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Learning Nagios

You're reading from   Learning Nagios A beginners guide on Nagios

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785885952
Length 414 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Wojciech Kocjan Wojciech Kocjan
Author Profile Icon Wojciech Kocjan
Wojciech Kocjan
Piotr Beltowski Piotr Beltowski
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Piotr Beltowski
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Nagios FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing Nagios 4 3. Configuring Nagios 4. Using the Built-in Web Interface 5. Using Additional Interfaces 6. Using the Nagios Plugins 7. Advanced Configuration 8. Notifications and Events 9. Passive Checks and NRDP 10. Monitoring Remote Hosts 11. Monitoring Using SNMP 12. Advanced Monitoring 13. Programming Nagios

Understanding escalations


A common problem with resolving problems is that a host or a service may have blurred ownership. Often there is no single person responsible for a host or service, which makes things harder. It is also typical to have a service with subtle dependencies on other things, which by themselves are small enough not to be monitored by Nagios. In such a case, it is good to include lower management in the escalations so that they are able to focus on problems that haven't been resolved in a timely manner.

Here is a good example—a database server might fail because a small Perl script that is run prior to actual start to clean things up has entered an infinite loop. The owner of this machine gets notified. But the question is, who should be fixing it? The script owner? Or perhaps the database administrator? Often this may end up in different teams assuming someone else should resolve it—programmers waiting on database administrators and vice versa.

In such cases, escalations...

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