On Wednesday 05 September 2007 14:14:56 Aaron Richton wrote:
http://www.openldap.org/lists/openldap-software/200602/msg00158.html
We use this with only slight modifications. Of course, the only time it
has ever produced a meaningful notification has been for a few minutes
following a fresh server install as changes made since the last slapcat
replicate in. (And since that's an expected condition, it's of minimal
interest to me on Nagios.)
I'll note that all of our syncrepl failures (which are zero as of late;
run 2.3.38!) were much more insidious bugs that updated contextCSN because
"they thought they worked."
On Wed, 5 Sep 2007, Bruno Lezoray EMSM wrote:
Hi all,
few months ago, i developed script to monitor slurpd replication, by
checking replication logs.
Now, we want to implement SyncRepl replication, and it looks more
complex to know a status of the replication.
Is someone already developed a tool to do that ?
My first idea is to compare the contextCSN of the suffix entry between
the master and the slave.
I don't know if there is some specific logs that indicate the
replication is broken.
Here is mine, which I use with Hobbit, but which can also be used standalone
(with name/IP of servers as arguments):
http://staff.telkomsa.net/~bgmilne/bb-openldap.pl
It also does performance monitoring (e.g. graphs of searches, binds,
operations etc.) in conjunction with Hobbit. It needs no configuration (finds
all databases with syncrepl, and the updateref for the database, from the
contents of the monitor backend), but requires (at present) anonymous access
to cn=monitor.
What it does pick up for me is when replication is interrupted on servers
separated by a firewall (which I have started observing again, now that we do
actually have some slaves on a different network).
Regards,
Buchan
Hi Buchan,