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Nagios Core Administration Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Nagios Core Administration Cookbook Second Edition Over 90 hands-on recipes that will employ Nagios Core as the anchor of monitoring on your network

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785889332
Length 386 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Tom Ryder Tom Ryder
Author Profile Icon Tom Ryder
Tom Ryder
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Hosts, Services, and Contacts FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Commands and Plugins 3. Working with Checks and States 4. Configuring Notifications 5. Monitoring Methods 6. Enabling Remote Execution 7. Using the Web Interface 8. Managing Network Layout 9. Managing Configuration 10. Security and Performance 11. Automating and Extending Nagios Core Index

Finding a plugin

In this recipe, we'll follow a procedure to find a plugin appropriate to a specific monitoring task. We'll start by checking whether an existing plugin is already available to do just what we need. If we can't find one, we'll check whether we can use another more generic plugin to solve the problem. If we still find that nothing suits, we'll visit Nagios Exchange and search for an appropriate plugin.

Getting ready

You should have a Nagios Core 4.0 or newer server running with a few hosts and services that are configured already, and you'll need to have a particular service on one of these hosts, which you're not yet sure you need to monitor.

We'll use a simple problem as an example; we have a server named troy.example.net that runs an rsync(1) process that listens on port 873. We're already monitoring the host's network connectivity via PING, but we'd like to have Nagios Core check whether the rsync(1) server is available...

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