Monit
From James's Wiki
if installed with apt systemd file is already in.
sudo nano /etc/monit/monitrc
changed:
set alert ractive74@gmail.com
set mailserver smtp.gmail.com port 587 username "MYUSER" password "MYPASSWORD" using tlsv12
check system $HOST if loadavg (1min) > 4 then alert if loadavg (5min) > 2 then alert if cpu usage > 95% for 10 cycles then alert if memory usage > 75% then alert if swap usage > 25% then alert
check network public with interface eth0 if failed link then alert
sudo systemctl restart monit
sudo monit -t
sudo monit start all
sudo monit status
monit not starting up correctly on reboot...so I deleted the init.d/monit script and made a monit.service file
- This file is systemd template for monit service. To
- register monit with systemd, place the monit.service file
- to the /lib/systemd/system/ directory and then start it
- using systemctl (see bellow).
- Enable monit to start on boot:
- systemctl enable monit.service
- Start monit immediately:
- systemctl start monit.service
- Stop monit:
- systemctl stop monit.service
- Status:
- systemctl status monit.service
[Unit]
Description=Pro-active monitoring utility for unix systems
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
KillMode=process
ExecStart=/usr/bin/monit -c /etc/monit/monitrc -I
ExecStop=/usr/bin/monit quit
ExecReload=/usr/bin/monit reload
Restart = on-abnormal
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target