Hi Ralph, I have setup this script on client side to run after every 1 minute. On server hosts.cfg i changed the line as below:
1.2.3.4 server1.example.com # apache=http://127.0.0.1/server-status?autonoconn nofiles nobbd CLASS:WEB TRENDS:*,vmstat:vmstat1|vmstat3|vmstat4|vmstat5|apache:apache|apache1|apache2|apache3
But I am not getting the apache graph in trends. Could you tell what am I doing wrong?
On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 7:37 AM, Ralph Mitchell <ralphmitchell at gmail.com>wrote:
You can simulate the "apache" tag in the xymon hosts.cfg by running little script on the client itself. It reports the short-form server-status info as a data message that will be picked up on the xymon server and reported on the trends page.
Ralph Mitchell
===== cut - here ===== #!/bin/sh
STATE=
curl -s -S http://localhost/server-status?auto<http://localhost/server-status?auto>$XYMON $XYMSRV "data $MACHINE.apache $STATE"
exit 0 ===== cut - here =====
On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 7:49 PM, Jeremy Laidman <jlaidman at rebel-it.com.au>wrote:
On 29 October 2013 19:48, deepak deore <deepakdeore2004 at gmail.com> wrote:
/server-stauts page can be accessed from localhost, is there a way where xymon client can send /server-status page to the server ?
You can just write a script on the client to fetch via localhost, and report to the Xymon server via a status message.
However, if you're unable to get a script running on the client, you can probably do something in client-local.cfg on the Xymon server. For example, setup a "file:" entry like so:
file:
( echo "client/apache-status $MACHINE.$OSTYPE"; echo "[server-status]"; wget -q -O- http://127.1/server-status ) | $XYMON $XYMSRV @ >/dev/nullYou should end up with the server status output in the client data for the server. You can then fetch it server-side from a script by using:
$XYMON $XYMSRV "clientlog $SERVERNAME section=server-status"
and parse it for whatever you need.
J
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