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mon monitors (README.monitors)
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The following monitors are provided with the distribution, to get
you started. It's simple to add your own monitors. See the man page
for "mon" to learn how.

fping.monitor
-------------
    This pings a list of hosts efficiently using the fping program,
    from the Satan distribution. fping.monitor is just a simple
    shell wrapper for fping, and is normally invoked with just the
    list of hosts to ping. Here's a trick: say you don't want to
    trigger an alert until a machine has unpingable for some number
    of minutes. Give fping.monitor the arguments "-r 3 -t 240000".

    arguments:

        -a              only report failure if all hosts fail
        -r num          retry "num" times for each host before
                        reporting failure
        -t num          set timeout between retries to "num"
                        milliseconds
        -s num          consider hosts whose response time exceed
                        "num" milliseconds as failures
        -T              for each failed host (no response only),
                        traceroute to the system and report the
                        output


ping.monitor
------------
    Similar to fping.monitor, but uses the system's ping program.
    This serializes the pings, which is normally bad to do. This
    is simply an alternative to fping.monitor, if you can't get
    fping to compile. I've only tested it with Linux and Solaris.

freespace.monitor
-----------------
    This will monitor disk space usage of a particular NFS server.
    Arguments are supplied as "path:kBfree [path:kBfree...]". If
    free space dips below kBfree, then it returns a failure condition,
    and the output is how much space is left on that server.

    If you use this monitor, use separate mounts for the volumes that
    you want to test, mounting them with the "-o ro,intr,soft" options,
    so things don't hang too bad if the server is down.

    You should use the ";;" directive to the monitor line, because
    freespace.monitor doesn't take a list of hosts. Here's an example:

watch nfsservers
        service fping
            interval 5m
            monitor fping.monitor
            alert mail.alert mis-alert@company.com
            alert netpage.alert mis-pager
            alertevery 60m
        service freespace
            interval 10m
            monitor freespace.monitor /server1:5000000 /server2:5000000 ;;
            alert mail.alert mis-alert@company.com
            alert netpage.alert mis-pager
            alertevery 60m

tcp.monitor
-----------
    Useful to see if it's possible to connect to a particular port
    on a particular server. This is over-simplified, and does not yet
    support parsing of the output from these services. Options are
    "-p port" to tell which port to check, and a list of hosts.


http_t.monitor
--------------
    This monitor, contributed by Jon Meek (meekj@pt.cyanamid.com), will
    use HTTP to connect to a server, get a page, and log the transfer
    speed of the transaction. It uses the Time::HiRes Perl module,
    available from CPAN. It can also register a failure if the transfer
    doesn't complete within a certain number of seconds. See the
    source code for an explanation of the arguments.

http_tp.monitor
---------------
    Used to measure and log http file transfer speed and use a proxy.
    See the comments in the source code for instructions.
    Requires Time::HiRes, LWP::UserAgent, and HTTP::Request.

dns.monitor
-----------
    dns.monitor will make several DNS queries to verify that a server is
    providing the correct information for a zone. The zone argument is
    the zone to check. There can be multiple zone arguments. The master
    argument is the master server for the zone.  It will be queried for
    the base information.  Then each server will be queried to verify
    that it has the correct answers.  It is assumed that each server is
    supposed to be authoritative for the zone.

ftp.monitor
-----------
    Connect to an ftp server, wait for an acceptible prompt, and log
    out.

hpnp.monitor
------------
    Uses SNMP to monitor HP JetDirect-equipped printers. Reports
    failures as told by the various objects in HP's MIB, and returns
    the message that is showing on the printer's LCD ("LOW TONER",
    "LOAD LETTER", etc.).

http.monitor
------------
    Connects to an http server, retrieves a URL, and returns true
    if everything is OK.

imap.monitor
------------
    Connects to an IMAP server, checks for a sane response, and
    then logs out.

ldap.monitor
------------
    This script will search an LDAP server for objects that match the
    -filter option, starting at the DN given by the -basedn option. Each
    DN found must contain the attribute given by the -attribute option
    and the attribute's value must match the value given by the -value
    option.  Servers are given on the command line. At least one server
    must be specified.

netappfree.monitor
------------------
    Use SNMP to get free disk space from a Network Appliance
    exits with value of 1 if free space on any host drops below
    the supplied parameter, or exits with the value of 2 if
    there is a "soft" error (SNMP library error, or could not get a
    response from the server).

