Search Exchange
Search All Sites
Nagios Live Webinars
Let our experts show you how Nagios can help your organization.Login
Directory Tree
Directory
condata
check_vsphere





This monitoring plugin is able to check various aspects of ESXi hosts or vcenters over the vsphere API. It is meant as a replacement of check_vmware_esx/check_esx3 and the like. They are written in perl and VMware has deprecated the perl API. So this one ...
/Category:Directory
LicenseGPL