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Mail Server Monitoring

Lastest articles from mail-server-monitoring-server

Linux Series 2: DNS Zones and BIND9 configuration settings.

dedicated linux server hostingIn our last tutorial we covered the basics of how to install and configure a LAMP stack running Linux, Apache HTTP server, MySQL, and PHP. Now what is the next step? In this next tutorial we  will be learning how to set up and configure a DNS server. A DNS server is how we are going to  manage internal domain names at home or in the office. For this tutorial we will be using the BIND9 service. First a little bit about how DNS Works, DNS stands for Domain Name Servers, this is a service running on the server which tells that www.google.com is located at IP address 74.125.239.18 (amongst a million others) if the DNS service cannot find address 74.125.239.18 on its DNS table it will begin querying other DNS services with a higher authority until it finds which DNS table holds the domain information for address 74.125.239.18. When it finds this information that is then passed to the users browser however in the event no internet connected DNS server is found with domain information for this address it will display a message in the users browser such as “Server not found”

When it comes to DNS configuration settings they can be very tricky. They can also be very difficult at times and we can go into depth about some more of the functions later so we want to create a private internal domain name “mydomain.com” so lets find out what our internal IP address is. Open your terminal and type ifconfig this will display a listing of all of our network connections. Now let’s assume our internal network address is 10.0.2.x (which is what mine is at the moment) and our router and gateway is 10.0.2.2 lets suppose all the devices on our network are going to be configured using static IP addresses (normally IP addresses are assigned automatically by DHCP but for the purpose of this tutorial we will have three static IP devices connected to our gateway.
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Category: Applications Monitoring, Database Management, Database Monitoring, Linux Servers Monitoring, Mail Server Monitoring, MySQL monitoring, Network Monitoring, Server Management, Sysadmin Tools, Web Server Monitoring

10 Tips for Monitoring Best Practices (Alerting and Notifications)

top ten monitoring best practices monitisMonitoring tools are only as good as YOU make them!  Not really what you wanted to hear?  Sorry but the truth will set you FREE.  This Article will cover 10 Tips for Monitoring Best Practices.  Guess what… they are all about YOU not the monitoring tools or features!

All monitoring solutions simply do what YOU tell them to.  Monitoring tools come in two varieties:

  • Sensitive types:  All alerts are automatically on, at the most sensitive level
  • Quite types:  All alerts are disabled and you need to enable them manually.


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Category: 101 Reasons To Choose Monitis, Applications Monitoring, Database Monitoring, Events Monitoring, Java Monitoring, Linux Servers Monitoring, Mac OS Monitoring, Mail Server Monitoring, Network Monitoring, Uptime Monitoring, Windows Servers Monitoring

Bandwidth monitoring with ntop & Monitis

ntop bandwidth monitor


ntop is a very simple yet powerful bandwidth monitor which outputs various statistics counters in RRD.
RRD – Round Robin Database – is a very handy framework for saving server performance counters in a ring buffer.
We can say that if we would like to graph network performance, ntop does most of the hard work for us and all we have left to do is to graph the counters.
Among the counters ntop exposes there are:

  • Total bytes per interface
  • Total HTTP, DHCP, DNS, NetBIOS bytes per interface
  • Interface throughput
  • IGMP, ARP statistics

And speaking of graphing, we have Monitis, which can graph any counter we can think of. I have an idea – lets graph ntop data with Monitis!
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Category: 101 Reasons To Choose Monitis, Linux Servers Monitoring, Mail Server Monitoring, Monitoring Scripts, Network Monitoring, Performance Management, Server Management, Web Server Monitoring

Microsoft Exchange Monitoring – Important Performance Counters

clip_image001In a previous article we discussed monitoring Exchange Server with Monitis and provided a custom monitor written in PowerShell.

In this article we’ll go over the available and relevant metrics for Exchange Server 2003. We’ve categorized the performance counters in the following groups:

1. Exchange Message Counters

2. Exchange Services Counters

3. Memory Monitoring

4. Network Monitoring

The Message and Service counters are the ones we’ll discuss in this article. Memory and Network monitoring will be covered in a follow-up article.

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Category: Mail Server Monitoring, Windows Networking, Windows Servers Monitoring

Microsoft Exchange Monitoring

clip_image001This is the second article in a series about Exchange Server that follows up on the article monitoring Exchange Server with Monitis.

In the previous post we discussed the Exchange Message and Service Counters. In this article we’ll go over the Memory and Network Monitoring metrics.

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Category: Applications Monitoring, Mail Server Monitoring, Network Monitoring, Server Management, Windows Servers Monitoring

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About Monitis

Monitis GFI is a specialist provider of web and Cloud monitoring services that include website monitoring, site load testing, transaction monitoring, application and database monitoring, Cloud resource monitoring, and server and internal network monitoring within one easy-to-use dashboard. Over 100,000 users worldwide have chosen Monitis as their provider of choice to increase uptime and user experience of their services and products. What makes Monitis' solutions different is that they are fast to deploy, feature-rich in technology and provide a comprehensive single-pane view of on-premise and off-premise infrastructure and applications.

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