Munin
glances
Munin | glances | |
---|---|---|
25 | 101 | |
1,912 | 24,957 | |
0.7% | - | |
7.4 | 9.6 | |
16 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Perl | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
Munin
- Munin Monitoring
- Monitor disk space automatically?
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Serve Munin Simple
I rediscovered Munin. To my surprise it is written entirely in Perl. I remember Munin from years ago... it still seems healty and maintained and lies ready on your Deb-Repositories. So I followed the Easy Install Guide... which really is easy, but fails to mention that you need to install your own HTTP-Server to serve the HTML-reports.
- A (less complex) Zabbix alternative to self host ?
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Code review wanted: munin-plugin, a rust library
A bit of background, which may make understanding my choices in this lib easier: Munin is a resource monitoring tool using rrdtool, usually run in a Server/Client Setup. The client accepts plugins which are just executables in a directory. Usually written in a scripting language, but it actually doesn't matter. Data is fetched every 5 minutes, plugins are first run with a config argument to spit out a munin graph config, followed by a run without arguments to present data. To support higher resolutions than just "every 5 minutes", graph config can contain config to tell munin one collects it every second. Then the fetching part needs to run as a daemon, writing a cache somewhere which gets output when munin wants the data.
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munin-pihole-plugins: mastering munin monitoring, meeting multiple marvellous milestones & more!
Munin plugins and management script for monitoring various Pi-hole® statistics.
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5V4A usb hub
When you do not have enough power you would get errors because looking up the plots would simply fail. Sounds more that there is one disk which is slower. I had one 2TB external usb which was really slow and the latency of lookups was through the roof. Are you on linux ? Then install munin-monitoring.org it shows latency of the disks out of the box.
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long response time
what os ? on linux install https://munin-monitoring.org/ it will give you disk latency information.
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Nextcloud Monitoring software
I'd say give Munin a try.
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(Re-) Introducing munin-pihole-plugins
Munin plugins for monitoring Pi-hole®. Transforms a server into a powerful monitoring platform, as simple as one, two, three, ...four.
glances
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Homelab Adventures: Crafting a Personal Tech Playground
Glances
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Easily monitor your Server from anywhere
As is from their github repository.
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Pyenv – lets you easily switch between multiple versions of Python
If I pin a version of Python, isn't that going to wreck any tooling that depends on it? Unless you're saying have multiple versions of Python installed.
This is practically the only remaining annoyance I have with the Python ecosystem (relative imports aside). I use some tools, like Glances [0] whose formula relies on a much newer version (3.12) than the actual package requires (3.8) [1].
So when there's a Python update, all of those update as well. I thought I'd fixed this with pipx, but in a way that's worse, because the venvs it builds depend on a specific version of Python existing, which doesn't work well with brew always wanting to upgrade it.
I want a stable, system-level Python that I don't touch, don't add packages to, and which only exists as a dependency for anything that needs it. If an update would break a package I have installed (due to Python library deprecation, etc.), it should warn me before updating. Otherwise, I don't care, as long as any symlinks are taken care of.
Separately, I want a stable, user-level Python that I can do whatever I want to. Nothing updates it automatically. I can accomplish this by compiling Python and using `make altinstall`, but if there's a better way, I'd love to hear about it.
[0]: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/20e744191e74d...
[1]: https://github.com/nicolargo/glances
- Hard disk LEDs and noisy machines
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Glances for monitoring OPNsense
Wanting to get Glances installed on OPNsense for its integration into homepage.
- Any metrics dashboard out there for viewing power usage???
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Are there an alternative to htop that lets me see the total resource usage per app?
I don't try but maybe glance https://github.com/nicolargo/glances
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Dashboard with all container resource usage?
In the meantime Glances is a pretty good way to keep an eye on CPU and memory usage of all your containers. You can either run it as a lightweight docker image or as a native application on your host.
- [Docker] Surveillance du réseau de conteneurs Docker?
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[Docker] Docker -Container -Netzwerküberwachung?
Bearbeiten: Dies war, was ich war: [https://github.com/nicolargo/glances weise(https://github.com/nicolargo/glances)
What are some alternatives?
Netdata - The open-source observability platform everyone needs
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
Zabbix - Real-time monitoring of IT components and services, such as networks, servers, VMs, applications and the cloud.
btop - A monitor of resources
Monit
bashtop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
LibreNMS - Community-based GPL-licensed network monitoring system
Cacti - Cacti ™
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
uptime-kuma - A fancy self-hosted monitoring tool
homarr - Customizable browser's home page to interact with your homeserver's Docker containers (e.g. Sonarr/Radarr)