Switching to passive checks instead of active ones?

Holger Weiss holger at CIS.FU-Berlin.DE
Fri Oct 5 14:26:01 CEST 2007


* Andreas Ericsson <ae at op5.se> [2007-10-05 10:42]:
> Ivan Fetch wrote:
> >     I'm looking for folks doing something like this, or reasons why this 
> > might be a particularly bad idea.  Perhaps Nagios triggering checks 
> > has so much sanity built in, that moving checks to the 
> > push-to-Nagios model is a bad idea?

We use NSCA for a large number of service checks (we don't use NRPE) and
it works just fine for us.

> It's not a particularly bad idea, but you'll have to accept that you don't
> get nagios' "check max_check_attempts times before sending alerts" logic,
> unless you implement it yourself.

You do get that logic, you can specify max_check_attempts just as for
active checks.  You just don't get a retry_check_interval different from
the normal_check_interval unless you implement it yourself.  For us,
that's not a problem, as we don't want a different retry_check_interval
anyway (for most checks, we submit check results once a minute).  But if
you rely on this Nagios feature, that's a real drawback of NSCA, yes.

Holger

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc.
Still grepping through log files to find problems?  Stop.
Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser.
Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/
_______________________________________________
Nagios-users mailing list
Nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nagios-users
::: Please include Nagios version, plugin version (-v) and OS when reporting any issue. 
::: Messages without supporting info will risk being sent to /dev/null





More information about the Users mailing list