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You're reading from  Nagios Core Administration Cookbook Second Edition - Second Edition

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Published inFeb 2016
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ISBN-139781785889332
Edition2nd Edition
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Tom Ryder
Tom Ryder
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Tom Ryder

Tom Ryder is a systems administrator living in New Zealand who works for an internet services provider. He loves terminals, text editors, network monitoring and security, Unix and GNU/Linux, shell script, and programming in general. He is also the author of the Nagios Core Administration Cookbook.
Read more about Tom Ryder

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Defining an escalation for repeated notifications


In this recipe, we'll learn how to arrange a Nagios Core configuration such that after a certain number of repetitions, notifications for problems on hosts or services are escalated to another contact, instead of (or in addition to) the normally defined contact. This is done by defining a separate object type called a host or service escalation.

This kind of setup could be useful for alerting more senior networking staff of an unsolved problem that a less experienced person is struggling to fix and can also function as a "safety valve" to ensure that problem notifications for hosts eventually do reach someone else if they remain unfixed.

Getting ready

You should have a Nagios Core 4.0 or newer server, with at least one host or service configured already, and at least two contact groups — one for the first few notifications, and one for the escalations. You should understand how notifications are generated and sent to the contacts and contact_groups...

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Nagios Core Administration Cookbook Second Edition - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2016Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781785889332

Author (1)

author image
Tom Ryder

Tom Ryder is a systems administrator living in New Zealand who works for an internet services provider. He loves terminals, text editors, network monitoring and security, Unix and GNU/Linux, shell script, and programming in general. He is also the author of the Nagios Core Administration Cookbook.
Read more about Tom Ryder