Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
35 lines (22 loc) · 1.9 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

35 lines (22 loc) · 1.9 KB

Monitor your ESXi disks SMART stats

This is a quick and dirty script and template to grab some quick statistics like drive health and temperature, as well as some other values like reallocated sectors and read/write errors.

This template monitors two specific types of disks on an ESXi host, local NVMe disks which are enumerated with the regex ^t10.NVMe and local SAS disks that are enumerated with the regex ^naa. There are separate template files for t10nvme and naaSAS based on the stats that are exposed for these disks types.

I plan to add support for SATA disks enumerated with ^t10.ATA in the future, but I wasn't able to test it with my current hardware.

I am using ESXi 6.7 and using Zabbix 5.0.

These scripts require passwordless SSH access to your ESXi host in question, so make sure your ssh public key is loaded onto your ESXi host.

You also need to make sure you have the zabbix_sender package installed.

The way I architected the template file is PER DISK. So you need to edit/import the template for each disk you are wanting to monitor. The script will monitor all of the disks in one go.

In scripts and the templates, there are some variable that need to be set. In the scripts you need to set:

  • zabbixServer - this is the hostname or IP address of your Zabbix server or proxy
  • zabbixName - this is the name of the host that the template is applied to in Zabbix
  • yourESXiHost - this is your ESXi host to which you are SSHing to
  • org - this is part of the zabbix key, I made the zabbix key using my org name to make it unique

In the template you need to set:

  • device - this is the name of the device as listed by ESXi using esxcli storage core device list
  • org - same as org above

Once you do a find and replace in the template for each device, and in the scripts, you just need to configure these scripts to run automatically, in crontab for instance.

Hope this is helpful to someone out there.