Hi! i have a mixed set of containers (a few, not too many) and bare-metal services (quite a few) and i would like to monitor them.

I am using good old “monit” that monitors my network interfaces, filesystems status and traditional services (via pid files). It’s not pretty, but get the work done. It seems i cannot find a way to have it also monitor my containers. Consider that i use podman and have a strict one service, one user policy (all containers are rootless).

I also run “netdata” but i find it overwhelming, too much data, too much graphics, just too much for my needs.

I need something that:

  • let me monitor service status
  • let me monitor containers status
  • let me restart services or containers (not mandatory, but preferred)
  • has a nice web GUI
  • the web gui is also mobile friendly (not mandatory, but appreciated)
  • Can print some history data (not manatory, but interesting)
  • Can monitor CPU usage (mandatory)
  • Can monitor filesystem usage (mandatory)

I don’t care for authentication features, since it will be behind a reverse proxy with HTTPS and proxy authentication already.

I am not looking for a fancy and comples dashboard, but for something i can host on a secondary page that i open if/when i want to check stuff. Also, if the tool can be scripted or accessed via an API could be useful, so i would write some extractors to print something in a summary page in my own dashboard.

  • Avid Amoeba
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    3 months ago

    Anytime you’re asking this, go for the projects Quick Start / Getting Started doc. In this case here. If you’re on a Debian based system Prometheus is already packaged in the repository so you don’t have to download the latest. You likely won’t win anything but the pain for having to set up the bare binary as a service with systemd. I followed that doc to setup mine but installed it from apt.

    On a second thought, if you’re getting it from the repo and it already has a systemd unit defined, it might be more difficult to follow the Getting Started doc. You know what, follow it as-is. Once you have something running and monitoring ad-hoc, it’ll be easy to install from apt and put your config in it.