Hi,
I've been using BB for several years, and now when i had to build a new machine i found Hobbit!! Hobbit is much better than BB, but i have a question though.
I want to send and email-alert to myself if i get a red alert on any of my monitored systems on any servicers. How can i do this? Is it possbile to use some kind of wildcard? I tried HOST=* but it didn't work.
Thanks in advance
/ Martin
On Fri, Nov 11, 2005 at 12:27:58PM +0100, Martin Lyberg wrote:
I want to send and email-alert to myself if i get a red alert on any of my monitored systems on any servicers. How can i do this? Is it possbile to use some kind of wildcard? I tried HOST=* but it didn't work.
This in the ~hobbit/server/etc/hobbit-alerts.cfg should do it:
HOST=*
MAIL martin.lyberg at gmail.com
If it doesn't work, then please check if you can send mail at all from the Hobbit server. If you run
echo "mail test" | mail martin.lyberg at gmail.com
and the mail does not arrive, you'll have to check your mail setup first.
Regards, Henrik
On 11/11/05, Henrik Stoerner wrote:
This in the ~hobbit/server/etc/hobbit-alerts.cfg should do it:
HOST=* MAIL martin.lyberg at gmail.com
If it doesn't work, then please check if you can send mail at all from the Hobbit server. If you run
echo "mail test" | mail martin.lyberg at gmail.com
and the mail does not arrive, you'll have to check your mail setup first.
Odd, same syntax that didn't work at first. Seems to work now though.
Thank you!
/ Martin
Henrik,
I have som further questions on this topic. I'm not quite sure of the syntax here. I want to be notified ONLY if the color is red or purple. Can this be made on a single line like this:
HOST=* MAIL root REPEAT=1h COLOR=red,purple
Question 2:
I want to send notifications to other people on certain hosts. How can i add multiple sites on the same line, this doesn't seem to work:
HOST=www.domain1.com|www.domain2.com|www.domain3.com MAIL user1 at domain.com COLOR=red,purple,yellow REPEAT=1h RECOVERED MAIL user2 at domain.com COLOR=red,purple,yellow REPEAT=1h RECOVERED
Thanks in advance
/ Martin
On Fri, Nov 11, 2005 at 03:49:42PM +0100, Martin Lyberg wrote:
I have som further questions on this topic. I'm not quite sure of the syntax here. I want to be notified ONLY if the color is red or purple. Can this be made on a single line like this:
HOST=* MAIL root REPEAT=1h COLOR=red,purple
Yes.
I want to send notifications to other people on certain hosts. How can i add multiple sites on the same line, this doesn't seem to work:
HOST=www.domain1.com|www.domain2.com|www.domain3.com
You can either list individual hosts, but then you must use commas to separate hostnames. Like HOST=www.domain1.com,www.domain2.com,www.domain3.com or you can use regular expressions - these begin with a '%' sign, followed by the regex. How you'll define that obviously depends on the hostnames involved, for your example it might be HOST=%www.domain[123].com
Henrik
Greetings,
When compiling the newest snapshot on HP-UX 11.0 with gcc, i get the following error:
CC="/usr/local/bin/gcc" CFLAGS="-g -O -D_REENTRANT -DHPUX -I.
-Ipwd/include -DCLIENTONLY=1" OSDEF="-DHPUX" RPATHOPT="" PCREINCDIR=""
SSLFLAGS="" SSLINCDIR="" SSLLIBS="" NETLIBS="-lnsl"
BBTOPDIR="/home/hobbit" BBLOGDIR="" BBHOSTNAME=""
BBHOSTIP="134.48.22.240" BBHOSTOS="" LOCALCLIENT="no"
/usr/local/bin/gmake -C lib client
gmake[1]: Entering directory /home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/lib' /usr/local/bin/gcc -g -O -D_REENTRANT -DHPUX -I. -I/home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/include -DCLIENTONLY=1 -I. -I../include -c -o osdefs.o osdefs.c In file included from osdefs.c:16: osdefs.h:25: error: conflicting types for snprintf'
/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/hppa2.0n-hp-hpux11.00/3.3.2/include/stdio.h:493:
error: previous declaration of snprintf' gmake[1]: *** [osdefs.o] Error 1 gmake[1]: Leaving directory /home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/lib'
gmake: *** [lib-client] Error 2
Any ideas?
