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Multiple Host Instances

list Joshua Hunt
Wed, 20 Jul 2016 10:20:53 -0700
Message-Id: <CAA7d4yMz2RyFFdqp7jK1=user-58813b095cfe@xymon.invalid>

Awesome! Thank you! So I did those changes and now it is only the tests I
need that are showing up. However, what you mentioned at the end:

"The latter entries are there just for display purposes. The columns "info"
and "trends" are included by default. Those columns are specific to the
host and _not_ to the page. This means clicking on "info" on page L1 is
exactly the same as clicking on the link on page L2 or L3."

This is an issue. I'm hoping to be able to set it up so that when I click
on info for TEST1, it will only show testing1, instead of all three tests.
This is so that when I'm on the main view, I can see whether or not
individual systems on the same host are up and running, without all three
turning red when only one is failing.


On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 9:48 AM, John Thurston <user-ce4d79d99bab@xymon.invalid>
wrote:
On 7/20/2016 7:19 AM, Joshua Hunt wrote:
This set up does run all my custom tests properly, however, each setup
for "site.address.domain" runs /all three custom scripts, /(testing1
testing 2 & testing3),
Are the scripts actually *running* three times?

I believe Xymon builds a list of hosts, and then builds a list of tests
for each host. It then performs the tests defined for each host. I'd expect
your configuration to run each test once for the host, display all three
columns/tests on each page, and show all three test results on the host's
"info" page.

If what you want is a single test to appear on each page, then I suggest
something like this in your hosts.cfg:

####################
page L1 TEST1
group-only testing1
10.0.0.1  site.address.domain # prefer noping testip testing1 \
          testing2 testing3

page L2 TEST2
group-only testing2
0.0.0.0 site.address.domain #

page L3 TEST3
group-only testing3
0.0.0.0 site.address.domain #
##########################

The first defines the host, its IP, and all of its network tests. The
slash on the end is to handle the short lines of my email client. It
signifies a continuation of the line onto the next. You could split the
line, or just make it very long.

The latter entries are there just for display purposes. The columns "info"
and "trends" are included by default. Those columns are specific to the
host and _not_ to the page. This means clicking on "info" on page L1 is
exactly the same as clicking on the link on page L2 or L3.


--
   Do things because you should, not just because you can.

John Thurston    XXX-XXX-XXXX
user-ce4d79d99bab@xymon.invalid
Enterprise Technology Services
Department of Administration
State of Alaska