916 projects tagged "Linux"
jWatchdog delivers a simple watchdog to actively monitor your infrastructure and send you notifications in case something goes wrong. It is configured using a simple XML configuration file. This configuration file can be changed on-the-fly without a need to restart the watchdog. jWatchdog does not offer data collection itself. It assumes that you already collected the data on which you want to run jWatchdog. The de facto standard tool Collectd is recommended for data collection. jWatchdog assumes that you use the RRDTool collectd output plugin to store the collected data in RRD files, or use Graphite as a datasource.
The NSCA-ng package provides a client-server pair which makes the Nagios command pipe accessible to remote systems, with per-client passwords and fine-grained authorization control. This allows for submission of passive check results, downtimes, and many other commands to Nagios (or compatible monitoring solutions). Check results of arbitrary size and multiline plugin output are supported.
Zfswatcher is ZFS storage pool monitoring and notification daemon. It periodically inspects the zpool status and sends configurable notifications on status changes such as disk failures. It also controls the disk enclosure LEDs. There is an embedded Web interface for displaying status and logs.
Flawless traps exceptions and then uses git blame to send an email to the developer who wrote the buggy code. Even if a particular line of code causes thousands of exceptions, only one email will be sent. It uses git-blame to figure out which developer is responsible for a particular exception, and will only email that developer. If you set report_only_after_minimum_date, then Flawless will only report exceptions caused by code modified after report_only_after_minimum_date. You can mark certain files/functions as library code, and when an exception originates in those files/functions, the caller will be blamed for the error instead of the library code.
Collax Groupware Suite is a complete collaboration, e-mail, and messaging server with Outlook MAPI support. It offers enterprise email server functions, anti-spam and anti-virus filters, GUI management, a file server for SMB, NFS, FTP, and Apple shares, backup/restore server, IM server, and fax and SMS server. The groupware offers AJAX Web mail, calendar, team calendar, contacts, and tasks, and supports ActiveSync for mobile devices. It is free for private or commercial use of up to five users.
MuninLive turns your existing munin-based infrastructure into a realtime monitoring solution. It connects to munin nodes and converts munin graphs to JSON objects. If a frontend requests a mld object, the values are served from memory by an embedded Web server while mld keeps polling the munin node in the background as long as frontend requests are being made. You can implement your own frontend or use the shipped example frontend, which can be used out of the box and comes with user management based on munin groups exported by the server. MuninLive can be queried with all popular programming languages or with JavaScript itself, and supports CORS.
Monitoring::Spooler is a handy queue manager for queueing and delivery of monitoring notifications. It is able to handle several groups of on-call personnel and provides an extensible plugin mechanism to connect it to virtually any remote service which provides some kind of API. It is designed to work nicely with App::Standby.
Andrisoft WANSIGHT is a fully featured network traffic analyzer and collector. It provides in-depth traffic analysis, traffic accounting, and bandwidth monitoring, and enables you to generate complex traffic reports, graphs, and tops, instantly pin down the cause of network incidents, understand patterns in application performance, and make the right capacity planning decisions. It supports 10GbE packet sniffing and NetFlow, sFlow, and IPFIX.
FlatTraffic is a Web interface for analysing netflow records and showing statistics designed to make it clear and easy to determine which hosts on a network are consuming data. It has been primarily designed for use by networking and servers geeks who have to endure the pain of data-capped Internet Service Providers, something that's unfortunately rather common in the Australia/New Zealand region in particular.