From tkdubiel at gmail.com Sat Sep 4 17:01:53 2021 From: tkdubiel at gmail.com (Tomasz Dubiel) Date: Sat, 4 Sep 2021 17:01:53 +0200 Subject: [naemon-users] How Naemon receives passive checks? Message-ID: We have Nagios installation, in which passive checks are getting received by NSCA. It is installed in xinetd on given port. How does Naemon handle it? Best regards, Tomek. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From tkdubiel at gmail.com Sat Sep 4 17:17:05 2021 From: tkdubiel at gmail.com (Tomasz Dubiel) Date: Sat, 4 Sep 2021 17:17:05 +0200 Subject: [naemon-users] Transition from the latest Nagios to Naemon Message-ID: Hello. We are using the latest Nagios on Debian. It basically relies on passive checks being sent by nsca (send_nsca). NSCA is installed in xinetd and receives the checks on the given port. How can I ensure I can move Nagios installation to Naemon with everything working? I've read that Naemon runs completely on its own user, directory and can be installed alongside Nagios. Is that for sure? We use Nagios with Thruk. Can I stop Nagios, install Naemon, try to move configuration files to Naemon, start Naemon, see how it's working and after that stop Naemon, start Nagios and Nagios will run without any problems? Installation of Naemon won't overwrite any Thruk, Nagios settings? I saw that the default directory of Thruk for Naemon is /etc/thruk, which is the same on our Nagios server for Thruk. I don't want anything to be overwritten (Thruk, apache2). Best regards, Tomek. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: