When you have a website or a network, it’s helpful to be aware of any issues as soon as they occur. There are open source and freeware
 server/network monitoring tools that will supervise your infrastructure
 for any issues that may arise. These tools are meant to aid you in 
avoiding being taken offline and evaluating if your resource needs has 
outgrown your infrastructure.
In this article, we review our top 10 server/network monitoring tools. You will see a variety of server applications here so that you might find the tool (or tools) for your needs.
1. Monit
Monit not only monitors your server, but also attempts to 
remedy problems by taking predefined actions for certain situations. For
 example, if your database server crashes, Monit can automatically 
restart the service if this is the action that you want to take (hint: 
it usually is).
If you have more than one server that you need to monitor, then you can use M/Monit- an extended version of Monit that provides a simple way to monitor multiple machines.
There’s also an iPhone app available for M/Monit to help you conveniently check on your network without lugging around a laptop around.
2. Ganglia
When you have a cluster of machines, it’s difficult to see how the whole cluster is doing all at once. Ganglia,
 instead, presents an overview of the whole cluster. This is a great 
tool to have set up when you’re working with a server cluster; with that
 said, it may be overkill for single-machine set-ups.
3. Munin
Munin monitors and graphs system performance metrics. It can
 automatically produce daily/weekly/monthly/yearly performance graphs 
and reports of many important metrics. It comes with the ability to 
monitor core system resources, such as memory, disk space, CPU usage, 
server applications such as MySQL, Apache, and Squid.
One of Munin’s greatest strengths is how simple it is to extend. With
 just a few lines of code, you can write a plugin to monitor almost 
anything. Being so easy to extend means that Munin is also a good choice
 for graphing things unrelated to server performance, such as the number
 of user signups or website popularity.
4. Cacti
Cacti is similar to Munin in many ways. What is makes Cacti 
different though–and where it stands out in relation to Munin–is that it
 allows you to resize your graphs and view data for an arbitrary range. 
Whereas Munin has fixed daily, weekly, monthly and yearly graphs (unless
 you write a custom extension), Cacti lets you view your data however 
you want to: last 2 hours, last 4 days, last 6 months, out of the box. 
You can even visually select and zoom into regions on your graphs.
5. Nagios
Nagios is "the industry standard in IT infrastructure 
monitoring,"–well, at least that’s what it says on their website. Nagios
 can be complicated to install and configure, but its wealth of features
 are unmatched by any tool out in the market and is geared for the 
experienced IT network administrator. Nagios supports monitoring of 
multiple hosts and can send out alerts via email, pager (if you still 
use this ancient technology) or SMS/text messaging. Like Monit, it can 
also be configured to automatically respond to problems.
6. Zabbix
Zabbix is a feature-packed monitoring tool. It has great 
visualization support including user-defined views, zooming, and 
mapping. It can send out alerts via email, SMS or instant message. It 
also provides audible alerts, which can be useful when you’re physically
 near the monitoring machine.
7. Observium
Observium is geared towards Linux, BSD and Cisco networks. 
It supports auto discovery of your network infrastructure, finding the 
networks that you’re likely interested in monitoring; this feature can 
be compared to how your Wi-Fi software automatically finds signals in 
range that you can jack into. Observium provides detailed graphs, and 
can be set up alongside Nagios to provide alerts. It also integrates 
well with Collectd (featured below) for a more robust interface.
8. Zenoss
Zenoss is an open source version of the commercial server monitoring tool Zenoss Enterprise, written entirely in Python. It supports the Nagios plugin format,
 so many existing Nagios plugins can be used in Zenoss. One of the main 
highlights of Zenoss is its powerful yet simple to use user interface.
9. Collectd
Collectd is similar to Munin and Cacti in that it focuses on
 graphing system metrics. Where it excels in is that it is designed 
specifically for performance and portability; this ultimately means it’s
 great on rugged systems, low-end systems, and embedded systems. Being 
designed for performance and low-system resource use means that Collectd
 can gather data every 10 seconds without interfering with your server 
processes, providing extremely high-resolution statistics. You can write
 extensions for it in C, Perl or Java.
10. Argus
Argus focuses on the monitoring of network services, and 
supports IPv4 and IPv6. It has a nice alert escalation procedure: after 
sending out an alert and the problem still isn’t resolved within a fixed
 amount of time (because the systems admin is at home enjoying his 
sleep), another alert will be sent out to someone else.
What do you use?
Do you have experiences with any of the tools above? Do you use something else? Join our discussion in the comments.
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