Reza, Yes, that should work. You could also set a second threshold for it go critical like this (which would set the threshold at 80%):
critical: $fsMaxUsedBytesPerCent > 80, "Alarm Message" Tim Huffman Director of Engineering Business Only Broadband 777 Oakmont Lane, Suite 2000, Westmont, IL 60559 Direct: 630.590.6012 | Main: 630.590.6000 | Fax: 630.986.2496 [email protected] | http://www.bobbroadband.com/ Cell: 630.340.1925 | Toll-Free Customer Support: 877.262.4553 Follow Us on LinkedIn | Follow Us on Twitter please consider the environment prior to printing -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of reza Sent: Monday, March 04, 2013 6:09 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [IM-Talk] NetApp Custom Probe - Alarm on _NUM_ Disk Usage Hello Fellow Users of Intermapper! I am using the custom-snmp NetApp probe written by Mr. Stewart Harris and would like to be able to throw an alarm on a specific percentage of disk use. My understanding is that it will only currently alarm on the following variables. <snmp-device-thresholds> alarm: ($miscGlobalStatus <> 3)&&($miscGlobalStatus <> 4) "$miscGlobalStatusMessage" alarm: $diskfailedCount > 0 "$diskFailedMessage" alarm: $fsOverallStatus > 1 "$fsStatusMessage" warning: $miscGlobalStatus = 4 "$miscGlobalStatusMessage" </snmp-device-thresholds> And an error message such as the one below will be turned from the $fsOverallStatus variable. 01/19 06:56:14: Message from InterMapper 5.5.6 Event: Alarm Name: filer02 Document: Storage Address: 192.168.x.y Probe Type: SNMP-SHEF- Netapp Status (port 161 SNMPv2c) Condition: /vol/NA01_NFS03 is nearly full (using or reserving 95% of space and 0% of inodes, using 95% of reserve). What I would like to do is to be able to alarm once 70% of the disk is in use. I'm thinking about adding the following to the <snmp-device-thresholds> section alarm: $fsMaxUsedBytesPerCent > 70, "Alarm Message" Would this work in order to alarm me sooner at a predifined alarm percentage? I looked up the OID for the NetApp fsMaxUsedBytesPerCent and it simply returns an integer of 0 through 100. Thanks for your input, Reza
