System Monitoring Tool

Nilesh niluforalways at yahoo.com
Tue Mar 6 13:25:02 UTC 2007


Dear All,

Thanks for your valuable replies, I have install
Nagios with   
default configuration now I want to monitor the
Apache, VSFTP server but I am not able to monitor the
services.
Where should add and what for those services 
could anyone please help me

Thanks
Nilesh 
--- "Chris St. Pierre" <stpierre at NebrWesleyan.edu>
wrote:

> On Sat, 3 Mar 2007, Nilesh wrote:
> 
> > I would like to monitor remote machine for system
> > performance ( CPU usage,Memory,Hard Disk Space),
> > network connectivity ( to and from ) and database
> > connection .. etc
> > we are facing some problems like connection
> timeout or
> > out of memory
> 
> It sounds like you're not looking for a general
> network monitoring
> tool, which the other respondents have suggested,
> but something to
> help you find out why one certain server is borking.
>  If that's the
> case, then 'sar' will rock your face right off its
> hinges.
> 
> If you're looking for historical monitoring of these
> resources, for
> upgrade planning, etc., then Cacti is very slick.
> 
> If you're looking for event-based monitoring --
> i.e., something that
> will page you when you run out of memory or Tomcat
> dies -- Nagios is
> great.  The learning curve can be steep, but it's
> worth it in the
> end.  It also has several plugins to do historical
> monitoring.
> 
> Chris St. Pierre
> Unix Systems Administrator
> Nebraska Wesleyan University
> ----------------------------
> Never send mail to thobrux at nebrwesleyan.edu
> 
> -- 
> redhat-list mailing list
> unsubscribe
>
mailto:redhat-list-request at redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe
> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
> 



 
____________________________________________________________________________________
Bored stiff? Loosen up... 
Download and play hundreds of games for free on Yahoo! Games.
http://games.yahoo.com/games/front




More information about the redhat-list mailing list