check_logfiles 2.5.5.1 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications Infrastructure Monitoring check_logfiles 2.5.5.1 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 02-02-2009
check_logfiles 2.5.5.1 (Default branch)

check_logfiles is a plugin for Nagios which checks logfiles for defined patterns. It is capable of detecting logfile rotation. If you tell it how the rotated archives look, it will also examine these files. Unlike check_logfiles, traditional logfile plugins were not aware of the gap which could occur, so under some circumstances they ignored what had happened between their checks. A configuration file is used to specify where to search, what to search, and what to do if a matching line is found. License: GNU General Public License (GPL) Changes:
Native support for the Windows EventLog was added (which requires the Win32-Perl-Module). Multiline-output was added. Pathnames can now contain blanks. Image

Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

1 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Infrastructure Monitoring

check_logfiles HPUX

Hello, I have to monitoring a log in a machine HPUX B.11.00. I defined config file: $seekfilesdir = '/opt/tools/capmau/log'; @logs = ( { tag => 'sybase', logfile => '/opt/sybase/ASE-12_0/install/errorlog', criticalpatterns =>, }, ); and defined in nrpe.cfg: ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: msanbrug
0 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
vrotate(1Vi)															      vrotate(1Vi)

NAME
vrotate - rotate an image SYNOPSIS
vrotate [-angle angle] [- option ...] [infile] [outfile] DESCRIPTION
vrotate rotates each input image by the specified angle, producing a file of output images. The rotation is done by first rotating the image by a multiple of 90 degrees (using flips and transpositions) to an angle nearest to the specified angle, and then by completing the rotation using Alan Paeth's three-shear method. Because each pixel in the rotated image is a weighted average of the corresponding pixels in the original image, the set of colors (or gray shades) used by the original image will not be preserved in the rotated image. In general, the edges of the rotated image will not be parallel to the vertical and horizontal axes. In such cases, the output image will be the smallest rectangular region containing the whole rotated image. Portions of the output image not covered by the rotated image will be filled with zeros. COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
vrotate accepts the following options in any order: -help Prints a message describing options. -in infile Specifies a Vista data file containing the input images. -out outfile Specifies where to write the output images as a Vista data file. -angle angle Specifies the angle of rotation in degrees. Positive values rotate counterclockwise; negative ones rotate clockwise. Default: 90. Input and output files can be specified on the command line or allowed to default to the standard input and output streams. SEE ALSO
VImage(3Vi), Vista(7Vi) ``A Fast Algorithm for General Raster Rotation'' by Alan Paeth, Graphics Interface '86, pp. 77-81. AUTHOR
Daniel Ko <ko@cs.ubc.ca> Vista Version 1.12 24 April 1993 vrotate(1Vi)