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 freeb:~# man watchdog.conf|tee WATCHDOG.CONF(5)                                              WATCHDOG.CONF(5) 
NAME        watchdog.conf - configuration file for the watchdog daemon 
DEscRIPTION        This file carries all configuration options for the Linux watchdog dae-        mon.  Each option has to be written on  a  line  for  itself.  Comments        start with '#'.  Blanks are ignored except after the '=' sign. An empty        text after the '=' sign disables the feature  as  long  as  that  makes        sense. 
OPTIONS        interval = <interval>               Set  the interval between two writes to the watchdog device. The               kernel drivers expects a write command every  minute.  Otherwise               the  system  will  be  rebooted. Default value is 10 seconds. An               interval of more than a minute can only be used with the -f com-               mand-line option. 
       logtick = <logtick>               If  you  enable  verbose  logging, a message is written into the               syslog or a logfile. While this is nice, it is not necessary  to               get  a  message  every 10 seconds which really fills up disk and               needs CPU. logtick allows adjustment of the number of  intervals               skipped before a log message is written. If you use logtick = 60               and interval = 10, only every 10 minutes (600 seconds) a message               is  written.  This  may make the exact time of a crash harder to               find but greatly reduces disk usage and administrator nerves  if               you're  looking  for  a  particular  syslog  entry in between of               watchdog messages. 
       max-load-1 = <load1>               Set the maximal allowed load average for a 1 minute  span.  Once               this  load  average  is  reached the system is rebooted. Default               value is 0. That means the load average check  is  disabled.  Be               careful  not to this parameter too low. To set a value less then               the predefined minimal value of 2, you have to use the  -f  com-               mandline option. 
       max-load-5 = <load5>               Set  the  maximal allowed load average for a 5 minute span. Once               this load average is reached the  system  is  rebooted.  Default               value  is  3/4*max-load-1.  Be careful not to this parameter too               low. To set a value less then the predefined minimal value of 2,               you have to use the -f commandline option. 
       max-load-15 = <load15>               Set  the maximal allowed load average for a 15 minute span. Once               this load average is reached the  system  is  rebooted.  Default               value  is  1/2*max-load-1.  Be careful not to this parameter too               low. To set a value less then the predefined minimal value of 2,               you have to use the -f commandline option. 
       min-memory = <minpage>               Set  the minimal amount of virtual memory that has to stay free.               Note that this is in pages. Default value is 0 pages which means               this  test  is  disabled. The page size is taken from the system               include files. 
       max-temperature = <temp>               Set the maximal allowed temperature. Once  this  temperature  is               reached  the system is halted. Default value is 120. There is no               unit conversion, so make sure you use  the  same  unit  as  your               hardware.  Watchdog  will  issue  warnings  once the temperature               increases 90%, 95% and 98% of this temperature. 
       watchdog-device = <device>               Set the watchdog device name. Default is to disable  keep  alive               support. 
       temperature-device = <temp-dev>               Set  the temperature device name. Default is to disable tempera-               ture checking. 
       file = <filename>               Set file name for file mode.  This option can be given as  often               as you like to check several files. 
       change = <mtime>               Set  the change interval time for file mode. This options always               belongs to the active filename, that is when finding  a  'change               ='  line  watchdog  assumes it belongs to the most recently read               'file =' line.  They don't  neccessarily  have  to  follow  each               other  directly.  But  you  cannot specify a 'change =' before a               'file ='.  The default is to only stat the file and  don't  look               for changes. 
       pidfile = <pidfilename>               Set pidfile name for server test mode.  This option can be given               as often as you like to check several servers. 
       ping = <ip-addr>               Set IP address for ping mode.  This option can be used more than               once to check different connections. 
       interface = <if-name>               Set  interface  name  for network mode.  This option can be used               more than once to check different interfaces. 
       test-binary = <testbin>               Execute the given binary to do some user defined tests. 
       test-timeout = <timeout in seconds>               User defined tests may only run for <timeout> seconds. Set to  0               for unlimited. 
       repair-binary = <repbin>               Execute  the  given binary in case of a problem instead of shut-               ting down the system. 
       admin = <mail-address>               Email address to send admin mail to. That is, who shall be noti-               fied  that  the  machine is being halted or rebooted. Default is               'root'. If you want to disable notification via email  just  set               admin to en empty string. 
       realtime = <yes|no>               If  set  to  yes  watchdog will lock itself into memory so it is               never swapped out. 
       priority = <schedule priority>               Set the schedule priority for realtime mode. 
FILES        /etc/watchdog.conf               The watchdog configuration file 
SEE ALSO        watchdog(8) 
  
4th Berkeley Distribution        January 2005                 WATCHDOG.CONF(5)  |