General Question about monitoring Windows Machines
Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2012 5:33 pm
Nagios XI 2011 R2.2, running on CentOS VM Image. I am attempting to monitor several aspects of a mixture of server manufacturers to include Dell, HP and SuperMicro. I have found the Dell plugin, and have experienced moderate success. I would like to get more granular, more visible (rather than a global, 'all good') reporting on aspects such as CPU utilization, hard disk utilization, and hard disk capacity. I have moderate experience with Nagios Core, and was able to successfully monitor drive status and capacity, but am running into configuration issues with XI. I started with http://assets.nagios.com/downloads/nagi ... Client.pdf, http://www.nsclient.org/nscp/wiki/CheckDisk, and a few other guides, but am still having issue with the best methods that some of you have found monitoring systems such as this. Is NSClient++ the best rout to go with for Windows machines, SNMP, WMI, etc?
I do have both SNMP and NSClient++ running on a particular site that I am testing all of this on currently. Can anyone point me to a document that may give greater detail as to how precisely configure these hosts from within Core Config Manager? Is there perhaps a 'best practices' manual that might layout step 1, step 2, step 3, etc? As odd as this is going to sound, I am more accustomed to the text-based config files used in Core, and am trying to find a correlation between the two. Thanks for the patience with a NagiosXI noob
I do have both SNMP and NSClient++ running on a particular site that I am testing all of this on currently. Can anyone point me to a document that may give greater detail as to how precisely configure these hosts from within Core Config Manager? Is there perhaps a 'best practices' manual that might layout step 1, step 2, step 3, etc? As odd as this is going to sound, I am more accustomed to the text-based config files used in Core, and am trying to find a correlation between the two. Thanks for the patience with a NagiosXI noob




