Tiny programs to submit events to Riemann.
Riemann-health, for example, submits events about the current CPU, load,
memory, and disk use. Also available is riemann-bench
, which submits
randomly distributed metrics for load testing.
gem install riemann-tools
riemann-health --host my.riemann.server
This repository contains a number of different programs. Some of them
ship with the riemann-tools
gem, including:
- riemann-apache-status - Apache monitoring.
- riemann-dir-files-count - File counts.
- riemann-freeswitch - FreeSwitch monitoring.
- riemann-memcached - Monitor Memcache.
- riemann-proc - Linux process monitoring.
- riemann-bench - Load testing for Riemann.
- riemann-dir-space - Directory space monitoring.
- riemann-haproxy - Monitor HAProxy.
- riemann-net - Network interface monitoring.
- riemann-varnish - Monitor Varnish.
- riemann-cloudant - Cloudant monitoring.
- riemann-diskstats - Disk statistics.
- riemann-health - General CPU, memory, disk and load monitoring.
- riemann-nginx-status - Monitor Nginx.
- riemann-zookeeper - Monitor Zookeeper.
- riemann-consul - Monitor Consul.
- riemann-fd - Linux file descriptor use.
- riemann-kvminstance - Monitor KVM instances.
- riemann-ntp - Monitor NTP
Also contained in the repository are a number of stand-alone monitoring tools, which are shipped as separate gems.
Use these tools by installing their individual gems, usually named for the specific tool, for example:
gem install riemann-aws
To install the AWS tools.
- riemann-aws - Monitor various AWS services.
- riemann-elasticsearch - Monitor Elasticsearch.
- riemann-mesos - Monitor Mesos.
- riemann-rabbitmq - Monitor RabbitMQ.
- riemann-docker - Monitor Docker.
- riemann-marathon - Monitor Marathon.
- riemann-munin - Monitor Munin.
- riemann-riak - Monitor Riak.
- riemann-chronos - Monitor Chronos.
There are also a number of additional, stand-alone tools, contained in the Riemann GitHub account.
The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2011-2016 Kyle Kingsbury