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<FONT face=Tahoma size=2><B>From:</B>
nagios-users-bounces@lists.sourceforge.net
[mailto:nagios-users-bounces@lists.sourceforge.net] <B>On Behalf Of
</B>Michael Mukherji<BR><B>Sent:</B> Thursday, June 05, 2008 2:39
AM<BR><B>To:</B> Nagios Users Mailinglist<BR><B>Subject:</B> [Nagios-users]
Probelm with NSClient++<BR></FONT><BR></DIV>
<DIV></DIV>
<DIV>Hello List</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>I am using Nagios 3.0 to monitor few of my windows server using the
nsclient++ , I am monitoring services and memory + CPU utilization with
nsclient++, I get a critical alert saying <FONT size=2>(Return code of
139 is out of bounds) for the services and memory utilizations when ever the
service fails , sometimes it even gives false alert as when i login to server
i see that service running.</FONT></DIV>
<P>Can anyone help me on this pls ?</P>
<P>Also i would like to intregate nmap with nagios , to monitor open ports as
well for servers , has anyone any idea about the feasibility /else is
there any plugins available to check this !!</P>
<P>regards</P>
<P>Michael<SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2> </FONT></SPAN></P></BLOCKQUOTE>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>Michael,</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>I can't say specifically what your NSclient++ issue is, but I can offer
the following. I've seen this problem occur when I check something that
doesn't exist. For example, I've had machines where I've
used check_nt on the server side to check the D: drive on a Windows box,
but that D: does not exist (I did this as part of a hostgroup check and
one of those hosts did not have a D: drive).</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>My best suggestion is to break down the command you're running from the
nagios side (check_nt or preferrably, check_nrpe) to this host and run it to
make sure it returns properly. I find many of those Windows-checking
commands are complex enough that I can't be sure I have them right until I've
worked them out from the command-line first.</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>I don't know about nmap checking, but if you haven't already had a look
at Nagios Exchange (<A
href="http://www.nagiosexchange.org">www.nagiosexchange.org</A>). Also,
when I did a Google search for "nagios nmap plugin" I got several
reasonable-looking hits.</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
<DIV dir=ltr><SPAN class=030421314-05062008><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>Mark</FONT></SPAN></DIV></BODY></HTML>