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Iftop is a free software command-line system monitor tool developed by Paul Warren. It produces a real-time stream of incoming and outgoing network communications from the operating system iftop is running within. [2] By default, the connections are ordered by bandwidth usage, with only the
bmon is a free and open-source monitoring and debugging tool to monitor bandwidth and capture and display networking-related statistics.It features various output methods including an interactive curses user interface and programmable text output for scripting.
It allows the user to see traffic load on a network over time in graphical form. It was originally developed by Tobias Oetiker and Dave Rand to monitor router traffic, but has developed into a tool that can create graphs and statistics for almost anything. MRTG is written in Perl and can run on Windows, Linux, Unix, Mac OS and NetWare.
The software can be operated via an AJAX-based web interface which is suitable for both real-time troubleshooting and data exchange with non-technical staff via maps (dashboards) and user-defined reports. [7] An additional administration interface in the form of a desktop application for Windows, Linux, and macOS is available. [8] [9] [10]
Among the tools that can be used through this interface are nmap with the vizualization tool ZenMap, ntop, a Network Interface Bandwidth Monitor, a Network Segment ARP Scanner, a session manager for VNC, a minicom-based terminal server, serial port monitoring, and WPA PSK management.
Netdata consists of a daemon that, when executed, is responsible for collecting and displaying information in real-time. It is mostly written in C, Python and JavaScript, and aims to use minimal system resources. It can be run on any Linux system to monitor any system or application, and is capable of running on PCs, servers, and embedded Linux ...
Ganglia software is bundled with enterprise-level Linux distributions such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) or the CentOS repackaging of the same. Ganglia grew out of requirements for monitoring systems by Berkeley (University of California) but now sees use by commercial and educational organisations such as Cray, MIT, NASA and Twitter.
The application was inspired by the open-source version of Big Brother, a network monitoring application, and maintains backward compatibility with it. Between 2002 and 2004 Henrik Storner wrote an open-source software add-on called bbgen toolkit, then in March 2005 a stand-alone version was released called Hobbit.