In <user-cdc7fe58fab6@xymon.invalid> Loris Serena <user-718e3cd16d56@xymon.invalid> writes:
Q1.
Is there a way to avoid the Solaris 10 virtual filesystems
(i.e./etc/dfs/sharetab) from being listed/graphed in the disk test?
(possibly via conf setting on the Xymon client, rather than on the server)
The hobbitclient-sunos.sh script in ~xymon/client/bin/ does some
work to filter out the not-so-interesting filesystems. You can
tweak that shell-script to do what you want - if it makes sense
to ignore them everywhere, then please send me your modifications.
Also, the web page shows seven filesystems, whereas the RRD graphs show nine
of them...
(those 7 plus /devices and /var/run). How do I get rid of them?
Delete the corresponding ~xymon/data/rrd/HOSTNAME/disk,<whatever>.rrd
files.
Q3.
Is there a functionality similar to the BB www/notes html files, and a
template that matches the current xymon fonts/style?
Or, where can I add custom info about my monitored nodes? I.e. serial
numbers, helpdesk contacts, etc...
Xymon supports the same notes-files as BB. So just put the notes-files
in ~xymon/server/www/notes/
Q4.
I have had to enable ftp on one Solaris 10 box to allow it to just ftp
itself (don't ask!), and therefore I configured /etc/hosts.allow as
follows:
[actarus]$ grep ftp /etc/hosts.allow
in.ftpd: actarus
[actarus]$
Now, on the bb-hosts on the Xymon server, if I put:
10.11.12.13 actarus # http://actarus/ ssh !telnet !ftp !smtp
it gets RED, telling me that FTP is up
and if I put
10.11.12.13 actarus # http://actarus/ ssh !telnet ftp !smtp#
it gets YELLOW with the following message:
Service ftp on actarus is not OK : Unexpected service response
In fact, if I ftp actarus from the Xymon server cli, I get:
$ ftp actarus
Connected to actarus.boing.com.
421 Service not available, remote server has closed connection
ftp> quit
$
Is there a way around this?
The best way would probably be to copy the [ftp] section in the
~xymon/server/etc/bb-services file and create a new entry that
expects the "421" response - you would have to call it something
other than ftp, though.
Regards,
Henrik
--
Henrik Storner