
On Friday 05 September 2008 08:48:52 J. Bakshi wrote:
> Assaf Flatt
Assaf Flatto wrote:
> when using inheritance from templates , there is a partial inheritance, and
> any definition you put
> in the service declaration overrides the template definitions .
> So if you want to define for a specific check interval for a service - just
> add that definition in
> t
when using inheritance from templates , there is a partial inheritance, and any
definition you put
in the service declaration overrides the template definitions .
So if you want to define for a specific check interval for a service - just add
that definition in
the service declaration and that
One more question has been knocking me since a few days.
In the host template cfg file *normal_check_interval* define the
duration of time after which the
define service will be activated to check the local/remote system. So
all the services follow the
same interval defined by *normal_check_inter