2

I have a windows XP laptop in a remote location. I would like to have an overview for CPU/Memory statistics from a remote location. Monitoring a specific service (a Tomcat instance) would be nice but not essential.

I have seen the monitoring solutions (Nagios, cacti e.t.c) and they are all very heavy. I do not want to install mysql, web server and other stuff like that on the laptop.

I don't even need a web solution at all. It could just be a simple command line app with a server port and on my machine another GUI application would connect there (and not a web browser)

Is there something like this available?

Answer:

Perfmon is perfect for my needs

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/305610 http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/2008.08.pulse.aspx?pr=blog

3 Answers 3

1

For monitoring with Nagios etc. you just need a small client on the monitored machine that communicates with the real nagios installation. No database or web server necessary, at least on the clients.

Other options would be built-in performance monitor of Windows (which can be queried remotely) and SNMP (part of the OS, but not installed by default).

2
  • I know that you don't have to install the servers on the laptop. However you have to install them somewhere (This is what I want to avoid). Anyway, your suggestion about remote quering the performance monitor was exactly what I needed!
    – kazanaki
    May 14, 2010 at 11:34
  • -1 for suggesting just what the OP is trying to avoid. Lightweight != nagios Jan 13, 2011 at 3:18
0

One lightweight approach could be to simply use services like logmein or Teamviewer to remotely access the machine and check on the service health.

0

What about something simple like setting up a perfmon blackbox and zipping/emailng the log files out once a day? You could then analyze the data in perfmon or Excel/etc. on your local system.

It would take a little scripting to stop/email/restart the logging once a day, but it would be fairly simple.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .