Call me crazy if you like, but in the alerts.cfg file, in the list of environment variables passed to the script, it says:
# BBCOLORLEVEL - The color of the alert: "red", "yellow" or
"purple" ... [snip] ... # RECOVERED - Is "1" if the service has recovered.
So, um, just check $RECOVERED ??
if [ $RECOVERED -eq 1 ]; then
# send recovery email
fi
Ralph Mitchell
On Tue, Aug 25, 2020 at 8:04 PM Jeremy Laidman <jeremy at laidman.org> wrote:
Kris
I suspect $BBCOLORLEVEL is set to the color of the original condition.
According to the man page for alerts.cfg, if the word &COLOR& is in the recipient parameter, it is replaced by the colour of the alert. This might give the updated colour after the alert recovered, instead of the alert colour.
Or, you can use something like this:
NEWCOL=
$XYMON $XYMSRV "xymondboard host=$BBHOSTNAME test=$BBSVCNAME fields=color"Cheers Jeremy
On Wed, 26 Aug 2020 at 08:38, Kris Springer <kspringer at innovateteam.com> wrote:
I know this is old, but it's still an issue. I have a script that uses $BBCOLORLEVEL that works great, except the RECOVERED messages come in as Red. They don't say 'Recovered', they say 'Red'. I'm not much of a coder, but is there perhaps some way to have my bash script figure out if the message is a 'recovered' message and print that as the BBCOLORLEVEL instead of printing Red?
--
Kris Springer
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