blob: 55c38bf803c332ed9fd48e783acdc8a3b82fa331 [file] [log] [blame]
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
<pkgmetadata>
<maintainer type="person">
<email>andrew@ahamilto.net</email>
<name>Andrew Hamilton</name>
<description>Maintainer. Assign bugs to him.</description>
</maintainer>
<maintainer type="person">
<email>creffett@gentoo.org</email>
<name>Chris Reffett</name>
<description>Proxy maintainer. CC him on bugs.</description>
</maintainer>
<maintainer type="person">
<email>mjo@gentoo.org</email>
<name>Michael Orlitzky</name>
</maintainer>
<maintainer type="project">
<email>proxy-maint@gentoo.org</email>
<name>Proxy Maintainers</name>
</maintainer>
<maintainer type="project">
<email>sysadmin@gentoo.org</email>
<name>Gentoo Sysadmin Project</name>
</maintainer>
<longdescription>
Nagios is a host and service monitor designed to inform you
of network problems before your clients, end-users or
managers do. It has been designed to run under the Linux
operating system, but works fine under most *NIX variants as
well. The monitoring daemon runs intermittent checks on
hosts and services you specify using external "plugins"
which return status information to Nagios. When problems are
encountered, the daemon can send notifications out to
administrative contacts in a variety of different ways
(email, instant message, SMS, etc.). Current status
information, historical logs, and reports can all be
accessed via a web browser.
</longdescription>
</pkgmetadata>