    This requires the UCD SNMP library and G.S. Marzot's Perl SNMP
    module.

    Supply a configuration file with "--config file" option (see
    etc/netappfree.cf for an example), or "--list" for a listing
    of filesystems which are on your filers. Use --list for help in
    building a configuration file.

nntp.monitor
------------
    Tries to connect to a nntp server, and wait for the right output.

ping.monitor
------------
    Returns a list of hosts which not reachable via ICMP echo. Uses the
    system's default ping, rather than fping.

pop3.monitor
------------
    Connects to a POP3 server, waits for the OK prompt, then logs out.

process.monitor
---------------
    Monitor snmp processes.

    Arguments are:  [-c community] host [host ...]

    This script will exit with value 1 if host:community has
    processErrorFlag set.  The summary output line will be the host names
    that failed and the name of the process.  The detail lines are what
    UCD snmp returns for an ErrorMsg.  ('Too (many|few) (name) running (#
    = x)').  If there is an SNMP error (either a problem with the SNMP
    libraries, or a problem communicating via SNMP with the destination
    host), this script will exit with a warning value of 2.

    There probably should be a better way to specify a given process to
    watch instead of everything-ucd-snmp-is-watching.

reboot.monitor
--------------
    Polls the SNMP agent on hosts, and triggers a failure when a reboot
    is detected.

smtp.monitor
------------
    Connects to an SMTP server, waits for a prompt, and then logs out.

telnet.monitor
--------------
    Use tcp_scan to try to connect to the telnet port on a bunch of hosts,
    and look for a "login" prompt.

msql-mysql.monitor, rpc.monitor
-------------------------------
    See the separate README for these monitors.

readdir.monitor
---------------
    From: gilles LamiraL <lamiral@mail.dotcom.fr>
    To: "mon@linux.kernel.org" <mon@linux.kernel.org>
    Subject: readdir monitor

    Hello,

    I wrote a monitor that reads several directories and tells
    if the number of files in each directory exceeds a given number.
    Possible uses are testing /var/spool/mqueue or /var/spool/lp/
    It is a local monitor. No SNMP here. I think it can be easyly
    called from an SNMP agent.

    1) The allowed number can be specified for each directory.

    2) You can add a regex filter to match the file names.
       Only one regex is allowed for all directories.
       Tell me if you want one for directory.

    3) The return status is interesting. It gives the exceeded values
       in a log based 2 way.

    For example:
    You want to check if /var/spool/mqueue contains less than 100 messages

    $ ls /var/spool/mqueue | wc -l
    479
    $ ./my-readdir.monitor /var/spool/mqueue:100
    /var/spool/mqueue:479
    $ echo $?
    3

      1 means more than 100 messages
      2 means more than 200 messages
      3 means more than 400 messages
      4 means more than 800 messages

    ...
    255 means more than 5.79 * 10^76 messages (579 + 74 zeros !)

    Nice ?
    See more example in the script itself.

up_rtt.monitor
--------------
    mon monitor to check for circuit up and measure RTT.
    Jon Meek - 09-May-1998.  Requires Perl Modules "Time::HiRes" and
    "Statistics::Descriptive".

dialin.monitor
--------------
    Dials in to a modem and fails if a carrier and a prompt is not
    detected.  Useful for telling if your modem pool is down or if some
    spaz modem has quit answering the phone.

    dialin.monitor requires the Perl Expect module, available from
    CPAN.

    This program performs UUCP-style locking, and needs to run setgid
    uucp to accomplish this. Provided is dialin.monitor.wrap.c, a simple
    little C program which is installed as setgid uucp and directly
    executes the actual dialin.monitor Perl script. This is required
    because some systems (e.g. Linux) do not allow setuid/setgid scripts.

    To build, edit the Makefile in mon.d, and adjust monpath to your
    environment. The do:

    make && make install

    dialin.monitor accepts several arguments. The only required argument
    is "-n", which specifies the phone number to dial.

