Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Total Utter Noob
#1

Hi All.

I am Aussie living in London. Network Admin, and we've just decided to use Nagios on Fedora Core 6 for network monitoring and geeeez the learning curve is steep.

Im pretty keen to get good at this linux stuff - i've always liked "first principles" but it's very trying.

 

looking forward to participating here :)

Reply
#2

Hi there - welcome to the forums!

 

It can be hard at first to get to grips with Linux, but we are here to help. :)

Reply
#3

welcome to the forums, i think you'll find we are more than willing to help, and yes linux can seem a steep learning curve at furst but the best thing to do is percevere, you'll thank yourself later

 

cheers

anyweb

Reply
#4

Quote:Hi All.I am Aussie living in London. Network Admin, and we've just decided to use Nagios on Fedora Core 6 for network monitoring and geeeez the learning curve is steep.

Im pretty keen to get good at this linux stuff - i've always liked "first principles" but it's very trying.

 

looking forward to participating here :)
 

As a network admin, you might be interested in Linux Network Admin Guide (or the NAG), which was good enough it actually made it into print with O'Reilly.

 

Useful utilities for a network admin:
just some ideas for you to poke around in :)

 

enjoy the forums, ask questions! ;)

Reply
#5

I am also a newbie and interested in Learning Linux.

 

 

As am also a Network Eng, suggested tools will be of great use for me.. Thanks... :)

I have installed Nagios on my Fedora 6 and I want to configure Nagat too. Searched lot.. But no efficient documentation...

Can anyone guide me on this?

Reply
#6

Dunno about Nagat, but in terms of network tools:

 

snmpd for network monitoring (including router, etc)

mrtg to report results in a browser

nagios to show multi-server results (multiple MRTGs in effect)

cacti for nice graphs

 

awstats to graph results of logfiles, such as apache/ftp/mail/etc

 

Erm... and the other networky tools:

iptables for Firewalls/NAT

tc for Traffic control (traffic shaping)

tcpdump to sniff packets

nmap to port-scan boxen

 

Others (ifconfig/ip/netstat/host/nslookup) you'll probably know.

Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)