OSMC 2011 – Snaps & Slides

A week later, we’ve finally recovered from the monitoring madness at the Open Source Monitoring Conference.

The two days were packed with lots of news around Nagios/Icinga best practices, addons and plugins, as well as Shinken and OpenNMS. It was great to hear the latest from Jörg Linge on PNP4Nagios, Michael Medin on NSClient++ and [...]

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FrOSCon 2011 – Snaps & Slides

Back from the 6th FrOSCon just this past weekend, and we have a couple of happy snaps and presentation slides to share.

This year we were there with a presentation as well as a project booth. In his speech, Marius gave a nice introduction to Icinga and the particulars of the new web interface. [...]

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Farewell Icinga API

In the days leading up to the v1.5 release, we bid our Icinga API goodbye and usher in a new API and Web concept.

You may ask yourself, what was this API anyway? Indeed, if you weren’t developing or adapting extensions for the new web interface, you wouldn’t have had much contact with this important [...]

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Icinga Goes Mobile!

You ask and team Icinga responds. The request for an Icinga mobile app has been floating around for a while now, and here it now is. Icinga Mobile is our app tailored for your iPhone (pre-tested), Android, and what not.

Written in JavaScript and enhanced with Sencha, Icinga Mobile communicates through Icinga Web though its [...]

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Making things accessible: The Icinga-Web REST API

A lot of people who want to integrate Icinga in their enviroment ask us if there’s a way of requesting database information over an unified API. This is possible over our ‘Icinga-Web REST Adapter’. It’s been in Icinga-Web for about 2 releases now, but I think it’s now time to make it public (as we [...]

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Icinga at the FrOSCon 2010

We’re currently represented at the FrOSCon fair in Sankt Augustin, Germany, with our own booth.

It’s good to see that there’s a lot of interest in Icinga and we got a lot of positive and constructive feedback from all different kinds of users, developers and administrators. Sometimes people even had to stay in line to [...]

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