08-21-2018
As it seems, Prometheus ist the current hot shit in monitoring(no offence). Some former colleagues of mine are very fond of that tech too.
My idea of Prometheus is, that it is real cool pile of nuts and bolts, where you can build most advanced planes of. Since know almost nothing about Prometheus, this is very likely a wrong view of mine.
Peaseant, if you like, I'd like to hear, what it is, that fascinates you about Prometheus.
I like check_mk because - staying at my metaphor - it IS a quite nice plane, which is ready to take off after single command installation.
Update
A short investigation of mine seems to confirm my current view. P. is a sophisticated and powerful piece of software which requires considerable learning effort to get it into work and then you may scalably process a whole lot of servers. But if you only have a fistful of servers that's a far too big gun for the task.
Last edited by stomp; 08-21-2018 at 09:33 AM..
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KSC(1) User Commands KSC(1)
NAME
ksc - Linux kernel module source checker
SYNOPSIS
ksc [ -d | --directory ] DIRECTORY
ksc [ -k | --ko ] FILE
OPTIONS
KSC accepts command-line arguments, and has both a long and short form usage. You can use either style or combine them to specify
options. When the tool is run with kernel module sources it checks for all four architectures, and when run with binary kernel modules, it
checks for the specific architecture for which the binary was built.
Valid RHEL whitelist releases are rhel6.0, rhel6.1, rhel6.2, rhel6.3, rhel6.4
-h, --help
show this help message and exit
-c CONFIG, --config=CONFIG
path to the local ksc.conf file. If not specified the tool tries to read from ~/ksc.conf and if that is also not found then from
/etc/ksc.conf
-d DIRECTORY, --directory=DIRECTORY
path to the directory
-i, --internal
to create text files to be used internally.
-k KO, --ko=KO
path to the ko file. You should either use -d or -k to run the KSC tool, but not both. If both -d and -k option is used at the
same time then only -d is used and the -k option is discarded.
-n RELEASENAME, --name=RELEASENAME
Red Hat release against which the bug is to be filed. Default value is 6.5
-p PREVIOUS, --previous=PREVIOUS
path to the previous resultset file and submit it as a bug to Red Hat Bugzilla.
-r RELEASE, --release=RELEASE
RHEL whitelist release used for comparison
-s, --submit
Submits the report to the Red Hat bugzilla (https://bugzilla.redhat.com). The credentials need to be in the /etc/ksc.conf file. The
tool will prompt for bugzilla password.
The configuration file looks like below:
[bugzilla]
user=user@redhat.com
partner=partner-name
partnergroup=partner-group
server=https://bugzilla.redhat.com/xmlrpc.cgi
-v, --version
Prints KSC version number
ksc - Version 0.9.11 Feb 2014 KSC(1)