On Fri, May 05, 2000 at 11:41:20AM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > anyone know of a good tool to do big network monitoring? for about 300-400 > systems
'mon'. It's used to monitor everything at Transmeta. It's basically a scheduler for running simple processes that return 0 for 'ok' or non-zero for 'borked' (and text, if you want). The scheduler calls other simple programs for alerting and is configurable for things like settings for days/times and dependencies (ie, if your switch pukes, you don't want to be alerted for everything hanging off it). It is packaged in woody, and probably potato as 'mon'. If you can hack perl (which is the easy way to write monitor scripts), it's gangs of fun. My favorite is one that I run that ensures OpenView hasn't coredumped. I love the irony. :) > needs to run on linux/freebsd. we are using nocol now i think but its not > robust enough anymore. I love mon. It also has a very helpful mailing list. -- Brian Moore | Of course vi is God's editor. Sysadmin, C/Perl Hacker | If He used Emacs, He'd still be waiting Usenet Vandal | for it to load on the seventh day. Netscum, Bane of Elves.