diff options
author | mh <mh@immerda.ch> | 2008-04-25 17:06:44 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | mh <mh@immerda.ch> | 2008-04-25 17:06:44 +0000 |
commit | b5f3dc2e11daae975e3a28e740eb7bf1c1f47127 (patch) | |
tree | cc1ff420befb6646b364b287e6cb616f7ef6bb63 /files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64 | |
parent | 764740bd305e9eb823bf05b855d51c0d9c6f0af0 (diff) |
moved configs finally
Diffstat (limited to 'files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64')
-rw-r--r-- | files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64 | 34 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 34 deletions
diff --git a/files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64 b/files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64 deleted file mode 100644 index b9f0841..0000000 --- a/files/configs/private/resource.cfg.x86_64 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,34 +0,0 @@ -########################################################################### -# -# RESOURCE.CFG - Sample Resource File for Nagios 2.9 -# -# Last Modified: 09-10-2003 -# -# You can define $USERx$ macros in this file, which can in turn be used -# in command definitions in your host config file(s). $USERx$ macros are -# useful for storing sensitive information such as usernames, passwords, -# etc. They are also handy for specifying the path to plugins and -# event handlers - if you decide to move the plugins or event handlers to -# a different directory in the future, you can just update one or two -# $USERx$ macros, instead of modifying a lot of command definitions. -# -# The CGIs will not attempt to read the contents of resource files, so -# you can set restrictive permissions (600 or 660) on them. -# -# Nagios supports up to 32 $USERx$ macros ($USER1$ through $USER32$) -# -# Resource files may also be used to store configuration directives for -# external data sources like MySQL... -# -########################################################################### - -# Sets $USER1$ to be the path to the plugins -$USER1$=/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins - -# Sets $USER2$ to be the path to event handlers -#$USER2$=/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/eventhandlers - -# Store some usernames and passwords (hidden from the CGIs) -#$USER3$=someuser -#$USER4$=somepassword - |