On 09/23/2005 01:43 PM, ABOKHALAF, Nassri Abdellatif wrote: > Just wanted to add one more tool to make this threat complete. > > See Opmanager at > > http://manageengine.adventnet.com/products/opmanager/ > > The free edition is really nice if you have a small network to monitor. > > Nassri > > >>Try the following .. It rocks .. >> >>JFFNMS >> >>http://jffnms.sourceforge.net >> >> >>Very powerful tool .. >> >>BRW >> >>-----Original Message----- >>From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx >>[mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Todd Reed >>Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 12:38 PM >>To: CentOS mailing list >>Subject: RE: Recommendation On Ping And Alert Tool >> >>Try OpenNMS. Nagios and Zabbix can also do historical data, >>although I'm not sure about SNMP. I've tried using both and >>by dar, I feel that OpenNMS is easier to work with. The >>installation of Tomcat and Java is the hardest item. I do >>know that OpenNMS can do SNMP. Pretty much, I give OpenNMS >>the IP address and it finds the common services. You may >>have to go in and define custom services (I had to since my >>Oracle servers have multiple listener ports). It will try >>the default SNMP string, but if you change it, there is a web >>form to change it. You can also enter your asset information >>through the web form. >> >>You can also create custom reports that can be called on the fly. >> >>Check out http://www.opennms.org for the screen shots and >>more information. >> >> >>I've been working with it for about 2 weeks and already I'm >>able to do more with it than Nagios or Zabbix. The only >>thing I liked about Nagios is the WRML graph, but I mainly >>want to see a status grid and that's it. >> >>--Todd >> >> >>-----Original Message----- >>From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx >>[mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Les Mikesell >>Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 2:29 PM >>To: CentOS mailing list >>Subject: RE: Recommendation On Ping And Alert Tool >> >>On Thu, 2005-09-22 at 14:21, Todd Reed wrote: >> >>>I previously used Nagios and because of the painful >> >>configurations, I >>found >> >>>OpenNMS. It does all I need and more, being more easier >> >>than Nagios. >> >>>It uses PostgreSQL and runs on top of Tomcat4. >> >>Do any of these alternatives combine the ability to monitor >>current status with a grid-like display of many systems and >>services with notification alarms and also keep long-term >>historical graphs of >>values? I'm currently running spong for notifications/status and >>cacti for history/graphs, but I'd like to find something that >>does both with one snmp query. Give Hobbit a chance: http://hobbitmon.sourceforge.net/. Base on Big Brother but with a lot of enhancements... Best, Oliver