14.11. Monitoring Disk Usage
Problem
You want to keep an eye on some of your disk partitions and see how full they are getting.
Solution
First, you need to edit snmpd.conf, adding the partitions you wish to monitor:
## /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf disk /var disk /home
Then, restart snmpd:
# /etc/init.d/snmpd restartTry this in mrtg.cfg:
# Monitor disk usage of /var and /home partitions # Target[server.disk]: dskPercent.1&dskPercent.2:password@localhost Title[server.disk]: Disk Partition Usage PageTop[server.disk]: <H1>Disk Partition Usage /var and /home</H1> MaxBytes[server.disk]: 100 ShortLegend[server.disk]: % Y Legend[server.disk]: % used LegendI[server.disk]: /var LegendO[server.disk]: /home Options[server.disk]: gauge,growright,nopercent Unscaled[server.disk]: ymwd
Make sure that LoadMIBs:
/usr/local/share/snmp/mibs/UCD-SNMP-MIB.txt is in the Global
Config Options section. Run these commands to load the changes:
# env LANG=C mrtg /etc/mrtg.cfg
# indexmaker --output=/var/www/mrtg/index.html /etc/mrtg.cfgMind your filepaths, because they vary on different Linux distributions, and remember to run the first command until it quits emitting error messages, which should take no more than three tries.
Discussion
This only works on disk partitions—you cannot select just any old directory.
Give MRTG an hour or so, then check your work with the df-h command:
$ df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/hda1 14G 2.3G 11G 17% / /dev/hda3 5G 1.8G 3.2G 36% /usr /dev/sda1 31G 6.5G 24G 22% /home ...Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
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