[Xymon] [External] powershell client data file excessive Port info enhancement request

Phil Crooker Phil.Crooker at orix.com.au
Thu Aug 30 02:39:17 CEST 2018


A number of servers (HP, IBM, Dell) have temperature monitors which may use SNMP, or may have management software you could install on the windows OS.


Switches, air conditioners, etc often have temperature sensors.


The sensor may be monitoring internal temp but if that is the only option, you could just change the thresholds, so if the ambient temp is say 20 (celsius) and internal is 33, you could trigger alerts on the internal temp over 40.


Another option is a USB thermometer - haven't used it myself but may work.


hope that helps...

________________________________
From: Xymon <xymon-bounces at xymon.com> on behalf of Timothy Williams <tlwilliams4 at vcu.edu>
Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2018 1:55:11 AM
To: zak.beck at accenture.com
Cc: xymon at xymon.com
Subject: Re: [Xymon] [External] powershell client data file excessive Port info enhancement request

Great, thanks!

For now, this is what I added to xymonclient.ps1
in the function XymonClientConfig($cfglines) [and have a corresponding entry "netstat_listening" in clientconfig.cfg]
                -or $l -match '^netstat_listening' `
and in the function XymonPorts
    if ($script:clientlocalcfg_entries.ContainsKey('netstat_listening'))
       {
       "[ports]"
        netstat -an | findstr LISTENING}
    Else{
       "[ports]"
        netstat -an }
        WriteLog "XymonPorts finished."
        }

Also, we recently had a CRAC unit go down in a remote location. On the server team, we were able to see temperature warnings on the Linux boxes, but Windows is silent on this. Any thoughts on how to monitor salient temperatures in Windows? (CPU, mainboard, fans, etc?)

Timothy L. Williams

Operating Systems Analyst
Virginia Commonwealth University Computer Center
900 East Main St. STE 1141 Richmond VA 23219
804-828-0556<tel:(804)%20828-0556>

[https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0B2qQ4YudApjzSEtfOGhrMXdLcU0&revid=0B2qQ4YudApjzMnZncGl3bm4yT1E2dkxnZEFzazRvN1dWbFVRPQ]

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On Mon, Aug 13, 2018 at 7:43 AM Beck, Zak <zak.beck at accenture.com<mailto:zak.beck at accenture.com>> wrote:

Hi



Yes, sounds very feasible and worthwhile. I’ll look to add this in the next week or two.



Thanks



Zak



From: Xymon <xymon-bounces at xymon.com<mailto:xymon-bounces at xymon.com>> On Behalf Of Timothy Williams
Sent: Monday, 6 August 2018 15:56
To: xymon at xymon.com<mailto:xymon at xymon.com>
Subject: [External] [Xymon] powershell client data file excessive Port info enhancement request



We are in the process of migrating 300+ servers from BBWin client to powershell client. All works well, except our anti-virus servers create a huge data file that gets truncated, causing FILES, SVCS, WHO to go Purple. We have set the MAXMSG_STATUS AND MAXMSG_CLIENT Xymon server parameters to 1024, but the AV servers still blow past that. The PORTS function reports all of the TCP ESTABLISHED and TIME_WAIT connections for every AV client on servers and desktops. We only need to know that the AV server is proper LISTENING. Using Slimmode and excluding the Ports section doesn't work as we do need to know the listening ports.



I have modified the Xymonclient.ps1 script as follows to limit the data in the function XymonPorts

"[ports]" netstat -an

to:

    "[ports]"

    netstat -an | findstr LISTENING



Rather than manually editing each new version of script released, I would rather have a client-local.cfg entry that would turn this on per group similar to what you have for IFSTAT. Less desirable would be a statement in Xymonclient_config.XML, or as a mode in Slimmode.

Does this sound like a doable enhancement?



Timothy L. Williams

Operating Systems Analyst
Virginia Commonwealth University Computer Center

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