There's no problem with having xymonproxy and xymond running on the
same machine, you just need to change the port that one of them
listens on. It's usually easier to change xymond's port. I have run
several servers with xymonproxy running "on top" of xymond, where
the xymonproxy instance would forward to both another port on the
machine it was running on (usually 1985) and to another machine
that was running a backup instance of xymon or a test instance.
Thanks, Larry Barber
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 12:43 PM, Novosielski, Ryan
<user-ae4522577e16@xymon.invalid <mailto:user-ae4522577e16@xymon.invalid>> wrote:
On 12/09/2012 06:53 PM, Jeremy Laidman wrote:
On 7 December 2012 06:57, Novosielski, Ryan <user-ae4522577e16@xymon.invalid
<mailto:user-ae4522577e16@xymon.invalid <mailto:user-ae4522577e16@xymon.invalid>>> wrote:
1) Do the xymonnet machines listen on the Xymon port? They seem
to, but I can't see any reason why they should. If they didn't,
I'd configure the xymonnet machines to use the standard port
1984 to give me less to do when going live.
I agree, the xymonnet process should not be listening on any
port. Only the xymond process listens on port 1984.
Well, tracked this one down! Most things have "NEEDS xymond" and
at one point I thought that mattered and didn't disable xymond.
It's been running for no reason on my setup apparently since the
beginning.