Hello.
I've been using Cacti for about 2 month and Im very impressed of all the tools I can use to monitor my entire network.
The only problem I have is when I reboot my Cacti server, all of my custom route adresses dissapears. I have to manually add all adresses at startup.
The command im using is:
route add -net 192.168.1.1 192.168.0.1
Do I have to add all of my routing adresses to a config file or can I add a parameter (such in Windows) so it stays addes after reboot?
Regards
Abigum
How do I add route adresses in Cacti that stays permanent?
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- rony
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This is not a Cacti question, but more of a Linux question and will vary depending on what distro you are using.
[size=117][i][b]Tony Roman[/b][/i][/size]
[size=84][i]Experience is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]There are only 3 way to complete a project: Good, Fast or Cheap, pick two.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]With age comes wisdom, what you choose to do with it determines whether or not you are wise.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]Experience is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]There are only 3 way to complete a project: Good, Fast or Cheap, pick two.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]With age comes wisdom, what you choose to do with it determines whether or not you are wise.[/i][/size]
What kind?
OK. Thanx
Witch Linux platform is Cacti buildt on? I've heard it's a FreeBSD platform.
I tought this was cacti-thing, but if it's a linux thing, I've to check in the doc for that platform
Regards
Witch Linux platform is Cacti buildt on? I've heard it's a FreeBSD platform.
I tought this was cacti-thing, but if it's a linux thing, I've to check in the doc for that platform
Regards
- rony
- Developer/Forum Admin
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- Joined: Mon Nov 17, 2003 6:35 pm
- Location: Michigan, USA
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Cacti isn't built on any platform....
I know people running Cacti on:
Windows 2000, 2003
Linux - Fedora, Suse, Debian, Gentoo, Mandriva, etc.
FreeBSD - 5.x and 6.x
AIX - 5.x
Solaris - 8, 9 and 10
OS X - Mac
It just a matter of the platform in question having php support.
As for your question, again, routing is dependant on what OS you are running. Might I suggest that you tackle this routing issue on a router on your network?
I know people running Cacti on:
Windows 2000, 2003
Linux - Fedora, Suse, Debian, Gentoo, Mandriva, etc.
FreeBSD - 5.x and 6.x
AIX - 5.x
Solaris - 8, 9 and 10
OS X - Mac
It just a matter of the platform in question having php support.
As for your question, again, routing is dependant on what OS you are running. Might I suggest that you tackle this routing issue on a router on your network?
[size=117][i][b]Tony Roman[/b][/i][/size]
[size=84][i]Experience is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]There are only 3 way to complete a project: Good, Fast or Cheap, pick two.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]With age comes wisdom, what you choose to do with it determines whether or not you are wise.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]Experience is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]There are only 3 way to complete a project: Good, Fast or Cheap, pick two.[/i][/size]
[size=84][i]With age comes wisdom, what you choose to do with it determines whether or not you are wise.[/i][/size]
Re: What kind?
cacti is built on whatever platform you decide, windows, freebsd, etc.Abigum wrote:OK. Thanx
Witch Linux platform is Cacti buildt on? I've heard it's a FreeBSD platform.
I tought this was cacti-thing, but if it's a linux thing, I've to check in the doc for that platform
Regards
if you are using linux or a variant, type uname -sr from the command line and it will tell you what distro and version you are running, then go to their docs and take a looksy.
if you are running windows, well, i doubt you are running windows because of your first question so i wont go into that.
mine shows this:
> uname -sr
FreeBSD 6.1-RELEASE
just to give you an idea of what you will see. therefor, i run freebsd 6.1.
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