
| Title | : | Nagios: System and Network Monitoring |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.72 (585 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 1593270704 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 464 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2006-05-30 |
| Genre | : |
Nagios: System and Network Monitoring shows how to configure and use Nagios, an open source system and network monitoring tool. Nagios makes it possible to continuously monitor network services (SMTP, POP3, HTTP, NNTP, PING, etc.), host resources (processor load, disk and memory usage, running processes, log files, etc.), and environmental factors (such as temperature). When Nagios detects a problem, it communicates the information to the sys admin via email, pager, SMS, or other user-defined method; current status information, historical logs, and reports can also be accessed via a web browser. Nagios System and Network Monitoring covers the Nagios core, all standard Nagios plug-ins and selected third-party plug-ins, and shows readers how to write their own plug-ins. The book covers Nagios 2.0 and is backwards compatible with earlier versions.
Editorial : "An excellent book well written from front to back." -- Free Software Magazine, July 2006
"Wolfgang Barth has written an excellent book." -- Nagios
This book is just a delight! What a great encouragement to the few 'good' teachers who have come through our life.. Good nagios book. Good so far. If you have read any of Cioran's books and been astonished by them, by their relentless spirit of twilight negativity and acerbic melancholy, if you have marveled at this man who writes in such a personally lyrical and at the same time perversely declarative manner, then this book will be a most welcome addition to your understanding of whatever you might have read of this Romanian author's works and been left to ponder.
Almost all of Cioran's works are now available in English translation (with the sore exceptions of his 1930s political tract "Romania's Transfiguration" and the "Cahiers" (Notebooks), but until the appearance of this book penned by Ilinca Zarifopol-Johnston, the capable translator of his Romanian-language works who sadly died in 2005, and which in turn was completed by her husband, Kenneth Johnston, there was for
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