Nagios
Fig: Favorite System Monitoring Tool Voting Results
1. Nagios – Network Monitoring Software
Nagios
won by a huge margin. This is not a suprise to lot of people, as Nagios
is hands-down the best monitoring tool. As you already know, I love
Nagios and have been using it for a long time. I have also written
several tutorials on Nagios (and many more to come).- Home Page: http://www.nagios.org
- Author: Ethan Galstad
- Latest stable release: 3.2
- License: Open Source. GNU.
- Read more about Nagios at Wikipedia.
Nagios Core 3 eBook is the only guide you’ll ever need to monitor everything, be proactive, and sleep well.
2. Cacti – Network Monitoring Software
Cacti
uses RRDtool for the network graphing solution. Using Caci you can
monitor and graph – CPU Load, Network bandwidth utilization, network
traffic monitor etc.,Cacti also supports plugin architecture. Some admins like the powerful graphing feature provided by Cacti, they use both Nagios and Cacti in their environment as the network monitoring tools.
- Home Page: http://www.cacti.net
- Latest stable release: 0.8.7e
- License: Open Source. GNU.
- Read more about Cacti at Wikipedia.
3. Top (and other top variations)
- Top Command – Few of you have mentioned top command as your favorite monitoring tool
- ntop (Network Top) – Ntop is a free network monitoring software. ntop displays network usage information in a similar fashion to top command output. You can also create HTML output file (dump) of the network status using ntop. Apart from the command line, you can also launch the web version of the ntop once you’ve started the ntopd service and visit http://{ip-address}:3000 from browser.
- htop (interactive process viewer for Linux) – htop is similar to top command with few additional features. The main difference is that you can use mouse to interact with the htop command output.
4. Zabbix
Zabbix has the following three main modules:
- Server (written in C)
- Agents (written in C)
- Frontend (PHP and Javascript)
- Home Page: http://www.zabbix.com
- Latest stable release: 1.6.6
- License: Open Source. GNU.
- Developed by: Zabbix SIA (Private company)
- Read more about Zabbix at Wikipedia
5. Munin
Similar
to Cacti, Munin uses RRDTool to present the output in a pretty graph
via web interface. The primary emphasis of Munin is on the plug and play
architecture for it’s plugin. There are lot of plugins available for
Munin, which will just work out-of-the box without lot of tweaking.- Home Page: http://munin.projects.linpro.no
- Latest stable release: 1.2.6
- License: Open Source. GNU.
- Read more about Munin at Wikipedia
No comments:
Post a Comment