#!/bin/sh # REDUNDANCY EVENT HANDLER SCRIPT # Written By: Ethan Galstad (egalstad@nagios.org) # Last Modified: 02-19-2004 # # This is an example script for implementing redundancy. # Read the HTML documentation on redundant monitoring for more # information on what this does. # Location of the echo and mail commands echocmd="/bin/echo" mailcmd="/bin/mail" # Location of the event handlers eventhandlerdir="/usr/local/nagios/libexec/eventhandlers" # Only take action on hard host states... case "$2" in HARD) case "$1" in DOWN) # The master host has gone down! # We should now become the master host and take # over the responsibilities of monitoring the # network, so enable notifications... `$eventhandlerdir/enable_notifications` # Notify someone of what has happened with the original # master server and our taking over the monitoring # responsibilities. No one was notified of the master # host going down, since the notification would have # occurred while we were in standby mode, so this is a good idea... #`$echocmd "Master Nagios host is down!" | /bin/mail -s "Master Nagios Host Is Down" root@localhost` #`$echocmd "Slave Nagios host has entered ACTIVE mode and taken over network monitoring responsibilities!" | $mailcmd -s "Slave Nagios Host Has Entered ACTIVE Mode" root@localhost` ;; UP) # The master host has recovered! # We should go back to being the slave host and # let the master host do the monitoring, so # disable notifications... `$eventhandlerdir/disable_notifications` # Notify someone of what has happened. Users were # already notified of the master host recovery because we # were in active mode at the time the recovery happened. # However, we should let someone know that we're switching # back to standby mode... #`$echocmd "The master Nagios host has recovered, so the slave Nagios host has returned to standby mode..." | $mailcmd -s "Slave Nagios Host Has Returned To STANDBY Mode" root@localhost` ;; esac ;; esac exit 0