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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring Event processing & machine learning in monitoring system Post 302857067 by zaxxon on Wednesday 25th of September 2013 11:26:42 AM
Old 09-25-2013
I had bad experience with expensive tools in the past, where OS names were listed in the white papers and sales publications, even in the header of scripts, which simply did not work or were a pain to get to work.
Some monitoring solutions can't come out of the box as some demands for applications etc. is far too special so you often have a lot of coding or at least configuration works.

Some companies even charge insane prices for additional probes/modules/plugins/spys (whatever they call them), that are so badly programmed or simple, you could think they are making a bad joke.
I would always setup a detailed Prove of Concept, invite the company and have detailed things tested, before buying anything. The sales often promise a lot, while the techs take the pain or the hotline/support is pushed to the front to block off the customer more or less.
Nagios, as a free tool for example, offers a lot of plugins that cover most things, but the plugins you can get for free are from very good to flawed. Again, sometimes you have to write stuff on your own but can offer them for exchange, if allowed Smilie

my 2 cents
 

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COLLECTD(1)							     collectd							       COLLECTD(1)

NAME
collectd - System statistics collection daemon SYNOPSIS
collectd [options] DESCRIPTION
collectd is a daemon that receives system statistics and makes them available in a number of ways. The main daemon itself doesn't have any real functionality apart from loading, querying and submitting to plugins. For a description of available plugins please see "PLUGINS" below. OPTIONS
Most of collectd's configuration is done using using a configfile. See collectd.conf(5) for an in-depth description of all options. -C <config-file> Specify an alternative config file. This is the place to go when you wish to change collectd's behavior. The path may be relative to the current working directory. -t Test the configuration only. The program immediately exits after parsing the config file. A return code not equal to zero indicates an error. -T Test the plugin read callbacks only. The program immediately exits after invoking the read callbacks once. A return code not equal to zero indicates an error. -P <pid-file> Specify an alternative pid file. This overwrites any settings in the config file. This is thought for init-scripts that require the PID-file in a certain directory to work correctly. For everyday-usage use the PIDFile config-option. -f Don't fork to the background. collectd will also not close standard file descriptors, detach from the session nor write a pid file. This is mainly thought for 'supervising' init replacements such as runit. -h Output usage information and exit. PLUGINS
As noted above, the real power of collectd lies within it's plugins. A (hopefully complete) list of plugins and short descriptions can be found in the README file that is distributed with the sourcecode. If you're using a package it's a good bet to search somewhere near /usr/share/doc/collectd. There are two big groups of plugins, input and output plugins: o Input plugins are queried periodically. They somehow acquire the current value of whatever they where designed to work with and submit these values back to the daemon, i. e. they "dispatch" the values. As an example, the "cpu plugin" reads the current cpu-counters of time spent in the various modes (user, system, nice, ...) and dispatches these counters to the daemon. o Output plugins get the dispatched values from the daemon and does something with them. Common applications are writing to RRD-files, CSV-files or sending the data over a network link to a remote box. Of course not all plugins fit neatly into one of the two above categories. The "network plugin", for example, is able to send (i. e. "write") and receive (i. e. "dispatch") values. Also, it opens a socket upon initialization and dispatches the values when it receives them and isn't triggered at the same time the input plugins are being read. You can think of the network receive part as working asynchronous if it helps. In addition to the above, there are "logging plugins". Right now those are the "logfile plugin" and the "syslog plugin". With these plugins collectd can provide information about issues and significant situations to the user. Several loglevels let you suppress uninteresting messages. Starting with version 4.3.0 collectd has support for monitoring. This is done by checking thresholds defined by the user. If a value is out of range, a notification will be dispatched to "notification plugins". See collectd.conf(5) for more detailed information about threshold checking. Please note that some plugins, that provide other means of communicating with the daemon, have manpages of their own to describe their functionality in more detail. In particular those are collectd-email(5), collectd-exec(5), collectd-perl(5), collectd-snmp(5), and collectd-unixsock(5) SIGNALS
collectd accepts the following signals: SIGINT, SIGTERM These signals cause collectd to shut down all plugins and terminate. SIGUSR1 This signal causes collectd to signal all plugins to flush data from internal caches. E. g. the "rrdtool plugin" will write all pending data to the RRD files. This is the same as using the "FLUSH -1" command of the "unixsock plugin". SEE ALSO
collectd.conf(5), collectd-email(5), collectd-exec(5), collectd-perl(5), collectd-snmp(5), collectd-unixsock(5), types.db(5), <http://collectd.org/> AUTHOR
Florian Forster <octo@verplant.org> 5.1.0 2012-04-02 COLLECTD(1)
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