Build precise queries to find exactly what you need
Press ESC to close
@transom324
Favorites0
Views
Projects0
This is exactly what we needed to see our IIS application pool resource usage trends. We sometimes have individual apps that freeze. We hope now to be able to foresee issues before end-users are affected. Thanks so much! Q. How would we set alert thresholds?
Reviewed 8 years ago
This wizard gives us the deep visibility into our vCenter environment that allows us to tweak the little things before they become big problems. This is huge for us. Well done, Troy!
Reviewed 9 years ago
It maybe a rookie error but I can't get it to work. I keep getting: (Return code of 127 is out of bounds - plugin may be missing)
Reviewed 10 years ago
Awesome plugin! We've been using it for a couple years. Thanks, Troy! We recently migrated our vCenter server to a vCenter Server Appliance 6.7U1. Will this plugin work with vCenter Server Appliance 6.7U1? This the output from the check: vi-admin@vma:~> ~/box293_check_vmware.pl --server 192.168.103.210 --check vCenter_Name_Version Server version unavailable at 'https://192.168.103.210:443/sdk/vimService.wsdl' at /usr/lib/perl5/5.10.0/VMware/VICommon.pm line 726. vi-admin@vma:~>
Reviewed 7 years ago
With the help of Nagios customer forum I was able to get the plugin installed and configured as a service. I even have a nice graph :) Many thanks to all.
Reviewed 11 years ago
We have an EMR with 8 IIS application pools any of which may or may not start after a server reboot. This is huge for us! We don't mind the Microsoft (R) Windows Script Host Version in the Status Information field. Thanks.
I don't understand how to format the alert ranges. No matter what value I use for an alert -w or -c threshold it results in a critical low alert. Does the script need to be edited? Otherwise, without using alert flags, the plugin does output the correct temperature.
I uploaded the plugin via the Nagios XI GUI. I get this error when I try to test from the command line. -bash: ./check_dd.pl: /usr/local/groundwork/bin/perl: bad interpreter: No such file or directory