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Nagios distributed monitoring support
Nagios provides central monitoring of the hosts and services in your distributed network. The Opengear console servers embed Nagios NSCA client and NRPE server software so they can function as distributed Nagios monitoring servers. This removes the need for dedicated slave Nagios servers at remote sites. They can also be deployed locally to the Nagios monitoring host server to provide additional diagnostics and points of access to managed devices. The console servers all provide basic distributed monitoring, whereas the IMG4000 and IM4200 families also support more extensive and customizable monitoring (refer faq 282).
You can freely upgrade you console server to support Nagios by downloading a driver (version 2.3.1 or later). You can also freely download the latest Nagios version. Nagios also forms the core of many leading commercial system management solutions such as GroundWork. For details on configuring Nagios support refer Chapter 10 in the IMG/IM/CM4000 User Manual
While Nagios takes some time to configure and install, it provides an outstanding network-monitoring system. With Nagios you can:
- display lists showing in real time the status of each monitored server, network node and service
- use a wide range of freely available plug-ins to make detailed checks of specific services (e.g. don't just check a database server is accepting network connections, check that it can actually validate access requests and return real data)
- display warnings and send warning e-mails or pagers alerts when a service failure or degradation is detected
- assign contact groups who are responsible for specific services in specific time frames
Using your console servers to distribute Nagios monitoring enables you to simply and securely monitor remote sites and nodes distributed behind firewalls. To set this up, you first configure distributed monitoring in the upstream Nagios monitoring host, then configure the console servers for Nagios support:
- Nagios integration is enabled and a path established to the upstream Nagios server
- The embedded NSCA client is then configured to periodically report on Nagios monitored services. NSCA enables scheduled check-ins with the remote Nagios server and is used to send passive check results across the network to the remote server
- The NRPE server is then configured. NPRE is the Nagios daemon for executing plugins on remote hosts, enabling the remote Nagios server to actively request status updates from the console server
- Each of the Serial Ports and each of the Hosts connected to the console server which are to be monitored are then Nagios enabled and any specific Nagios checks configured. Refer faq 282 for details of basic, advanced and custom checks.
- Lastly the upstream Nagios monitoring host must be configured
... and see Chapter 10 in the IMG/IM/CM4000 User Manual for more details.
You also can find more distributed Nagios information on:
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