
IBM San Volume Controller
Check IBM Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS Inodes
Description:
This bash script reports on the number of inodes in an IBM Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS system.
Current Version
1.0
Last Release Date
2016-06-15
Compatible With
- Nagios 3.x
- Nagios 4.x
Owner
License
MIT
Project Files
File | Description |
---|---|
check_sonas_inodes.sh |
Project Notes
The number of used and maximum inodes for the given fileset in the given filesystem is reported, along with a utilization percentage.
The plugin produces Nagios performance data so it can be graphed.
The actual code is managed in the following GitHub rebository - please use the Issue Tracker to ask questions, report problems or request enhancements.
https://github.com/acch/nagios-plugins
The script requires SSH Public Key Authentication for connecting to the Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS system. SSH Public Key Authentication needs to be set up first, before running the script. To test your SSH configuration, try to login to Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS via SSH from the Nagios server as the Nagios user - if this works without prompting you for a password you seem to have properly configured Public Key Authentication. If you get a "Permission denied" error when running the script, the most likely reason for that is Public Key Authentication not being configured correctly for the Nagios user (by default called 'nagios').
It is strongly recommended to create a dedicated read-only Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS user to be used by this script. This eases problem determination, allows for proper audit tracing and helps avoiding undesired side-effects. Also, it eliminates the risk of script errors having an impact on your actual production environment...
To create a read-only user 'nagios' with password 'secret' on Storwize V7000 Unified / SONAS, run the following commands as the Nagios operating-system user (by default called 'nagios', too):
# ssh admin@[mgmt_ip_address] mkuser nagios -p secret -g Monitor
# ssh admin@[mgmt_ip_address] chuser nagios -k "`cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub`"
Note that you may need to modify the last command to point to the actual location of your SSH public key file used for authentication
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