[clue] question, Nagios [talk]

Dan Kulinski daniel at kulinski.net
Mon May 21 10:54:09 MDT 2012


Mike,  if you can setup CentOS 6 at home you can use virt-manager to just
create a bunch of virtual machines.  I could get into some nitty gritty
about COW system images and using one base image to spawn multiple virtual
machines with their own settings but that is a bit technical, probably
something for a skype session more or less.  Having a test lab setup is
really the way to go and provides you with the most flexibility to break
things without getting yourself into deep trouble.

Heck, VM sessions based on COW images is probably a good idea for a LUG
session too.

Dan

On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 10:51 AM, Jim Ockers <ockers at ockers.net> wrote:

> Mike:
>
> I'm learning Nagios today too.  Take a look at the Nagios core
> documentation. Also, I agree that the fastest way to learn it is to
> install it on a test system and mess with it, using the documentation as
> a guide.  I'm reading the PDF Manual because I find it more convenient
> than the HTML one.
>
> http://library.nagios.com/library/products/nagioscore/manuals/
>
> Jim
> --
> Jim Ockers, P.E., P.Eng. (ockers at ockers.net)
> Contact info: http://www.ockers.net/
>
>
> Mike Bean wrote:
> >
> > Real simply, I've got to learn Nagios, I wonder if anyone can
> > recommend a good reference material for it?   Maybe go to the
> > bookstore after work!
> >
> > Bean
>
>
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