ZenPacks

Table of Contents

1. Introduction to ZenPacks
1.1. Installing ZenPacks
1.1.1. Installing via the Command Line
1.1.2. Installing via the User Interface
1.1.3. Installing All Core ZenPacks via RPM
1.2. Creating a ZenPack
1.2.1. Packaging and Distributing Your ZenPack
1.3. Removing a ZenPack
2. Zenoss Core ZenPacks
2.1. ZenJMX ZenPack
2.1.1. About ZenJMX
2.1.2. JMX Background
2.1.3. ZenJMX Capabilities
2.1.4. Single Value Attribute Calls
2.1.5. Multi-Value Attribute Calls
2.1.6. Operation Calls
2.1.7. ZenJMX Behavior
2.1.8. Running the ZenJMX Daemon
2.1.9. Defining Custom JMX Data Sources
2.1.10. Enabling Remote JMX Access
2.1.11. Interrogating an JMX Agent via JConsole
2.1.12. Installing ZenJMX
2.2. ApacheMonitor ZenPack
2.3. DellMonitor ZenPack
2.4. HPMonitor ZenPack
2.5. MySqlMonitor ZenPack
2.6. NtpMonitor ZenPack
2.6.1. Components
2.6.2. DataSource Class Options
2.6.3. Example
2.7. LDAPMonitor ZenPack
2.7.1. Components
2.7.2. DataSource Class Options
2.7.3. Additional Configuration
2.7.4. Example
2.8. RPCMonitor ZenPack
2.8.1. Components
2.8.2. DataSource Class Options
2.8.3. Additional Configuration
2.8.4. Example
2.9. IRCMonitor ZenPack
2.9.1. Components
2.9.2. DataSource Class Options
2.9.3. Example
2.10. JabberMonitor ZenPack
2.10.1. Components
2.10.2. DataSource Class Options
2.10.3. Example
2.11. DigMonitor ZenPack
2.11.1. Components
2.11.2. DataSource Class Options
2.11.3. Example
2.12. FTPMonitor ZenPack
2.12.1. Components
2.12.2. Datasource Class Options
2.12.3. Example
2.13. NNTPMonitor ZenPack
2.13.1. Components
2.13.2. DataSource Class Options
2.13.3. Example