    -n number   dial in to "number"
    -t secs     timeout to wait for "CONNECT" from modem (60)
    -l lockdir  directory to use for UUCP-style locking ("/var/lock")
    -D device   serial device to use ("/dev/modem")

foundry-chassis.monitor
-----------------------
    Reports the power supply and fan status of Foundry chassis-based
    switches, like the BigIron and the FastIron. This uses the
    "FOUNDRY-SN-AGENT-MIB" and "FOUNDRY-SN-ROOT-MIB". Foundry annoyingly
    ships their MIBs in one giant file. What I do is separate them into
    distinct files so that the UCD tools don't need to parse the single
    giant file.

    I've tested this with staged failures of PSUs and it works fine.
    It actually caught an actual non-staged failure once.

    Arguments are:

    -c community     SNMP community to use

silkworm.monitor
---------------
    Reports port, fan, power supply, and temperature failures in Brocade
    SilkWorm FCAL switches. It requires Brocade's "SW-MIB" MIB.

    Sensor failures are explicitly reported by the agent, read by this
    monitor, and reported to mon. This monitor identifies port problems
    by paying attention to only those ports whose administrative status is
    "online", yet the actual operational status is not "online".

    This monitor has not yet been tested in the case of an actual (or
    staged) failure. That doesn't mean it doesn't work--it's just that
    it hasn't been tested :)

    Arguments are:

    -c community     SNMP community to use

cpqhealth.monitor
-----------------
    Report fan, PSU, and temperature failures from systems running the
    Compaq "Insight Manager". It requires the "CPQHLTH-MIB" MIB,
    and the UCD SNMP libs w/the Perl module.

    We've had this running for a little while now, and both tested it with
    "staged" failures and actual failures, and it seems to work rather
    well. The Insight agent is a bit quirky, though. I've seen where
    it reports that both PSUs are installed, running without error,
    yet it says it is not in a redundant configuration.

    Arguments are:

    -c community     SNMP community to use


mon.monitor
-----------
    Report the running status of a mon server.

    Arguments are:

    -p port             port to use, defaults to 2583
    -t timeout          timeout in seconds, defaults to 30
    -u username         username (optional)
    -p password         password (optional)


traceroute.monitor
------------------
        Monitor routes from monitor machine to a remote system
        using traceroute. Alarm and log when changes are detected.
        See embedded POD documentation for details.

smtp3.monitor
-------------
        smtp monior which performs logging of connect times.
        See embedded POD documentation for details.

http_tpp.monitor
---------------
        Parallel query http server monitor for mon. Logs timing
        and size results, can use a proxy server, and can
        incorporate a "Smart Alarm" function via a user supplied
        Perl module.  See embedded POD documentation for details.

file_change.monitor
-------------------
        file_change.monitor will watch specified files in a
        directory and trigger an alert when any monitored file
        changes, or is missing. File changes can optionally be
        logged using RCS.
        See embedded POD documentation for details.

na_quota.monitor
----------------
        report quota limits on network appliance filers.  see the comments
        in the file for details.


ÃÖ°í°ü¸®ÀÚ 2010-02-10 (¼ö) 15:30

mysql-mysql.monitor README
==========================


See the monitor script itself for most of the pertinent usage information.


This is msql-mysql.monitor, a monitor for mon that tries to intelligently
check if an mSQL or MySQL SQL server is operational.


This monitor required the perl5 modules DBI, DBD::mysql, and DBD::mSQL,
available from CPAN (http://www.cpan.org/).


The monitor may be installed as msql.monitor, in which case it defaults to
mSQL mode, or as mysql.monitor, in which case it defaults to MySQL mode.
Regardless of how it is installed, the --mode switch may be used to force
the monitor into msql or mysql mode.


In order for the monitor to succeed, the following must be true:


- For either mode, the server must be up and answering.
- For mSQL mode, the server ACLs must allow connections from the host running
  mon as the effective user running mon to the given database.
- For MySQL mode, the server grant tables must allow connections from the host
  running mon with the username and password provided to the given database.
- For either mode, the database specified must exist, and must contain at
  least one table


If any of these conditions are not met, the monitor will fail and the DBI
error will be returned to mon for processing by the appropriate alerts.

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