SAN and NAS

qnap_health

Description:

Check QNAP NAS health status. Provides a large set of check routines.

Usage: ${0##*/} [-V protocol] -H -C -p -w -c ”

Where: -p|–part – part to check”
-h – no human-readable output; do not use unit suffixes”
-w|–warning – warning”
-c|–critical – critical”
-t|–timeout – timeout for snmp connect, default: 5s”
–help – show this help”

SNMP specific”
-H|–hostname – hostname or IP”
-V – SNMP protocol version to use (1, 2c, 3); default: 2c”
-P|–port – SNMP port; default: 161″

SNMP Version 1|2c specific”
-C|–community – SNMP community name; default: public”

SNMP Version 3 specific”
-l|–level – security level (noAuthNoPriv|authNoPriv|authPriv)”
-u|–user – security name”
-a|–authprotocol – authentication protocol (MD5|SHA)”
-A|–authpassphrase – authentication protocol pass phrase”
-x|–privprotocol – privacy protocol (DES|AES)”
-X|–privpassphrase – privacy protocol pass phrase”

Parts are: status, sysinfo, systemuptime, temp, cpu, cputemp, usedram, iops, latency, powerstatus, fans, diskused, hdstatus, hdtemp, lunstatus (for iSCSI luns), volstatus (Raid Volume Status)”

volstatus & lunstatus checks all vols/luns and vols/lun space; powerstatus checks power supply”
is 1-8 for hd, 1-5 for vol”

Example for diskusage: ${0##*/} -H 127.0.0.1 -C public -p diskused -w 80 -c 95″

Example for volstatus: ${0##*/} -H 127.0.0.1 -C public -p volstatus -w 15 -c 10″
critical and warning value are related to free disk space”

Example for fans: ${0##*/} -H 127.0.0.1 -C public -p fans -w 2000 -c 1900″
critical and warning are minimum speed in rpm for fans”

this plugin requires the following programs to be installed:”
* bc”
* awk”
* snmpget”
* snmpwalk”

Current Version

1.01

Last Release Date

2021-05-26

Compatible With

  • Nagios 4.x

Owner

pgn

License

GPL


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Project Notes
# Usage: Icinga2 Enable SNMP on QNAP NAS appliance and use this script with Icinga2. Copy the command_qnap_health.conf into the configuration path of Icinga2. # Usage: Nagios Enable SNMP on QNAP NAS appliance, community name "public". Add this at the end of your "/usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/commands.cfg": ``` ########## ## QNAP ## ########## define command{ command_name qnap_health command_line $USER1$/qnap_health -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -C public -p $ARG1$ -w $ARG2$ -c $ARG3$ } ``` # Contributing Please feel free to fork and collaborate on this little but useful project. # Parts of script to improve - Power unit check - (let me know if on your device work) - Rewrite some code for better readability # Test This script was tested with: - QNAP model TS-853U-RP (with 4 disk) - QNAP model TS-859U+ (by Omar S. Ramirez thanks for your help) - QNAP model TS-212 and TS-231P (by github user mir07 Michael Rasmussen) - QNAP Model TS-EC1280U, Firmware 4.2.2 (Thanks to AndresCidoncha) - QNAP Model TS-459 Pro+, Firmware 4.2.6, Max HD number 4, No. Volume 1 - QNAP Model TS-1263U-RP, Firmware 4.3.3, Max HD number 12, No. Volume 1 - QNAP Model TS-EC1680U, Firmware 4.3.6, Max HD number 16 - QNAP Model TS-EC2480U, Firmware 4.3.6, Max HD number 24 - QNAP Model TS-431P2, Firmware 4.4.1
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