NAME
Nagios::Plugin::Simple - Simple and Minimalistic Nagios Plugin Package
SYNOPSIS
use Nagios::Plugin::Simple;
my $nps=Nagios::Plugin::Simple->new;
$nps->ok("I'm OK") if &ok;
$nps->warning("I'm a bit sickly") if &sick;
$nps->critical("Barf...");
$nps->unknown("Huh?");
In the true spirit of Perl you can even do a one-liner.
perl -MNagios::Plugin::Simple -e 'Nagios::Plugin::Simple->new->ok("")';echo $?
DESCRIPTION
This is the package that I use mostly because I feel the Nagios::Plugin is too encompassing. I feel that it is the scripts responsibility to handle arguments and thus this package does not do that nor will do that. If you want argument handling use one of the GetOpt packages.
USAGE
use Nagios::Plugin::Simple;
my $nps=Nagios::Plugin::Simple->new;
if (&ok) {$nps->ok("good!")} else {$nps->critical("bad!")};
CONSTRUCTOR
new
my $nps=Nagios::Plugin::Simple->new();
METHODS
initialize
ok
Exits script with ok status code.
$nps->ok("I'm OK");
Prints "OK: %s" and exits with a code 0.
STDOUT => "OK: I'm OK\n", EXIT=>0
warning
Exits script with warning status code.
$nps->warning("I'm a bit sickly");
Prints "Warning: %s" and exits with a code 1.
STDOUT => "Warning: I'm a bit sickly\n", EXIT=>1
critical
Exits script with critical status code.
$nps->critical("Barf...");
Prints "Critical: %s" and exits with a code 2.
STDOUT => "Critical: Barf...\n", EXIT=>2
unknown
Exits script with unknown status code.
$nps->unknown("Huh?")
Prints "Unknown: %s" and exits with a code 3.
STDOUT => "Unknown: Huh?\n", EXIT=>3
code
Exits script by status code. This works best if your status is actually stored as a code 0, 1, 2, or 3 in a variable.
$nps->code($code => $string);
Examples:
$nps->code(0 => "I'm OK!");
$nps->code(1 => "I'm a bit sickly");
$nps->code(2 => "Barf...");
$nps->code(3 => "Huh?")
Prints ``$status: %s'' and exits with $code.
status
Exits script by status string. This works best if your string is actually stored as "OK", "Warning", etc in a variable
$nps->status($status => $string);
Examples:
$nps->status("OK" => "I'm OK!");
$nps->status("Warning" => "I'm a bit sickly");
$nps->status("Critical" => "Barf...");
$nps->status("Unknown" => "Huh?")
Prints ``$status: %s'' and exits with correct code.
codes
Returns a hash of the Nagios status codes.
my %codes=$nps->codes; #(OK=>0, Warning=>1, Critical=>2, Unknown=>3)
my $codes=$nps->codes; #{OK=>0, Warning=>1, Critical=>2, Unknown=>3}
my %status=reverse $self->codes; #(0=>"OK", 1=>"Warning", ...)
BUGS
SUPPORT
AUTHOR
Michael R. Davis
CPAN ID: MRDVT
STOP, LLC
account=>perl,tld=>com,domain=>michaelrdavis
http://www.stopllc.com/
COPYRIGHT
This program is free software licensed under the...
The BSD License
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.