gotop
Grafana
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gotop | Grafana | |
---|---|---|
16 | 378 | |
7,009 | 60,196 | |
- | 1.3% | |
1.7 | 10.0 | |
over 3 years ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | TypeScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
gotop
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Looking for the name of this application - taken from Kali homepage
As other users have said, the one on the screenshot is gotop, which was archived close to 3 years ago. I would personally recommend bashtop, which is similar function, it is still developed and it's built in shell and a bit of Python. ofc, this is just my opinion. Hope you find a good system monitor
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Midnight Commander is MIA; any command line based twin pane file manager recommendations?
gotop - Another system monitoring tool, written in Go
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Writing a TUI physics engine that uses ASCII/Unicode animations.
Take a look @ example gotop
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What is the coolest Go open source projects you have seen?
gotop
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Is there any maintaned alternative to vtop, i.e. a system monitor with Vim bindings?
gotop looks awesome! Here's a maintained fork that's linked to from the original, archived GitHub repo.
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gotop on a jailbroken kindle
Just for fun. You can download the armv7 bin file from here, and copy it to the kterm main folder. Then run it in kterm by input ./gotop, enjoy!
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bpytop
I like using gotop, written in Go.
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List of CLI programs (follow-up to GUI). Feel free to make suggestions.
Gotop (a system monitor that's more readable than htop IMO)
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Rule
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/cjbassi/gotop /tmp/gotop /tmp/gotop/scripts/download.sh
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The fu#k
Seems that is obsolete.
Grafana
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Golang: out-of-box backpressure handling with gRPC, proven by a Grafana dashboard
To help us visualize these scenarios, we'll build a Grafana Dashboard so we can follow along.
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Monitoring, Observability, and Telemetry Explained
Visualization and Analysis: Choose a tool with intuitive and customizable dashboards, charts, and visualizations. A question to ask is, "Are the visualization features of this tool user-friendly and adaptable to our team's specific needs?" Tools like Grafana and Kibana provide powerful visualization capabilities.
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4 facets of API monitoring you should implement
Prometheus: Open-source monitoring system. Often used together with Grafana.
- Grafana: Open and composable observability and data visualization platform
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The Mechanics of Silicon Valley Pump and Dump Schemes
Grafana
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Reverse engineering the Grafana API to get the data from a dashboard
Yes I'm aware that Grafana is open source but the method I used to find the API endpoints is far quicker than digging through hundreds of files in a codebase I'm not familiar with.
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Building an Observability Stack with Docker
So, you will add one last container to allow us to visualize this data: Grafana, an open-source analytics and visualization platform that allows us to see traces and metrics simply. You can set Grafana to read data from both Tempo and Prometheus by setting them as datastores with the following grafana.datasource.yaml config file:
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How to collect metrics from node.js applications in PM2 with exporting to Prometheus
In example above, we use 2 additional parameters: code (HTTP response code) and page (page identifier), which provide detailed statistics. For example, you can build such graphs in Grafana:
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Root Cause Chronicles: Quivering Queue
Robin switched to the Grafana dashboard tab, and sure enough, the 5xx volume on web service was rising. It had not hit the critical alert thresholds yet, but customers had already started noticing.
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Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years (1998)
I completely agree but do feel it needs qualifying. The problems beginners run into aren't usually the same as the problems experienced devs run into when adopting a language new to them, but where I see the two overlap I know something is a serious hazard in a language.
Java as a first language: won't like the boilerplate but won't have any point of comparison anyway, will get a few NPEs, might use threads and get data races but won't experience memory unsafety.
Go as a first language: much less boilerplate, but will still get nil panics, will be encouraged to use goroutines because every tutorial shows off how "easy" they are, will get data races with full blown memory unsafety immediately.
Rust as a first language: `None` // no examples found
I think Go as a beginner language would be better if people were discouraged from using goroutines instead of actively encouraged (the myth of "CSP solves everything"), otherwise I think it needs much better tooling to save people from walking off a cliff with their goroutines. And no, -race clearly isn't it, especially not for a beginner.
And in one respect I've found Go more of a hazard for experienced devs than beginners: the function signature of append() gives you the intuition of a functional programming append that never modifies the original slice. This has literally resulted in CVEs[1] even by experienced devs, especially combined with goroutines. Beginners won't have an intuition for this and will hopefully check the documentation instead of assuming.
[1] https://github.com/grafana/grafana/security/advisories/GHSA-...
What are some alternatives?
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
Thingsboard - Open-source IoT Platform - Device management, data collection, processing and visualization.
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
Apache Superset - Apache Superset is a Data Visualization and Data Exploration Platform [Moved to: https://github.com/apache/superset]
bashtop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
Heimdall - An Application dashboard and launcher
yabai-skhd-configs - Config for my yabai and skhd
Wazuh - Wazuh - The Open Source Security Platform. Unified XDR and SIEM protection for endpoints and cloud workloads.
picom - A lightweight compositor for X11
Thingspeak - ThingSpeak is an open source “Internet of Things” application and API to store and retrieve data from things using HTTP over the Internet or via a Local Area Network. With ThingSpeak, you can create sensor logging applications, location tracking applications, and a social network of things with status updates.
simple-bar - A yabai status bar widget for Übersicht
uptime-kuma - A fancy self-hosted monitoring tool