The number of containers I’m running on my server keeps increasing, and I want to make sure I’m not pushing it beyond its capabilities. I would like a simple interface accessible on my home network (that does not make any fishy connections out) that shows me CPU and RAM-usage, storage status of my hard drives, and network usage. It should be FOSS, and I want to run it as a Docker container.

Is Grafana the way to go, or are there other options I should consider?

  • mbirth@lemmy.ml
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    28 days ago

    Possibly a bit overkill, but I’m running Zabbix in 3 containers (Core, WebUI, database). Using its agent installed on all my machines, I can monitor basically anything. Of course, you can set limits, alerts, draw graphs, etc.

    • cyberwolfie@lemmy.mlOP
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      28 days ago

      That looks cool, but as you said maybe a little overkill, hehe. I’ll still check it out in more detail, in any case good for later!

  • grapemix@lemmy.ml
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    26 days ago

    I won’t waste time on things other than grafana if your setup is serious. Because you will always want more. Log aggregation, log query, alerts, tracing, profiling, oidc, s3 bucket, more and more dashboards. It’s addictive. Why waste time to redo it in the future?

  • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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    27 days ago

    I have Netdata running in a container, which has a useful all-in-one-pane view, and it does a good job of auto detecting other containers and the host OS. Its essentially zero config.

    It also has alerting capability, which is not zeroconf (configuring it properly is a bit of a chore). 😅

    They try to push a pro/paid version, but it’s subtle and completely optional (a bit like the way Portainer does it).