This document describes the procedures for installing Nagios monitoring agent, NSClient, on a target Microsoft Windows desktop or server for the purposes of monitoring that machine with Nagios XI. This allows organizations to monitor vital metrics and ensure that a specific Windows desktop machine or server is functioning properly. Installing SNMP on 2008 Server The SNMP service is installed via the Add Features Wizard in Server Manager. For Windows Server Core systems, SNMP services must be installed using the command prompt.
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Windows Server 2008 Monitoring With Nagios CapabilitiesNagios provides complete monitoring of Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional and Server operating systems – including system metrics, service states, process states, performance counters, event logs, applications (IIS, Exchange, etc), and services (Active Directory, DHCP, etc). BenefitsImplementing effective Windows Server 2008 monitoring with Nagios offers the following benefits:. Increased server, services, and application availability. Fast detection of network outages and protocol failures. Fast detection of failed services, processes and batch jobsSolutionsThese Nagios solutions provide Windows Server 2008 monitoring capabilities and benefits:.Resources.See Also.
In the previous articles we discussed about. In this article, l’ll explain how to monitor remote windows machine and the various service running on the windows server using nagios monitoring server.
Following three sections are covered in this article.I. 4 steps to install nagios on remote windows host. Install NSClient on the remote windows server. Modify the NSClient Service. Modify the NSC.ini.
Start the NSClient ServiceIII. 6 configuration steps on nagios monitoring server. Verify checknt command and windows-server template. Uncomment windows.cfg in /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg. Modify /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/windows.cfg. Define windows services that should be monitored. Enable Password Protection.
Verify Configuration and Restart Nagios.I. Overview.Following three steps will happen on a very high level when Nagios (installed on the nagios-server) monitors a service (for e.g. Disk space usage) on the remote Windows host. Nagios will execute checknt command on nagios-server and request it to monitor disk usage on remote windows host. The checknt on the nagios-server will contact the NSClient service on remote windows host and request it to execute the USEDDISKSPACE on the remote host. The results of the USEDDISKSPACE command will be returned back by NSClient daemon to the checknt on nagios-server.Following flow summarizes the above explanation:Nagios Server (checknt) —– Remote host (NSClient) —– USEDDISKSPACENagios Server (checknt).
I currently have it up and running, Nagios 3.0 running on Ubuntu 8.04, on a Latitude 5000 laptop. It’s monitoring a Win 2003 sbs SP2, HP Proliant DL 380. NsClient is the latest one, which I updated less than 3 month ago. I also configured the Ubuntu box as an email server, which allows the nagios to send out any email alerts w/o having to register a domain or anything (but it can’t receive any email). But that does not matter in this scenario.
I’m particularly like having the monitoring box being independent from the server, because if my Win server were to go down, nagios is still fully capable of alerting me (of course if an internet connection is still available). Hi.First of all i should appreciate this step by step guide produced by Ramesh.I have a problem if you can help me plz. I followed these steps and i was able to monitor my Windows-server 2003. But when i configured Nagios to monitor Remote linux (Centos) along with Windows-server now i can only monitor my local & remote Linux but now all Windows services say “Critical” and ” connections refused” when i go toCan you tell me whats wrong with Windows services but when i ping it worksThanks in Advance.
Thanks,I checked the.ini file and all seem to be OK. I am getting following error on windows server.“2008-10-20 14:19:23: error.NSCAThread.cpp:208. I see in the nagios.cfg you can specify a directory where Nagios will look for.cfg files and process all it finds. The syntax is, for example:cfgdir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/serversSo you could create a windows-servers directory and create new copies of the windows.cfg, one for each server you’re monitoring and edit them accordingly? I end this with a? Because I’m just guessing and will try it out myself!Also I am monitoring a 2008 Standard server with NSClient (latest stable) and it’s working well with the quickstart guide’s configuration.
@Kevin Kraft,Yes. You can absolutely do that. I.e define a new cfgdir for windows and create one individual.cfg file (for each windows server) under this new cfgdir. Keep us posted on how it went.@Carlos,You really don’t need to create a new cfgdir to monitor multiple windows server. It is optional.
You can use one /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/windows.cfg file and define multiple host in it as I’ve explained in the comment above. Can you please let us know what kind of issues you are facing when you tried this method? @Carlos,I got it working, but it took some trial and error. Essentially just making copies of the sample windows.cfg wasn’t working, so I had to comment out everything in copy and start one thing at a time until I got it right. From what I can tell, you need to keep the ‘hostgroup’ section commented out in all but the first.cfg you make.
