Hi all:
Running Nagios 3.3.1 on RH5.5 server.
In an earlier version I discovered that the Histogram reports would not
always run correctly. Specifically, running the report for a service.
The error message that appears is "It appears as though you are not
authorized to view information for
Hello,
Being relatively new to nagios I'm wondering what I should use for a reporting
tool.
I've looked at a few tools on NagiosExchange but I'm not sure if they fit the
bill, so I wanted to ask the list for opinions. And yes, I know what opinions
are like haha.
Here are my requirements:
1. Se
2009/8/25 :
> Is there a good tool that someone is using or can suggest that can provide
> below mentioned reports (or something closer)?
I used pnp4nagios to gather the data and drraw - the version at
http://github.com/perldork/drraw-pnp/tree/master - to do the
reporting.
In drraw you can amalg
Is there a good tool that someone is using or can suggest that can
provide below mentioned reports (or something closer)?
Report from 8/1/2009 to 8/25/2009
Host 1
CPU Usage Min. Max. Avg.
Memory Usage Min. Max. Avg.
Disk Usage Min. Max. Av
Thanks for your replies Tom, Marc and Anthony.
I have found the problem. Because of a misconfiguration issue, the
Nagios server was also doing active checks on the host...
Thanks for your answers, they have helped me understand better how to
debug a NSCA config.
--
Jean-Michel Philippon-Nadea
Hi,
this may be related to freshness checking.
check what your freshness check command is,
then test it to see what its output is.
IF you have the Hosts reporting every 1/2 hr
and nagios freshness testing every 1 hr,
that means if one check is accedenly droped before nagios processes it
( this
On May 15, 2009, at 2:29 PM, Jean-Michel Philippon-Nadeau wrote:
> Thanks for your reply Tom.
> I really appreciate that you take a few minutes of your time to help
> me
> on this one.
>
> Tom Wlodek wrote:
>> You may also check whether you run it by hand as the right user.
>> Common
>> mista
On Fri, 2009-05-15 at 15:29 -0400, Jean-Michel Philippon-Nadeau wrote:
> Thanks for your reply Tom.
> I really appreciate that you take a few minutes of your time to help me
> on this one.
>
> Tom Wlodek wrote:
> > You may also check whether you run it by hand as the right user. Common
> > mistak
Thanks for your reply Tom.
I really appreciate that you take a few minutes of your time to help me
on this one.
Tom Wlodek wrote:
> You may also check whether you run it by hand as the right user. Common
> mistake is to execute plugins or scripts as one user 9say, root) and
> then nagios executes
On Fri, 2009-05-15 at 15:06 -0400, Jean-Michel Philippon-Nadeau wrote:
> Thanks for the reply.
>
>
> I have already checked that my command works. The script reporting disk
> usage and sending it to Nagios already runs fine on the other 30+
> machines and running the script manually works just
Thanks for the reply.
Tom Wlodek wrote:
> "no output" message in nagios usually means: "Your script has an error".
> Tahe the script which is supposed to execute "notify-by-email" command
> and execute it by hand. It should fail and give an error msg. This will
> give you a hint.
I have already c
"no output" message in nagios usually means: "Your script has an error".
Tahe the script which is supposed to execute "notify-by-email" command
and execute it by hand. It should fail and give an error msg. This will
give you a hint.
Good luck.
Tom
On Fri, 2009-05-15 at 13:47 -0400, Jean-Michel
Hi,
I have a strange problem with our Nagios installation. One machine in
particular is always reporting a failure when everything should be OK.
The machines pushes the service's status with NCSA. Here is what I see
in my nagios.log file:
[...]
[1242408603] EXTERNAL COMMAND:
PROCESS_S
h
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 3:04 PM, Andreas Ericsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alex Dehaini wrote:
>
>> thanks,
>>
>> I was looking at a tool that can tell me the number of downtimes a host or
>> service had in a day, week, month or year. This will help when giving
>> clients discoun
Alex Dehaini wrote:
> thanks,
>
> I was looking at a tool that can tell me the number of downtimes a host or
> service had in a day, week, month or year. This will help when giving
> clients discounts.
>
> Nagios availability report doesn't tell you the number of downtimes a host
> or service had
Saw this and thought it might be useful to the list
http://www.sawmill.net/formats/nagios.html
Lex
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 2:13 PM, Alex Dehaini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> does it require ndoutils to work?
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 1:15 PM, Ian Orszaczki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> nagi
does it require ndoutils to work?
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 1:15 PM, Ian Orszaczki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> nagiosdigger loads nagios logs into mysql and has custom reports for those
> sort of things. I think the site has a demo you can play with :) Its a
> tool that has alot of potential.
>
>
nagiosdigger loads nagios logs into mysql and has custom reports for those
sort of things. I think the site has a demo you can play with :) Its a
tool that has alot of potential.
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 10:59 PM, Alex Dehaini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> thanks,
>
> I was looking at a tool that
thanks,
I was looking at a tool that can tell me the number of downtimes a host or
service had in a day, week, month or year. This will help when giving
clients discounts.
Nagios availability report doesn't tell you the number of downtimes a host
or service had in a day or a specific period. If n
Nagios Digger (http://www.vanheusden.com/nagiosdigger/) can provide some
interesting analysis of nagios alerts with a level of interactivity.
On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 10:20 PM, Andreas Ericsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alex Dehaini wrote:
> > Hi Guys,
> >
> > Are there extra plugins or any open
Alex Dehaini wrote:
> Hi Guys,
>
> Are there extra plugins or any open source or paid software that can
> generate nagios reports and display them in a friendly manner?
>
op5's reporting solution is released as opensource. It's currently being
adapted to Nagios 3. It's got shitty documentation o
Hi Guys,
Are there extra plugins or any open source or paid software that can
generate nagios reports and display them in a friendly manner?
--
Alex Dehaini
Developer
Site - www.alexdehaini.com
Email - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
Th
Hello
I can suggest check top process from nagiosexchange it does an excellent job
of finding
which process consumes the most memory and cpu
Hope it helped
Moshe Sharon
www.centerity.com
-
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On Fri, 20 Jul 2007, Jake Solid wrote:
> Nagios did a good job reporting a high level of load on one of my servers
> during the morning
>
> CRITICAL - load average: 59.62, 31.70, 13.53
>
> Then it sent a recovery alert showing the load as:
>
> OK - load average: 1.72, 1.72, 4.56
>
> How can I find
on Nagios
Exchange, or try google.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jake
Solid
Sent: 20 July 2007 16:25
To: nagios-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [Nagios-users] Nagios reporting Load Usage
Nagios did a good job reporting a hig
Nagios did a good job reporting a high level of load on one of my servers
during the morning
CRITICAL - load average: 59.62, 31.70, 13.53
Then it sent a recovery alert showing the load as:
OK - load average: 1.72, 1.72, 4.56
How can I find out what exactly put the load a that high level?
Rega
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