thanks, Adam
As a quick fix, (and a fix for an additional similar problem) i changed the osdefs.h file to be the following (take note, i had to rename the snprintf and the socklen_t variables):
/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
/* Hobbit monitor
library. */
/* Compatibility definitions for various
OS's */
/*
*/
/* Copyright (C) 2002-2005 Henrik Storner
<henrik at storner.dk> */
/*
*/
/* This program is released under the GNU General Public License
(GPL), */
/* version 2. See the file "COPYING" for
details. */
/*
*/
/*----------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
#ifndef __LIBBBGEN_OSDEFS_H__ #define __LIBBBGEN_OSDEFS_H__
#include "config.h"
#include <sys/types.h> #include <stdarg.h>
#ifndef HAVE_SOCKLEN_T typedef int hobbit_socklen_t; #endif
#ifndef HAVE_SNPRINTF extern int hobbit_snprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...); #endif
#ifndef HAVE_VSNPRINTF extern int vsnprintf(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, va_list ap); #endif
#endif
Adam Scheblein wrote:
Greetings,
When compiling the newest snapshot on HP-UX 11.0 with gcc, i get the following error:
CC="/usr/local/bin/gcc" CFLAGS="-g -O -D_REENTRANT -DHPUX -I. -I
pwd/include -DCLIENTONLY=1" OSDEF="-DHPUX" RPATHOPT="" PCREINCDIR="" SSLFLAGS="" SSLINCDIR="" SSLLIBS="" NETLIBS="-lnsl" BBTOPDIR="/home/hobbit" BBLOGDIR="" BBHOSTNAME="" BBHOSTIP="134.48.22.240" BBHOSTOS="" LOCALCLIENT="no" /usr/local/bin/gmake -C lib client gmake[1]: Entering directory/home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/lib' /usr/local/bin/gcc -g -O -D_REENTRANT -DHPUX -I. -I/home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/include -DCLIENTONLY=1 -I. -I../include -c -o osdefs.o osdefs.c In file included from osdefs.c:16: osdefs.h:25: error: conflicting types forsnprintf' /usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/hppa2.0n-hp-hpux11.00/3.3.2/include/stdio.h:493: error: previous declaration ofsnprintf' gmake[1]: *** [osdefs.o] Error 1 gmake[1]: Leaving directory/home/hobbit/uploaded/snapshot/lib' gmake: *** [lib-client] Error 2Any ideas?
thanks, Adam
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On 11/11/05, Henrik Stoerner wrote:
You can either list individual hosts, but then you must use commas
to separate hostnames. Like HOST=www.domain1.com <http://www.domain1.com>,www.domain2.com<http://www.domain2.com> ,www.domain3.com <http://www.domain3.com> or you can use regular expressions - these begin with a '%' sign, followed by the regex. How you'll define that obviously depends on the hostnames involved, for your example it might be HOST=%www.domain[123].com
Thank you, it works like a charm now. I had a blankspace before my hosts ie:
HOST= domain1.com <http://domain1.com>,etc,etc instead of: HOST=domain1.com <http://domain1.com>,etcetc
That's why it didn't work before.
/ Martin
Greetings,
I have modified the ps in all my clients so that it also sends out
per-process cpu usage, and now am trying to use a regular perl
expression in the search for processes with a certain usage percentage.
Here is what i have:
%(8\d{2}\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) and %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) as
2 of my searches
These don't work however, because they pull up everything that is 8.xx 8x.xx 9.xx 9x.xx 1.xx 1x.xx and 1xx.xx I know these espressions work, because i tested them in a perl application... all i am trying to make it pull out is 8x.xx 9x.xx and 1xx.xx
Any ideas for a fix (either a patch or another way to do this type of a search)??
thanks, Adam
On Tue, Nov 15, 2005 at 09:08:28AM -0600, Adam Scheblein wrote:
Greetings,
I have modified the ps in all my clients so that it also sends out per-process cpu usage, and now am trying to use a regular perl expression in the search for processes with a certain usage percentage.
