On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 8:17 AM, MZMcBride z@mzmcbride.com wrote:
Jay Ashworth wrote:
https://icinga.wikimedia.com is now confirmed accessible, yes.
You mean https://icinga.wikimedia.org.
One issue, possibly specific to me:
I'm old, my laptop has a 12" screen. So I am prone to put Firefox in "Zoom Text Only" mode, and run the zoom up to read stuff. Icinga handles that pretty well, in our implementation, with one exception: that tab, top right, that has the icinga logo in it also appears to contain some summary data, and that part blows off the right edge of the screen (though it impinges on the Icinga text logo even at normal size).
Definitely not specific to you. I had a similar issue. Probably should be reported upstream. Not sure where specifically, sorry.
http://www.icinga.org/faq/how-to-report-a-bug/ is how to report upstream bugs.
And that service that's running status. is very spiffy; is that commercial?
Yes, I believe so. It was previously called WatchMouse. Now it's called Nimsoft, I think, though they appear to have been bought out by someone. Some quick googling should let you know.
Why is the Wikimedia Foundation using this (non-free) service? As I recall, it was donated. But the information surrounding status.wikimedia.org has always been kind of sketchy.
Status.wikimedia.org is half fixed and i'm working on completing the fix.
It is a donated service and is awesome. We need out of network monitoring (because in network obviously has flaws). We would love tohave any other out of network monitoring as well, and there are no free services that have global probes with layer 7 monitoring. If anyone knows any other commercial services that are willing to donate, please let me know.
Leslie
MZMcBride
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