[hobbit] resend: 2 questions

Gary Baluha gumby3203 at gmail.com
Fri Jul 18 21:30:02 CEST 2008


If that's the case, a fourth color would have the same limitation ;-)
(That's a lot of disk space if 100% full = gigs of free space)

With the lack of a finer granularity, the only option you have is to create
a custom script (client-side or server-side should work in this case) that
checks the _amount_ (as opposed to _percentage_) of free space, and set a
green/yellow/red threshold based on that.  You could then set up the Hobbit
alert rules like any other test, and it sounds like this would solve your
particular problem.

(a client-side script would probably be the easiest to set up, depending on
how many machines it would need to be propagated to)

On Fri, Jul 18, 2008 at 2:57 PM, michael nemeth <michael.nemeth at lmco.com>
wrote:

>  Sorry, disagree!
> I can have gigs of space left at 100%  not critical  at all !!!!  Its not
> "beyond critical"  its  fatal if you hit zero free !
> Either one needs finer granularity (isn't numerical limits in the work)  or
> a new  fatal color.  I have licenses that run near    100 % all the time
> too.
>
>
> Gary Baluha wrote:
>
> The philosophy Hobbit uses for alerting is that you're okay until you reach
> a certain threshold.  At that point (yellow) you still have to respond to
> the event and take care of it, before it becomes a bigger issue.  If it
> continues, then you reach another threshold where stuff can (and usually
> does) break.  At this point, you _need_ to respond to the event.
>
> What you are proposing is a fourth level such that you are "beyond
> critical".  This is a similar concept to being "fatally killed" (as opposed
> to just being "killed").  The trick to running a successful monitoring
> system is setting the thresholds in the first place (which is easier said
> than done), such that you don't have any false-positives, but even more
> importantly, no false-negatives (i.e. an alert you should have gotten, but
> didn't).
>
> Can you give a more specific example (in as far as I.P./security will
> allow) of what you are trying to accomplish?
>
> On Fri, Jul 18, 2008 at 11:52 AM, michael nemeth <michael.nemeth at lmco.com>
> wrote:
>
>>  One case I can think of is for even 100% you've  lots of but if you hits
>> 0 free you HAVE to do
>> some thing!
>>
>> Gary Baluha wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Jul 18, 2008 at 10:59 AM, Jeff Newman <jeffnewman75 at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> didn't see a reply, so thought i'd do a resend in case it got lost in
>>> the shuffle
>>>
>>> Hi All,
>>>
>>> Two questions:
>>>
>>> QUESTION #1: Is it possible to have a third color alert? Meaning:
>>>
>>> One of my customers wants a setup like this:
>>>
>>> Custom script runs on client server, reports:
>>>
>>> foo : 80
>>>
>>> for example.
>>>
>>> They want less than 85 to be green, 85-90 yellow, 90-95 red, and above
>>> 95 any color, say orange.
>>> So far as I can tell, I can only use green, yellow, and red for
>>> alerts, and blue and purple are reserved.
>>
>>
>> Currently, no.  But it might help to understand why 4 alert levels are
>> desired.
>>
>>  QUESTION #2:
>>>
>>> lets say #1 above is possible, so my script sends hobbit the status
>>> line based on the it sees, with the
>>> status of green, yellow, red, and orange. The hobbit server recieves
>>> it, and uses the NCV module to build the rrd etc..
>>> In hobbit-alerts.cfg to say does the SERVICE keyword work for custom
>>> NCV type columns?
>>
>>
>> The SERVICE tag in hobbit-alerts.cfg works for any column name, NCV or
>> otherwise.
>>
>>
>>
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.xymon.com/pipermail/xymon/attachments/20080718/0b201c16/attachment.html>


More information about the Xymon mailing list