Build precise queries to find exactly what you need
Press ESC to close
Join our next live webinar: “Advanced Nagios Monitoring Techniques” – Register Now
Your review has been submitted and is pending approval.
monitors sysctl hw.sensors on OpenBSD
Current Version
Last Release Date
February 4, 2010
Owner
Nagios Exchange
Compatible With
Works like sensorsd(8) but reports to Nagios. Allows you to monitor the hardware sensors that OpenBSD supports. Things like fan speed, temperature and many more. Examples of some sensors that can be monitored: hw.sensors.esm0.temp0=32.00 degC (CPU 1) hw.sensors.esm0.fan2=3667 RPM (Backplane Fan 1), OK hw.sensors.esm0.fan8=0 RPM (Fan 1), CRITICAL hw.sensors.esm0.indicator0=Off (Chassis Intrusion) hw.sensors.esm0.drive0=online (Drive 0) hw.sensors.esm0.drive2=unknown (Drive 2) hw.sensors.safte0.temp0=27.78 degC, OK hw.sensors.safte0.indicator0=On (Fan0), OK This can be handled with just running: check_hw_sensors but that will report that esm0.fan8 is critical and OK(3) Once you figure out that fan doesn't actually exist, you probably need a config file: hw.sensors.esm0.temp0:warn.low=25:warn.high=35:crit.low=20:crit.high=40 hw.sensors.esm0.fan8:ignore hw.sensors.esm0.indicator0:crit=Off hw.sensors.esm0.drive0:crit=online hw.sensors.esm0.drive2:crit=unknown The sensors that report their status (OK, CRITICAL at the end of the line) are handled automatically. Sensors that don't report that you have to give acceptable values. The config file lists acceptable values, not values that are actually critical. So, with the above config as '/etc/sensorsd.conf' running: check_hw_sensors -f will tell you OK(7) or, possibly OK(55) or even more depending on hardware. v1.42 now obeys the timeout from utils.pm
You must be logged in to submit a review.
To:
From: