Moral: Always dump off your scripts or your personal DEV CVS about once a month "just in case". No reason all that research and work should go to waste. :)
I keep my personal repository on a dropbox share, and just mount it up on all my boxes. If I decide to leave, remove dropbox, and voila! They don't have my personal stuff and I haven't lost anything I've written!
Jerald M. Sheets jr.
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 12:14 PM, Odinn <odinn_asgaard at yahoo.com> wrote:
I wrote several scripts at my last company, but they let me go, so I no longer have access to those scripts.
--
Jim Sloan
Just remember, today is the day you thought tomorrow was going to be yesterday.
*From:* Ambati Srinivas <am.srini at gmail.com> *To:* hobbit at hswn.dk *Cc:* everett.vernon at gmail.com *Sent:* Mon, March 22, 2010 11:52:17 AM *Subject:* Re: [hobbit] ESX monitoring.
Hi,
I did installed Xymon ESX agent on to the ESX, I just want to know the status of running VMs and its status.
Thanks for your assistance. AM
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 6:56 PM, Vernon Everett <everett.vernon at gmail.com>wrote:
You can install the Red Hat binaries in the ESX service console, and although it works, it still only gives a limited view. (Remember, the service console is also a VM) Also, remember, installing non-authorised packages into the service console could negate support contracts.
I was playing with using SNMP to monitor the rest of the host server at my previous contract, but never completed the job :-(
Getting a "complete view" of an ESX machine is not easy. We eventually settled for the client in each VM, and the service console. Not perfect, but acceptable.
Cheers Vernon
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 8:26 PM, Ambati Srinivas <am.srini at gmail.com>wrote:
Hi Everyone,
Does some one can suggest point me to addon for monitoring ESX machine?
AM