This is a bug fix release, which includes some important fixes to --extra-opts (a way of specifying command line options within files).
* check_http has options to specify the HTTP method (#2155152)
* check_users thresholds were not working exactly as documented (>= rather
than >)
to 1.4.13. Approved by tonnerre@
main CHANGES since 1.4.11:
- lots of bug fixes
- Added ./check_nt -v INSTANCES to count number of instances (Alessandro Ren)
- New check_icmp -s option to specify the source IP address
- check_dns now sorts addresses for testing results for more than one
returned IP (Matthias Urlichs)
- check_disk should now work with large file systems (2TB+) on all archs
that supports it
- check_ntp_peer now checks for the LI_ALARM flag
- check_procs now accepts --ereg-argument-array for a regular expression
match to the argument array
- check_dig can now pass arguments to dig by using -A/--dig-arguments
- check_dns now allow to repeat -a to match multiple possibly returned address
(common with load balancers)
- check_mysql and check_radius now try clearing password in processlist
just like check_mysql_query
- check_mysql and check_mysql_query now support sockets explicitely
(-s, --socket)
- negate now has the ability to replace the status text as well
(-s, --substitute)
- Added performance data to check_ping (Christian Schneemann)
- On non-skipped stderr, check_by_ssh now returns UNKNOWN or worse
(result from command) instead of always UNKNOWN.
- check_dig now returns CRITICAL instead of WARNING when no answer section
is found
- check_procs now captures stderr in external command and adds to plugin output
- check_snmp now only prints perfdata for non numeric values (#1867716)
- check_icmp now supports packet size modification
- check_http -e now accepts a comma-delimited list of expected status
codes (Sven Nierlein)
- check_ntp_peer/check_ntp_time used to show port in --help but ignored
the argument - now implemented
crashes on various architectures and system, such as, for example,
the check_icmp bus error on sparc64.
Changes in 1.4.4:
- check_ntp is now written in C instead of Perl.
- check_disk bugfixes.
- check_udp2, check_udp and check_tcp are now united.
- check_mailq now reports mailq errors better.
- check_snmp now compiles with a sane amount of effort.
Changes in 1.4.5:
- Fixed bug in perl's is_hostname routine.
Changes in 1.4.6:
- check_ping and netutils.c now do less DNS lookups.
- alloca.h related compile fixes.
- check_swap now works on Solaris too.
- check_disk perf data can now be monitored.
- check_procs had a buffer overflow.
- Fixed UNIX socket error handling.
- check_by_ssh now can pass -q and -o to ssh.
- GNUlib sync.
- check_jabber can now return things different from a warning.
Changes in 1.4.7:
- check_procs uses /usr/ucb/ps on Solaris which fixes pst3 problems.
- check_smtp does a non-broken HELO now.
- check_icmp can now have a minimum number of required hosts and also
works if running for a long time on BSDs.
- check_ping timeout reduced.
- Everybody can now execute SUID check plugins unless indicated otherwise
to configure.
Changes in 1.4.8:
- check_disk now has an extra option for regex matching and grouping of FSes.
- check_ntp various fixes.
Changes in 1.4.9:
- New plugin check_cluster (not built by pkgsrc).
- check_by_ssh now has improved stderr/stdout handling options (-E/-S).
- check_ldap, check_radius and check_pgsql compile fixes.
- check_snmp 64-bit counter support.
- Better underflow checking for check_time.
- check_http output is more consistent now.
- check_http HTTP redirect segfault fixes.
- check_tcp doesn't segfault anymore when multiple expect strings are given.
- check_tcp now supports -A to check if all expect strings match.
Changes in 1.4.10:
- check_http redirect buffer overflow vulnerability fixed (was fixed
in pkgsrc before).
- check_http now shuts down HTTP/1.1 keepalive connections cleanly.
- check_ldaps doesn't guess anymore whether to use SSL or STARTTLS.
- check_disk now calls stat on all file systems.
- check_disk now supports the -L flag for local file system checks.
- check_disk now supports -i/-I for ignoring paths/partitions by regex.
- check_disk now supports -A to select all file systems explicitly.
- check_disk now needs to have the -E flag passed before -p or -r/-R.
- check_disk is no longer buggy when case sensitive and insensitive regexes
are mixed.
- check_dhcp now supports -u (unicast) to emulate a relay.
- check_dhcp now lets you specify the MAC address in the request using -m.
- check_dhcp -r and -s options now accept host names.
- check_icmp no longer bus errors on various platforms.
- check_smtp now handles multiple-packet server responses properly.
- Negate command line options are no longer evaluated twice by the shell.
- Negate commands to be run must now be fully qualified.
- Negate can now remap custom states.
- check_radius now supports radius-client-ng (was already in pkgsrc).
- check_by_ssh now supports multiline output.
- check_ntp now honors ntp flags.
Changes in 1.4.10:
- check_ntp returns UNKNOWN rather than WARNING if no jitter is available.
- check_cluster now accept all valid characters in its thresholds.
- check_ntp is now deprecated in favor of check_ntp_peer and check_ntp_time.
- check_disk no longer reports OK if disk usage exceeds 100%.
- check_load handles non-triplet arguments correctly now.
- Nagios::Plugin updated to 0.22.
1.4.3
Setuid plugins (check_dhcp, check_icmp) separated into plugins-root/. Run make install as root to install
SSL plugins work with gnutls as well as OpenSSL
check_mysql_query added to run arbitrary SQL commands, with threshold checking
libtool now required for development systems
Notice: check_udp (compiled from check_udp.c) will be deprecated in the next release.
check_udp2 should be used instead and will be renamed to check_udp
developer is officially maintaining the package.
The rationale for changing this from "tech-pkg" to "pkgsrc-users" is
that it implies that any user can try to maintain the package (by
submitting patches to the mailing list). Since the folks most likely
to care about the package are the folks that want to use it or are
already using it, this would leverage the energy of users who aren't
developers.