There are two problems with ping,

  1. On some networks they are filtered; so you cannot get a response
  2. On a busy network it can dropped in favor of higher priority traffic, it is annoying because it can generate numerous false positives

That being said, I would start implementing some basic monitoring using ping or a ssh/telnet session to check running processes on a box. I have looked at SNMP and I find that it is overly complicated and was not really worth the time invested; It was easier to just capture the output from a ps -ef command and parse that to see what was going on.


In reply to Re: Pinging network devices and setting SNMP traps by Herkum
in thread Pinging network devices and setting SNMP traps by jimbus

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