This will set the hostgroup for the template ‘windows-servers’, so any other host added that uses that template will automatically be added. I got errors if I included this in the other.cfg’s.I think multiple.cfgs, one for each server, is a better way for me to do it, because it will keep them more organized. I support tens of small businesses all over my area and am working to monitor them all over the Internet. This is method just makes more sense to me.Hope this helps, Carlos! Post back with your progress!-K.
I have been running several Nagios installations for various companies. I am now at the point where I need to monitor a single windows host from the Companies home office. I can ssh into the remote office server, but have no nsclient access.
Here is the command (ip address obscured):root@nagios libexec#./checknt -H 11.22.33.44 -p 12489 -d SHOWALL -v SERVICESTATE -l Spoolercould not fetch information from serverI am able to monitor other local windows machines successfully. NSClient configuration (nsc.ini) was copied from a production machine. I am not able to install NRPE on the Nagios box (may require reinstallation).The following ports are open on both ends of the connection: 22, 161, 162, 3389, 5666, 12489I can use MS remote desktop going both ways.
I can ping both ways. I can SSH both ways. I just cannot get checknt to work from nagios over the internet to windows 2003 server.
HiHas anyone successfully configured NSClient to monitor a machine running 64bits Windows Server 2008 R2 Standard? I have tried the latest nightly build, previous release without any success. Below is the error message from the nsclient.log.2010-10-22 01:40:59: error:modulesCheckSystemPDHCollector.cpp:215: Failed to query performance counters: Processor(total)% Processor Time: PdhGetFormattedCounterValue failed: A counter with a negative denominator value was detected. Had some trouble getting more than one windows server to show up despite defining host entries for each one in windows.cfg.
I initially installed client on one machine, updated windows.cfg, and the server showed up in Nagios under the host group I specified. I then installed client on two more windows machines the same way, added separate host entries for them in windows.cfg, and added the two server names to the members line under define hostgroup. (I read somewhere you can simply separate with a comma and they will show up in that group) Regardless of that, they don’t seem to show up at all. Any idea what I could be doing wrong? I’m finding Nagios has so much potential, but just starting out and trying to fill in the gaps of knowledge. Hi Anthony-Thanks for responding. All the servers I’m trying to add (as well as the single one I was able to add) are running W2K3 Std (32 bit)-The Windows Firewall is turned off on all servers-Yes, I installed and started the NSClient service on the new installs the same way I did the first.-Yes, I restarted the Nagios Service (/etc/rc/d/init.d/nagios reload) I’ve also stopped and started for the heck of it.I think I’m going to go buy a Nagios book this weekend and do some reading.
I’m in way over my head right now, but I’m stubborn and really excited about what Nagios can do, so I want to figure this all out. Hi Ramesh et All,I have tried the NSClient with a Windows 2008 x64 and Windows 7 x64 system, the installer fails, so I just downloaded the zip files and installed the service manually.I have been able to get everything working, with the exception of the PROCSTATE for checknt, It will not correctly report on 64 bit running applications like explorer.exe or notepad.exe, but does correctly report any 32bit applications as running correctly.I will continue to investigate or look for alternatives. Hi Ramesh, I have configured Nagios server on Redhat machine and it is working fine. I have got the Nagios Web UI.
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Whereas my windows host which need to be Monitored is a 32 bit machine. So i downloaded same version of NSClient mentioned in download link but 32 bit version. Then i installed the 32 bit version of NSClient. But there is no NSC.ini file found under directory C:Program FilesNSClient. So i am unable to proceed. Kindly can you let me the procedure to configure NSClient 32 bit version (NSCP-0.4.1.073-Win32.msi).
Kindly do the needful.—Hi This is Mohammed Jassim again. Hi, I’m new to this subject, I have a case when I’m monitoring the ram memory of a windows machine that has 17GB memory installed, and when monitoring this resource by testing console./checknt -H 192.168.3.91 -p 12489 -s password -v MEMUSE -w 82 -c 93, brings me a value that is not correct, shows the following: Memory usage: 35997.61 Mb – used: 18188.70 Mb (51%) – free: 17808.91 Mb (49%) ‘Memory usage ‘= 18188.70Mb, 29518.04, 33477.78, 0.00, 35997.61, which shows that a value of 35997.61 brings MG (36 GB) which is not real, you can help me thank. I did everything exactly but i cant get the information on nagios interface. It tells me that NSClient – ERROR: Invalid password. I`ve tried many passwords (in the.cfg and in the.ini) but the same result. I am able to see the status from putty but if i go to i get that error.this is from checking on putty:madalin@linux:$ /usr/local/nagios/libexec/checknt -H 192.168.1.246 -p 12489 -s secret-password -v MEMUSE -w 80 -c 90Memory usage: total:32748.44 MB – used: 7836.98 MB (24%) – free: 24911.46 MB (76%) ‘Memory usage’=7836.98MB;2613.59;0.00;32748.44.