Annotation of nagios/check_hw_sensors/README, Revision 1.7
1.1 andrew 1: check_hw_sensors plugin for Nagios monitors sysctl hw.sensors on OpenBSD
1.4 andrew 2: check_hw_sensors [-i] (-f [<FILENAME>]|(-s <hw.sensors id> [-w limit] [-c limit]))
1.1 andrew 3:
4: Usage:
1.4 andrew 5: -i, --ignore-status
6: Don't check the status of sensors that report it.
1.1 andrew 7: -f, --filename=FILE
8: FILE to load checks from (defaults to /etc/sensorsd.conf)
9: -s, --sensor=ID
10: ID of a single sensor. "-s 0" means hw.sensors.0.
11: -w, --warning=RANGE or single ENTRY
12: Exit with WARNING status if outside of RANGE or if != ENTRY
1.2 andrew 13: -c, --critical=RANGE or single ENTRY
1.1 andrew 14: Exit with CRITICAL status if outside of RANGE or if != ENTRY
15:
1.2 andrew 16: FILE is in the same format as sensorsd.conf(5) plus some additional
17: entries. These additional entries in the file are ignored by
18: sensorsd(8).
1.1 andrew 19:
20: check_hw_sensors understands the following entries:
21:
1.4 andrew 22: low, high, crit, warn, crit.low, crit.high, warn.low, warn.high,
23: ignore, status
1.1 andrew 24:
25: An ENTRY depends on the type. The descriptions in sensorsd.conf(5)
26: can be used when appropriate, or you can use the following:
27:
1.5 andrew 28: fanrpm, volts_dc, amps, watthour, amphour, integer (raw), percent,
29: lux or timedelta - Anything that includes digits. Both the value of
30: the check and the value of the sensor response that are not either a
31: digit or period are stripped and then the two resultant values are
32: compared.
1.1 andrew 33:
34: temp - Can be as above, but if the entry has an F in it,
35: it compares farenheit, otherwise it uses celcius.
36:
37: indicator or drive - does a case sensitive match of each
38: entry in the comma separated list and if it does not match
1.5 andrew 39: any of the entries, it sets the status.
1.1 andrew 40:
41: The entries 'crit' or 'warn' (or the -c or -w on the command line)
42: may be a RANGE or a comma separated list of acceptable values.
43: The comma separated list of values contains a list of things that
44: will NOT cause the status. This is possibly counterintuitive, but
45: you are more likely to know good values than bad values.
46:
47: A RANGE is a low ENTRY and a high ENTRY separated by a colon (:).
48: It can also be low: or :high with the other side left blank to only
49: make the single check..
50:
1.4 andrew 51: An entry marked "ignore" will cause that sensor to be skipped.
1.5 andrew 52: Generally used with state checking of all sensors to ignore sensors you
1.4 andrew 53: don't care about or that report incorrectly.
54:
55: If you are using --ignore-status, you can still check the status of
56: individual sensors with a status entry.
57:
1.7 ! andrew 58: check_hw_sensors (nagios-plugins 1.4) 1.22
1.1 andrew 59: The nagios plugins come with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. You may redistribute
60: copies of the plugins under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
61: For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING.
1.4 andrew 62:
1.7 ! andrew 63: $RedRiver: README,v 1.6 2006/12/05 16:26:48 andrew Exp $
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