Systems Monitoring
This page contains information on monitoring system resources and performance.
For information on monitoring data content and activity see:
Network Monitoring
To check your site is accessible you can check that the login page of the web file manager is available and responsive.
To check also that server is operational over a network you can call an API to check, for example, that a folder exists. There is such a script available under Access Anywhere scripts for monitoring.
Appliance Monitoring
You can use any platform that supports monitoring of CentOS 7 including SNMP.
For example, with the Amazon Cloud you could use CloudWatch as noted in Getting Started with AWS Cloud - Systems Monitoring.
We recommend monitoring the following metrics.
Base OS
vmstat Procs r: The number of processes waiting for run time. b: The number of processes in uninterruptible sleep. Memory swpd: the amount of virtual memory used. free: the amount of idle memory. active: the amount of active memory. Swap si: Amount of memory swapped in from disk (/s). so: Amount of memory swapped to disk (/s). IO bi: Blocks received from a block device (blocks/s). bo: Blocks sent to a block device (blocks/s). CPU us: Time spent running non-kernel code. (user time, including nice time) sy: Time spent running kernel code. (system time) id: Time spent idle. st: Time stolen from a virtual machine.%%''
Disk Space
df -k Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 18187836 2903080 14345956 17% //dev/sda1 101086 20047 75820 21% /boottmpfs 512468 0 512468 0% /dev/shm%%'
MySQL
Number of connections
SHOW STATUS LIKE "Connections"
If you are using MariaDB replication you could also use the database replication monitoring script. See Access Anywhere scripts for monitoring.
Network Usage
Monitor the network traffic using your monitoring system. Or you can get the information from
cat /proc/net/dev
Total Number of Processes
ps -e|sed 1d|wc -l
Recipes
Increasing Disk Space
To increase the disk space please follow the instructions at the following vmware kb article
Attaching a new Disk to The Appliance
To add a new disk to the appliance please follow the instructions at the following vmware kb article
Using a New Disk as Local Storage
The appliance is already configured with an FTP server listening on ip address 127.0.0.1 and port 2001.
- Add a new user with user home directory located on the newly attached disk mounted at newdisk
adduser -b /newdisk -s /sbin/nologin localstorage#change the
passwd localstorage
- Set home directory context for /newdisk/localstorage
chcon -R -t userhomedir_t /newdisk/localstorage
- Now you can add the a FTP provider to your NAA Account using the credentials
- account login:localstorage
- account password: the password you entered for localstorage user
- server host:ftp://127.0.0.1
- server port:2001
- server home directory:/