About RMON
What is RMON?
RMON stands for Remote Monitoring. With RMON you can check the availability of your
services, measure the response time for your applications, perform DNS checks, get inspiration
notification for SSL certificates. RMON also has many other useful functions.
Easy to Configure and Operate
With RMON you don’t have to perform any operations via the command line: you can
configure and manage it via the web interface.
One tool for web monitoring
Server availability, site or application response time, response verification, DNS
records and certificate expiration dates - RMON copes with this perfectly.
Fast to Deploy
To start monitoring, you need just to install the RMON on your server and RMON agents on your servers.
After the installation, the agents start to perform checks and send metrics to the centralized server.
Up to 1000 checks on 1vCPU.
With RMON you can:
Check the Availability
- check the availability of the servers via ICMP (PING check);
- check the availability of TCP port;
- monitor DNS performance;
- measure the response time;
- get expiry notifications for SSL certificates.
Analyse HTTP responses
- analyse response bodies: if the response does not include the necessary content, you will get a notification;
- send JSON body;
- monitor HTTP performance: name lookup, TTFB, total response time; Total 7 HTTP metrics;
Analyse Historical Data
- store the history of events for each host;
- view the history of all notifications sent via RMON;
- view the history of all metrics.
Receive Notifications
- configure alerts for different types of events;
- receive immediate alerts via the RMON web interface;
- get notifications via email, Slack, PagerDuty, MatterMost and Telegram.
Full features list
- Checking ping availability
- Checking DNS records availability
- Checking the availability of TCP and UDP ports
- Checking HTTP statuses
- Checking the BODY of HTTP(S) responses
- Checking the CSL expiration date
- Sending Telegram, Slack, PagerDuty and Email notifications
- Real-time alerting via RMON web interface
- Checking network connectivity
- Providing information upon response time
- Providing information upon servers uptime and downtime
- Storing the alarm history
- Storing the history of events for each host
- Status pages
- Agents