How can I change Nagios/NRPE log location?
Schimpke, Dr. Thomas - bhn
Schimpke.Thomas at bhn-services.com
Wed Oct 5 16:43:51 CEST 2011
Hi,
it's not nrpe's config file - it's xinetd's config file for the nrpe service. nrpe is started by xinetd as soon as a request from the nagios server arrives. So you simply need to restart xinetd (or reload its configuration).
If you still use SYSLOG (and not FILE), then you should configure the facility in /etc/syslog.conf appropriately. You need to restart/reload syslog for the change to have effect.
Thomas
On 10/05/2011 04:24 PM, R. Leigh Hennig wrote:
I've made the configuration change - now I'm guessing I need to restart NRPE daemon to read in the changed config file. How do I restart NRPE? I want it to run as a daemon, and I believe that it is...there's an nrpe file in /etc/xinte.d/...I already restarted xinted after I made the log file change there...
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 9:51 AM, Schimpke, Dr. Thomas - bhn <Schimpke.Thomas at bhn-services.com<mailto:Schimpke.Thomas at bhn-services.com>> wrote:
These aren't messages from nrpe but from xinetd. You should set the log_type parameter in nrpe's config fiule for the xinetd. Either use SYSLOG with facility local0 and configure syslog to log local0 to a file .../nrpe.log or use
FILE as a parameter for the log_type and and the full path to the desired logfile.
Check out the xinetd.conf man page for more details.
Since you poll nrpe quite often it may be better to run nrpe as a daemon (nrpe -d ...) anyway to avoid the start overhead.
Thomas
On 10/05/2011 03:13 PM, R. Leigh Hennig wrote:
On my remote hosts, /var/log/messages is filling up with messages like this:
Sep 26 06:33:53 <REMOVED> xinetd[13362]: EXIT: nrpe status=0 pid=8099 duration=0(sec)
Sep 26 06:34:01 <REMOVED> xinetd[13362]: START: nrpe pid=8105 from=<REMOVED>
Sep 26 06:34:01 <REMOVED> xinetd[13362]: EXIT: nrpe status=0 pid=8105 duration=0(sec)
Sep 26 06:34:57 <REMOVED> xinetd[13362]: START: nrpe pid=8113 from=<REMOVED>
How can I make it so that Nagios/NRPE throws these in a different file, and not just /var/log/messages?
Thanks
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All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a
definitive record of customers, application performance, security
threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes
sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1
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