Here is what i have: %(8\d{2}\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) and %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) as 2 of my searches
I think you have an error in that first expression - the "8\d{2}" seems wrong, if you want it to match number 80-89. It should be "8\d" without the "{2}".
These don't work however, because they pull up everything that is 8.xx 8x.xx 9.xx 9x.xx 1.xx 1x.xx and 1xx.xx
I'm not sure what data you're feeding it, but I tried with this setup in hobbit-clients.cfg:
HOST=localhost PROC %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) 0 0 PROC %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) 0 0
This will give a red if any of the commands in the "ps" listing has the percentages 80-94 or 95-100. Now let's test it:
$ bbcmd hobbitd_client --test Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: localhost Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 82.31 ls ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color red: Count=1, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
Good, the ps commandline string "82.31 ls" is matched as it should be.
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 8.29 ls ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
And the string "8.29 ls" is not matched.
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 100.00 muncher ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color red: Count=1, min=0, max=0
"100.00 muncher" is also matched
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 1.00 low ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
But "1.00 low" is now matched.
So either your rules are different from what I've used, or your ps output is unlike that which I used. I think you'll need to post some more details for us to figure out what the problem is.
Regards, Henrik
Henrik Stoerner wrote:
On Tue, Nov 15, 2005 at 09:08:28AM -0600, Adam Scheblein wrote:
Greetings,
I have modified the ps in all my clients so that it also sends out per-process cpu usage, and now am trying to use a regular perl expression in the search for processes with a certain usage percentage.
Here is what i have: %(8\d{2}\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) and %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) as 2 of my searchesI think you have an error in that first expression - the "8\d{2}" seems wrong, if you want it to match number 80-89. It should be "8\d" without the "{2}".
OK -- i checked my rules, and realized that i typed them into the e-mail wrong -- here is a direct cut/paste PROC %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) 0 0 yellow PROC %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) 0 0 red
After i pasted this i realized that i was also pulling IP addresses, so i changed the rules to this: PROC %\s+((8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}))\s+ 0 0 yellow PROC %\s+((9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}))\s+ 0 0 red
Which now work, but seems to be acting strange because when it finds a bad process it reports this(keep in mind that these are sorted by cpu usage and nothing has been edited/cut out):
red %\s+((9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}))\s+ (found 7, req. at most 0)
adam 18178 18176 99.63 11:19:16 pts/3 02:00 -bash root 19 0 0.55 Nov 8 ? 05:29 vxfsd
so i am not sure where the "found 7" is coming from, when clearly there is only 1...
Thanks, Adam
These don't work however, because they pull up everything that is 8.xx 8x.xx 9.xx 9x.xx 1.xx 1x.xx and 1xx.xx
I'm not sure what data you're feeding it, but I tried with this setup in hobbit-clients.cfg:
HOST=localhost PROC %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) 0 0 PROC %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) 0 0
This will give a red if any of the commands in the "ps" listing has the percentages 80-94 or 95-100. Now let's test it:
$ bbcmd hobbitd_client --test Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: localhost Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 82.31 ls ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color red: Count=1, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
Good, the ps commandline string "82.31 ls" is matched as it should be.
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 8.29 ls ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
And the string "8.29 ls" is not matched.
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 100.00 muncher ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color red: Count=1, min=0, max=0
"100.00 muncher" is also matched
Hostname (.=end, ?=dump, !=reload) [localhost]: Test (cpu, mem, disk, proc): proc ps command string: 1.00 low ps command string: Process %(8\d\.\d{2})|(9[0-4]\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0 Process %(9[5-9]\.\d{2})|(1\d{2}\.\d{2}) color green: Count=0, min=0, max=0
But "1.00 low" is now matched.
So either your rules are different from what I've used, or your ps output is unlike that which I used. I think you'll need to post some more details for us to figure out what the problem is.
Regards, Henrik
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participants (3)
-
adam.scheblein@marquette.edu
-
henrik@hswn.dk
-
martin.lyberg@gmail.com