Anyone here use a hosted monitoring solution and have any recommendations for or against? We're looking to supplement our current Nagios implementation, but have something entirely decoupled from our network infrastructure i was actually looking for the same thing... we're checking out Pingdom, and Site24x7 so far no clear winners yeah, I don't like Pingdom for some reason.. also it is pretty expensive for what it is the only things we really need are sms+email alerting and URL monitoring I've got cloudkick monitoring http, https, and ping on my vm, but it looks like they are in the middle of a transition to becoming "Rackspace Cloud Monitoring" since our in-house monitoring system takes care of the rest, we just want to know if customer-facing sites are not responding henderb: yeah, that kinda rules them out and illustrates one of the problems with SaaS providers what problem is that? that they can just randomly decide that the service you use is deprecated, forcing you to migrate ah, LOL, yeah either to their new SaaS system, or to someone else right kinda like the problem of migrating Slicehost customers to Rackspace Cloud, and all the IP renumbering outcry that came with it yeah... people hate renumbering so that problem exists in *aaS (any service ;) We're renumbering our office so we can switch from business-grade (hah) cable + a T1 backup line to a much nicer E100 line it's only ~16 IPs, but that's difficult enough, I couldn't imagine doing an entire cloud not a fan of pingdom, I usually just setup a remote app to monitor from the outside http://wasitup.com/ is not too shabby E100 line? yeah, something the local providers offer, it's a 100Mbit ethernet port directly to the premises nice! where are you located? less hassle for the provider, as they don't have to worry about CPE and translating the signal to whatever they use on their fiber etc downtown Vancouver ah cool About how much does better service like that cost? Our office is only 4 blocks from the Pittock IX in Portland and I keep wondering what it would take to get fiber or something and move our comcast to backup duty I don't see the bills, so I have no idea it's definitely more than "business"-grade cable/DSL, but generally the SLAs are much better my last job had 10Mbit symmetrical fiber, with no transfer cap it never went down in the five years I managed it Lefty: what medium are they using to deliver the 100 Mpbs, fiber? copper? coax ;) I believe it's fiber to the building, and then they distribute it via copper from the demarc downstairs roger really the only difference is the signalling used yeah Lefty: nice, another vancouverite? portertech: aye! Lefty: where you working? local? airg.com on Melville Lefty: nice, do you guys ever lend out your office space for local meetups? Not that I know of, but I've only been here a couple of months relocated? or just job swithc recently hired Lefty: i've used pingdom for quite a while and have been happy with them you could always put a nagios box on an arp vps to monitor your external facing stuff anyone have experience with the pub/sub capabilities of redis? considering it for real-time notifications... up_the_irons: I've played w/ it portertech: any good? nice and lightweight, simple queuing high throughput, since it all resides in memory and you get some persistence depending on settings ah interesting http://redis.io/topics/pubsub <3 those docs yup, already looking at those :) the doc for the "ping" command is interactive ;) re persistence, only works when making your own fifo, not pub/sub roger