Sponsored Content
Operating Systems BSD how to monitor a freebsd machine using nagios Post 302299209 by RealFreeBSDTips on Thursday 19th of March 2009 12:43:03 PM
Old 03-19-2009
First off configure simple monitors like ping/HTTP (depending on what you're running on the FreeBSD server). Next, install te Nagios client tools on the FreeBSD machine for things like load, disk space, etc, and then configure your Nagios to check them as well. Configuring Nagios for freebsd is no different to configuring it for any other nix flavour
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Application crashes in FreeBSD 7.1 while working ok in FreeBSD 6.3

Hello there, My mulithreaded application (which is too large to represent the source code here) is crashing after installing FreeBSD 7.1-RELEASE/amd64. It worked properly on others machines (Dual Cores with 4GB of RAM - FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE/i386). The current machine has 2x Core 2 Duo... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Seenquev
1 Replies

2. IP Networking

Unable to ping freebsd machine using fully qualified domain name

hi all. am unable to ping a freebsd machine using fully qualified domain name from a windows machine. i have already set the fqdn for the machine. plz advise me. thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolatt
2 Replies

3. Red Hat

To find the LATEST file from a dir on REMOTE machine and SCP to local machine?

Hi All, URGENT - Please help me form a scipt for this: I need the LATEST file from a dir on REMOTE machine to be SCP'd to a dir on local machine. (and I need to execute this from local server) I know that the below cmd is used to find the LATEST file from a dir. But this command is not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: me_ub
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to monitor Machine Health (Project Doctortux) Input needed.

I have written little script to check the CPU performance of the machine. Request you to contribute your comments on the same. Feel free to add your own scriptlet to make it better. I have decided to call it as doctortux I have decided to run the script in two mode 1)Interactive.(Not... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: pinga123
4 Replies

5. Solaris

Solaris machine without monitor!!!

Dear friends, I have solaris machine which doesn't have a monitor attached to it, I access it from another computer using putty. I was wondering if it is possible that by the time the computer starts, I could see all those boot messages live on my putty terminal. And is there any terminal... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: gabam
8 Replies

6. Infrastructure Monitoring

freeBSD CPU monitoring using nagios

Hi all, I am not being able to monitor CPU of freeBSD machine from my CentOS server. I have used check_aix_cpu but always gives garbage value, seems wrong in scripting. i want to monitor CPU usage of my freeBSD machine from my centOS server. I am able to monitor many services of that machine... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsuwal
0 Replies

7. Linux

Unable to connect to Server machine from a client machine using ftp service

Hi, Could you please help me with the below issue.. I'm running RHEL6 OS on both server (192.168.0.10) and client machines (192.168.0.1). I'm trying to connect to server from the client machine using ftp service. I have installed vsftpd daemon on both the machines. I'm getting... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: raosr020
4 Replies

8. Infrastructure Monitoring

Nagios check dependent on second nagios server

We have a dual Nagios server setup. One is setup for internal server monitoring on our LAN, while the second Nagios server is hosted externally and is used for external checks only such as URL and ping checks form the WAN side. I was wondering if there is any way to setup cross dependencies... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: eugenes18t
1 Replies

9. Infrastructure Monitoring

Searching for Saas Monitor service which monitor my servers which are sitting in different providers

Sorry if this is the wrong forum Searching for Saas Monitor service which monitor my servers which are sitting in different providers . This monitor tool will take as less CPU as possible , and will send info about the server to main Dashboard. The info I need is CPU / RAM / my servers status (... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: umen
1 Replies
Nagios::Object::Config(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation			       Nagios::Object::Config(3pm)

