I am inclined to agree, having extra functionality added to exim would
make it bulky, and we don't want a mailer like sendmail with creeping
featurism :-)
just a perl script or somesuch to tail the mainlog and paniclog and ujust
use cmu snmp to send traps.
Regards, Kerry.
On Thu, 13 Nov 1997, Philip Hazel wrote:
> On Wed, 12 Nov 1997 Bruno.Vuillemin@??? wrote:
>
> > The idea is for HP-Openview to get alerts when exim encounters some kind
> > of problem, for example : a local host that doesn't accept any new mail
> > and the queue become bigger and bigger on exim.
> >
> > (proposition 1): The principle is that exim (internally) should trigger
> > snmp traps and send them to HP-Openview, which in turn would process them
> > and eventually send an alarm to our pagers.
> >
> > (proposition 2): An other possibility is that exim, under certain
> > circumstances, runs a script that raises the snmp trap.
>
> A third possibility is to write an entirely separate program that works
> the way the Exim Monitor works - by reading Exim's log file continuously.
> This avoids any problems of interlocking that would otherwise have to be
> solved because Exim does not have a central controlling process.
>
> On Wed, 12 Nov 1997, Richard Welty wrote:
>
> > we're thinking about parking Linux mail relays and
> > DNS servers with Exim and Bind in our POPs, and keeping track of all
> > of them is going to be pretty miserable.
>
> Currently, an X screen full of Eximon displays is the best you can do, I
> think. (I normally have 3 production ones on my screen, plus some
> testing. When the manager of our other systems was on holiday, I had
> five or six for a time.) Note that you can get them to be coloured
> differently by starting them with commands like "eximon -bg blue".
>
> On 12 Nov 1997, Stuart Lynne wrote:
>
> > But for smaller sites that don't have an SNMP infrastructure how
> > about some way of getting the running daemon to dump stat's like
> > named does (either on demand or periodically).
>
> The problem with that is that the running daemon doesn't have any stats!
> Also, you can run an Exim host without having a daemon at all (input via
> inetd; queue runs via cron). The "no central coordination" design of
> Exim makes it lightweight, but means the only overall repository of
> stats information is the log.
>
> > The type of information I'm most interested in seeing are requests
> > per minute for the last minute, five minutes, fifteen minutes (mail
> > load average); CPU usage for parent and children since start and
> > current; total messages processed (delivered, failed, rejected,
> > queued, frozen, etc).
>
> A log-scanning program could handle that, except for the CPU usage
> requirement, but doesn't your operating system have tools for giving you
> that?
>
> --
> Philip Hazel University Computing Service,
> ph10@??? New Museums Site, Cambridge CB2 3QG,
> P.Hazel@??? England. Phone: +44 1223 334714
>
>
> --
> *** Exim information can be found at http://www.exim.org/ ***
>
>
--
*** Exim information can be found at
http://www.exim.org/ ***