Submitting passive checks from a remote host with NSCA
In this recipe, we'll show you how to automate the submission of passive checks by a remote host using the example of a monitored host, ithaca.example.net
, to submit a passive check to a Nagios Core server with information about how its BACKUP
service is performing.
For example, if the backup process gets completed successfully, we configure the monitored host to submit a passive check result, specifying that the BACKUP
service should have the OK
status. However, if there were a problem with the backup, the monitored host could send a passive check result with a WARNING
or CRITICAL
status.
In both cases, Nagios Core does no checking of its own; it trusts the results submitted by its target host.
To accomplish this setup, we'll use the NSCA add-on. We'll install the NSCA server on the Nagios Core server and the NSCA client program send_nsca
on the monitored host.
Getting ready
Here, we assume that you have already followed the Allowing and...