NAME
Nagios::Object::Config - Perl objects to represent Nagios configuration DESCRIPTION
This is a module for parsing and processing Nagios object configuration files into perl objects. METHODS
new() Create a new configuration object. If Version is not specified, the already weak validation will be weakened further to allow mixing of Nagios 1.0 and 2.0 configurations. For now, the minor numbers of Version are ignored. Do not specify any letters as in '2.0a1'. To enable regular expression matching, use either the "regexp_matching" or "true_regexp_matching" arguments to new(). See enable_regexp_matching() and enable_true_regexp_matching() below. my $objects = Nagios::Object::Config->new(); my $objects = Nagios::Object::Config->new( Version => 1.2 ); my $objects = Nagios::Object::Config->new( Version => 2.0, regexp_matching => 1, true_regexp_matching => 2 ); parse() Parse a nagios object configuration file into memory. Although Nagios::Objects will be created, they are not really usable until the register() method is called. $parser->parse( "myfile.cfg" ); find_object() Search through the list of objects' names and return the first match. The second argument is optional. Always using it can considerably reduce the size of the list to be searched, so it is recommended. my $object = $parser->find_object( "localhost" ); my $object = $parser->find_object( "oracle", "Nagios::Service" ); find_objects() Search through the list of objects' names and return all the matches. The second argument is required. my @object_list = $parser->find_objects( "load", "Nagios::Service" ); find_objects_by_regex() Search through the list of objects' names and return a list of matches. The first argument will be evaluated as a regular expression. The second argument is required and specifies what kind of object to search for. The regular expressions are created by translating the "*" to ".*?" and "?" to ".". For now (v0.9), this code completely ignores Nagios's use_regexp_matching and use_true_regexp_matching and does full RE matching all the time. my @objects = $parser->find_objects_by_regex( "switch_*", "Nagios::Host" ); my @objects = $parser->find_objects_by_regex( "server0?", "Nagios::Host" ); all_objects_for_type() Obtain a reference to all objects of the specified Nagios object type. Usage: $objects = all_objects_for_type($object_type) Parameters: $object_type - A specific Nagios object type, i.e. "Nagios::Contact".. Returns: A reference to an array of references to all objects of the specified type associated with this configuration. Objects of this type added to the configuration following the call to this method _will_ be accessible through this reference after the fact. Note that the array reference by the return value may be empty. Example: my $contacts = $config->all_objects_for_type("Nagios::Contact"); if (scalar(@$contacts) == 0) { print "No contacts have yet been defined "; } else { foreach $contact (@$contacts) { ... } } all_objects() Returns an arrayref with all objects parsed from the config in it. my $everything = $config->all_objects; find_attribute() Search through the objects parsed thus far, looking for a particular textual name. When found, return that object. If called with two arguments, it will search through all objects currently loaded until a match is found. A third argument may specify the type of object to search for, which may speed up the search considerably. my $object = $parser->find_attribute( "command_name", "check_host_alive" ); my $object = $parser->find_attribute( "command_name", "check_host_alive", 'Nagios::Host' ); resolve() Resolve the template for the specified object. Templates will not work until this has been done. $parser->resolve( $object ); register() Examine all attributes of an object and link all of it's references to other Nagios objects to their respective perl objects. If this isn't called, some methods will return the textual name instead of a perl object. $parser->register( $host_object ); my $timeperiod_object = $host_object->notification_period; resolve_objects() Resolve all objects currently loaded into memory. This can be called any number of times without corruption. $parser->resolve_objects(); register_objects() Same deal as resolve_objects(), but as you'd guess, it registers all objects currently loaded into memory. $parser->register_objects(); enable_regexp_matching()/disable_regexp_matching() This correlates to the "use_regexp_matching" option in nagios.cfg. When this option is enabled, Nagios::Object::Config will translate "*" to ".*?" and "?" to "." and evaluate the result as a perl RE, anchored at both ends for any value that can point to multiple other objects (^ and $ are added to either end). $parser->enable_regexp_matching; $parser->disable_regexp_matching; enable_true_regexp_matching()/disable_true_regexp_matching() This correlates to the "use_true_regexp_matching" option in nagios.cfg. This is very similar to the enable_regexp_matching() option, but matches more data and allows more powerful RE syntax. These modules will allow you the full power of perl RE's - this is probably more than is available in Nagios, so don't blame me if something works here but not in Nagios (it's usually the other way around anyways). The generated RE's have the same translation as above, but do not have the anchors to ^ and $. This option always supercedes enable_regexp_matching. $parser->enable_true_regexp_matching; $parser->disable_true_regexp_matching; list_hosts(), list_hostgroups(), etc. Returns an array/arrayref of objects of the given type. $config->list_hosts $config->list_hostgroups $config->list_services $config->list_timeperiods $config->list_commands $config->list_contacts $config->list_contactgroups $config->list_hostdependencies $config->list_servicedependencies $config->list_hostescalations $config->list_hostgroupescalations $config->list_serviceescalations $config->list_servicegroups $config->list_hostextinfo $config->list_serviceextinfo AUTHOR
Al Tobey <tobeya@cpan.org> Contributions From: Lynne Lawrence (API & bugs) perl v5.12.4 2011-10-22 Nagios::Object::Config(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:01 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy