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Zenoss Core 3.x Network and System Monitoring

You're reading from   Zenoss Core 3.x Network and System Monitoring A step-by-step guide to configuring, using, and adapting this free Open Source network monitoring system

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511582
Length 312 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Michael Badger Michael Badger
Author Profile Icon Michael Badger
Michael Badger
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Zenoss Core 3.x Network and System Monitoring
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Network and System Monitoring with Zenoss Core 2. Discovering Devices FREE CHAPTER 3. Device Setup and Administration 4. Monitor Status and Performance 5. Custom Monitoring Templates 6. Core Event Management 7. Collecting Events 8. Settings and Administration 9. Extending Zenoss Core with ZenPacks 10. Reviewing Built-in Reports 11. Writing Custom Device Reports Event Attributes
Device Attributes
Example snmpd.conf
Index

Meet the Zenoss Daemons


A daemon is a process that runs in the background on Unix systems and is comparable to what Windows calls a service. To see a list of Zenoss Core daemons, navigate to Advanced | Settings | Daemons. For each daemon, we see the process ID (PID), Log File, Configuration, State, and Actions, as shown in the following screenshot:

We've been working with these daemons from the very beginning through our actions within the Zenoss UI. As we look over the list of daemons, we can speculate about what some of these processes are responsible for. For example, zensyslog processes syslogs, zenmodeler creates the model of our devices based on the plugins defined for each device, and zenping monitors device availability.

We usually turn to the daemons when we're curious or troubleshooting. Click on the view log link to display the log file for each daemon. We can also find the logs by browsing the $ZENHOME/log directory.

If we want to override the default daemon behavior, we can edit...

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