This is the info I need but it sounded like I can get it from historical periods, which is what I'm after.
____ *Note: UMDNJ is now Rutgers-Biomedical and Health Sciences* || \\UTGERS |---------------------*O*--------------------- ||_// Biomedical | Ryan Novosielski - Senior Technologist || \\ and Health | novosirj at rutgers.edu<mailto:novosirj at rutgers.edu>- 973/972.0922 (2x0922) || \\ Sciences | OIRT/High Perf & Res Comp - MSB C630, Newark `'
On Jan 10, 2016, at 18:56, David Boyer <davieb at gmail.com<mailto:davieb at gmail.com>> wrote:
Ryan, What specific data are you looking for? If it's the kernel version, this could pull the info:
[xymon at xytest bin]$ ./xymon localhost "clientlog yumlist section=uname" [uname] Linux yumlist 2.6.32-504.12.2.el6.x86_64 x86_64
Or more detailed info: [xymon at xytest bin]$ ./xymon localhost "clientlog yumlist section=osversion" [osversion] CentOS 6.6 LSB Version: :base-4.0-amd64:base-4.0-noarch:core-4.0-amd64:core-4.0-noarch:graphics-4.0-amd64:graphics-4.0-noarch:printing-4.0-amd64:printing-4.0-noarch Distributor ID: CentOS Description: CentOS release 6.6 (Final) Release: 6.6 Codename: Final
and grab what you need...
Dave
On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 6:31 PM, Novosielski, Ryan <novosirj at ca.rutgers.edu<mailto:novosirj at ca.rutgers.edu>> wrote: Actually: how do you get at this? I can't see a way after hunting around a bit. I thought maybe in a client data link at the bottom of a historical page, but none is present.
____ *Note: UMDNJ is now Rutgers-Biomedical and Health Sciences* || \\UTGERS |---------------------*O*--------------------- ||_// Biomedical | Ryan Novosielski - Senior Technologist || \\ and Health | novosirj at rutgers.edu<mailto:novosirj at rutgers.edu>- 973/972.0922<tel:973%2F972.0922> (2x0922) || \\ Sciences | OIRT/High Perf & Res Comp - MSB C630, Newark `'
On Jan 10, 2016, at 06:48, J.C. Cleaver <cleaver at terabithia.org<mailto:cleaver at terabithia.org>> wrote:
This becomes even more relevant when you consider snapshoting. When a status goes "red", a snapshot of the client data at that time is kept. So if you went back later to try to figure out why (e.g.) CPU was rising, the output of the '[who]' section tells you who might have been doing something then, even if the data wasn't used for making a test out of at that time.