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Learning Nagios 4

You're reading from   Learning Nagios 4 For system administrators who want a fast, easily understood introduction to Nagios 4, this is the perfect book. Get to grips with the latest version of this powerful monitoring tool and transform the stability of your whole system.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783288649
Length 400 pages
Edition Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Wojciech Kocjan Wojciech Kocjan
Author Profile Icon Wojciech Kocjan
Wojciech Kocjan
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Learning Nagios 4
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Introducing Nagios 2. Installing Nagios 4 FREE CHAPTER 3. Using the Nagios Web Interface 4. Using the Nagios Plugins 5. Advanced Configuration 6. Notifications and Events 7. Passive Checks and NSCA 8. Monitoring Remote Hosts 9. Monitoring using SNMP 10. Advanced Monitoring 11. Programming Nagios 12. Using the Query Handler Index

Sending commands to Nagios


Nagios offers a very powerful mechanism to receive events and commands from external applications—the external commands pipe. This is a pipe file created on a filesystem that Nagios uses to receive incoming messages. The filename is rw/nagios.cmd, and it is located in the directory passed as the localstatedir option during compilation. If you have followed the compilation and installation instructions given in Chapter 2, Installing Nagios 4, the filename will be /var/nagios/rw/nagios.cmd.

The communication does not use any authentication or authorization. The only requirement is to have write access to the pipe file. An external command file is usually writable by the owner and the group; usually, the group used is nagioscmd. If you want a user to be able to send commands to the Nagios daemon, simply add that user to this group.

A small limitation of the command pipe is that there is no way to get any results, and so, it is not possible to send query commands to...

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