Introduction
Once hosts and services are configured in Nagios Core, its behavior is primarily dictated by the checks it makes to ensure that hosts and services are operating as expected, and the state it concludes these hosts and services must be in as a result of those checks.
How often it's appropriate to check hosts and services,
and on what basis it's appropriate to flag a host or service as having problems, depends very much on the nature of the service and the importance of it running all the time. If a host on the other side of the world is being checked with PING, and during busy periods its round trip time is over 100ms, then this may not actually be a cause for concern at all, and perhaps not something to even flag a WARNING
state over, let alone a CRITICAL
one.
However, if the same host were on the local network where it would be appropriate to expect round trip times of less than 10ms, then a round trip time of more than 100ms could well be considered a grave cause for concern...