Need to monitor Linux server performance? Try these built-in command and a few add-on tools. Most Linux distributions are equipped with tons of monitoring. These tools provide metrics which can be used to get information about system activities. You can use these tools to find the possible causes of a performance problem. The commands discussed below are some of the most basic commands when it comes to system analysis and debugging server issues such as: Finding out bottlenecks. Disk (storage) bottlenecks. CPU and memory bottlenecks. Network bottlenecks.
Computer monitoring systems are used to gather data for the purpose of real-time incident notification, performance analysis, and system health verification. Without such a tool, a system administrator would have to login to each machine to collect information on a regular basis. This kind of repetitive task can be automated using a system monitoring tool. System monitoring can also help identify problems before they escalate to emergency status. This type of software is not only useful for network administrators. Home users with a small network or even just a single computer will benefit from advanced notification provided by system monitoring tools. Knowing that free space on the hard disk is running out, or that a particular server/daemon has gone down can be extremely useful.
Central Loghost Mini-HOWTO This page is simply a collection of open source tools you can use to glue together your own centralized (syslog) loghost. Included are example configuration settings so that you can configure your loghost in a manner similar to mine. There is very little that you need to read and understand in order to use these tools. Also, these tools are widely used and therefore easy to get help with on internet mailing lists. I established a centralized location for syslog collection in order to facilitate: Log reporting real time alerting periodic (several times per day) summary reporting Log storage long term archival for possible later analysis Tools used: UNIX hosts (Linux and Solaris) Modified logcheck script(s). Syslog-NG Swatch though I'm slowly moving to SEC, this page will be updated once I've completely switched Splunk for a GUI interface Stunnel
Any system administrator worth their salt has some kind of system for collecting and maintaining information about all the systems they're responsible for. Gathering that info by hand, especially when the systems are inherited, can be time-consuming. Or you could try out boxinfo, a Perl script that gathers most or all of the information you'd want in a few easy steps. Boxinfo is simple to run, just run it on any Linux system that has Perl and it will look for information about the disk space, processor, memory, network interfaces, mounted disks, versions of utilities, and general system environment. Once finished, it prints out an HTML page or page in Wikimedia format, and a debug file that shows all commands run and the output. This can be useful to identify Perl modules you might be missing to gather information.
GroundWork Open Source, the fastest growing provider of open source IT management software, delivers the right solution to ensure unprecedented network, system and application availability. We combine all the advantages of open source software with superior functionality, documentation, and professional support to give you unprecedented visibility and control of your entire IT infrastructure. With GroundWork Open Source you get enterprise-class IT management at a fraction of the cost. Ground Work Open Source – IT Management that is just RIGHT.