| Building a Monitoring Infrastructure with Nagios | 
| Author: David Josephsen Publisher: Prentice Hall PTR Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $27.57 You Save: $12.42 (31%)
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (10 reviews) Sales Rank: 199511
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 264 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 0132236931 Dewey Decimal Number: 004.24 EAN: 9780132236935 ASIN: 0132236931
Publication Date: March 2, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Build real-world, end-to-end network monitoring solutions with Nagios This is the definitive guide to building low-cost, enterprise-strength monitoring infrastructures with Nagios, the world?s leading open source monitoring tool. Network monitoring specialist David Josephsen goes far beyond the basics, demonstrating how to use third-party tools and plug-ins to solve the specific problems in your unique environment. Josephsen introduces Nagios ?from the ground up,? showing how to plan for success and leverage today?s most valuable monitoring best practices. Then, using practical examples, real directives, and working code, Josephsen presents detailed monitoring solutions for Windows, Unix, Linux, network equipment, and other platforms and devices. You?ll find thorough discussions of advanced topics, including the use of data visualization to solve complex monitoring problems. This is also the first Nagios book with comprehensive coverage of using Nagios Event Broker to transform and extend Nagios. - Understand how Nagios works, in depth: the host and service paradigm, plug-ins, scheduling, and notification
- Configure Nagios successfully: config files, templates, timeperiods, contacts, hosts, services, escalations, dependencies, and more
- Streamline deployment with scripting templates, automated discovery, and Nagios GUI tools
- Use plug-ins and tools to systematically monitor the devices and platforms you need to monitor, the way you need to monitor them
- Establish front-ends, visual dashboards, and management interfaces with MRTG and RRDTool
- Build new C-based Nagios Event Broker (NEB) modules, one step at a time
- Contains easy-to-understand code listings in Unix shell, C, and Perl
If you?re responsible for systems monitoring infrastructure in any organization, large or small, this book will help you achieve the results you want?right from the start. David Josephsen is Senior Systems Engineer at DBG, Inc., where he maintains a collection of geographically dispersed server farms. He has more than a decade of hands-on experience with Unix systems, routers, firewalls, and load balancers in support of complex, high-volume networks. Josephsen?s certifications include CISSP, CCNA, CCDA, and MCSE. His co-authored work on Bayesian spam filtering earned a Best Paper award at USENIX LISA 2004. He has been published in both ;login and Sysadmin magazines on topics relating to security, systems monitoring, and spam mitigation. Introduction CHAPTER 1 Best Practices CHAPTER 2 Theory of Operations CHAPTER 3 Installing Nagios CHAPTER 4 Configuring Nagios CHAPTER 5 Bootstrapping the Configs CHAPTER 6 Watching CHAPTER 7 Visualization CHAPTER 8 Nagios Event Broker Interface APPENDIX A Configure Options APPENDIX B nagios.cfg and cgi.cfg APPENDIX C Command-Line Options Index
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
  Good but not what I had hoped September 17, 2008 The only thing that I found helpful not in the Nagios documentation is the scripting piece. It provides good ideas for creating nagios configs for large environment quickly. I was looking for at least a detailed information on integrating it with a third party rrd tool such as cacti for creating trends based on historical data.
  Good for quickstart March 1, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Main benefit of this book is that it will teach you many things in a short time. You might want to purchase it if you want a quick start on Nagios, and don't plan to use Nagios on larger systems. Also, although the author's (brief?) style has some benefits, it also has some drawbacks.
Things like distributed monitoring, fail-over, passive checks,... are barely touched. If you are installing Nagios for the first time, you probably won't miss these subjects elaborated, because you will want to have it running soon as possible. However, I think the Apress book covers these advanced topics much better, and gives a more comprehensive overview of Nagios. The decision is up to you. I preferred the lengthier book with more things explained, although it was a bit harder to read.
One more thing that I disliked was that for Passive checks author references Chapter 2. I couldn't find anything about passive checks there, so I checked the Index. No mention of them there either. I gave this book a relatively bad review due to this kind of unclear issues and for the lack of distributed monitoring and failover coverage, which I think is very important for a monitoring system in a serious installation.
As said, some things are better in this book than in Apress one (like ie. Windows check explanation), but in general, Apress book left a better impression on me.
  Not Much More Thorough Than Existing Documentation September 24, 2007 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
It's well written, but it didn't provide much more insights and coverage than reading the existing documentation you can download for free. There are also some glaring gaps in its coverage. There's nothing about passive checks! And I don't think it was written before v3.0 came out.
If you like written docs for stuff you reference often, it will be worth the money. But don't go to it with any significant troubleshooting problem.
  Fantastic Book for New Nagios Users July 5, 2007 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book takes the fairly complicated matter of configuring Nagios for monitoring your network infrastructure and makes it straight forward. Kudos and many things to Mr. Josephsen.
  Far and away the best book on Nagios May 31, 2007 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
I use Nagios heavily at my company and as a result, I've purchased all of the available texts on the subject. This one is simply the best work on Nagios available right now. It's clear and succinct where even the online docs from the Nagios project can be confusing. It covers things that the No Starch volume barely touches on (WMI Scripting and Nagios) and honestly, the diagrams and code samples are clear and useful in real-world application.
Really, buy this one. If you need another one, I would be surprised.
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