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Operating Systems Solaris How can i monitor solaris server by using any monitoring tools Post 302945387 by blackrageous on Thursday 28th of May 2015 05:00:27 PM
Old 05-28-2015
Snmpv3 as the agent hooked up to nagios as the manager. I would not use any of the nagios agents. Snmpv3 has a number of levels of security (traditionally snmp was not secure): you can encrypt the data and authenticate between manager and agent if you need high security If you don't need a graphic manager (like nagios), you could use snmp command line tools to query or receive unsolicited information from agents.
 

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icinga(8)							      nagios								 icinga(8)

NAME
icinga - network/systems status monitoring daemon SYNOPSIS
icinga [-h] [-v] [-s] [-d] <main_config_file> DESCRIPTION
icinga is a daemon program that monitors the status of various network accessible systems, devices, and more. For more information, please consult the online documentation available at http://www.icinga.org, or on your Icinga server's web page. OPTIONS
main_config_file The main configuration file. On debian systems this defaults to /etc/icinga/icinga.cfg -h A helpful usage message -v Reads all data in the configuration files and performs a basic verification/sanity check. Always make sure you verify your config data before (re)starting Icinga. -s Shows projected/recommended check scheduling information based on the current data in the configuration files. -d Starts Icinga in daemon mode (instead of as a foreground process). FILES
/etc/icinga Default configuration directory for Icinga AUTHOR
Icinga was started as Nagios by Ethan Galstad <nagios@nagios.org>. Icinga is maintained by the Icinga Project <info@icinga.org>. This manual page was written by sean finney <seanius@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux operating system (but it may be freely used, modified, and redistributed by others). sean finney March 2010 icinga(8)
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