Need advice about which tool to choose?Ask the StackShare community!
Add tool
Monitoror vs Nagios: What are the differences?
What is Monitoror? Unified monitoring wallboard. It is a wallboard monitoring app to monitor server status; monitor CI builds progress or even display critical values.
What is Nagios? Complete monitoring and alerting for servers, switches, applications, and services. Nagios is a host/service/network monitoring program written in C and released under the GNU General Public License.
Monitoror and Nagios can be categorized as "Monitoring" tools.
Some of the features offered by Monitoror are:
- Monitor all your tools in one place, one screen
- Shape the wallboard how it fits you the most
- Clear and readable overview
On the other hand, Nagios provides the following key features:
- Monitor your entire IT infrastructure
- Spot problems before they occur
- Know immediately when problems arise
Nagios is an open source tool with 60 GitHub stars and 37 GitHub forks. Here's a link to Nagios's open source repository on GitHub.
Decisions about Monitoror and Nagios
Matthias Fleschütz
Teamlead IT at NanoTemper Technologies · | 2 upvotes · 139.9K views
- free open source
- modern interface and architecture
- large community
- extendable I knew Nagios for decades but it was really outdated (by its architecture) at some point. That's why Icinga started first as a fork, not with Icinga2 it is completely built from scratch but backward-compatible with Nagios plugins. Now it has reached a state with which I am confident.
Manage your open source components, licenses, and vulnerabilities
Learn MorePros of Monitoror
Pros of Nagios
Pros of Monitoror
Be the first to leave a pro
Pros of Nagios
- It just works53
- The standard28
- Customizable12
- The Most flexible monitoring system8
- Huge stack of free checks/plugins to choose from1
Sign up to add or upvote prosMake informed product decisions
What is Monitoror?
It is a wallboard monitoring app to monitor server status; monitor CI builds progress or even display critical values.
What is Nagios?
Nagios is a host/service/network monitoring program written in C and
released under the GNU General Public License.
Need advice about which tool to choose?Ask the StackShare community!
Jobs that mention Monitoror and Nagios as a desired skillset
What companies use Monitoror?
What companies use Nagios?
What companies use Monitoror?
No companies found
What companies use Nagios?
Manage your open source components, licenses, and vulnerabilities
Learn MoreSign up to get full access to all the companiesMake informed product decisions
What tools integrate with Monitoror?
What tools integrate with Nagios?
What tools integrate with Monitoror?
Sign up to get full access to all the tool integrationsMake informed product decisions
Blog Posts
What are some alternatives to Monitoror and Nagios?
New Relic
The world’s best software and DevOps teams rely on New Relic to move faster, make better decisions and create best-in-class digital experiences. If you run software, you need to run New Relic. More than 50% of the Fortune 100 do too.
Kibana
Kibana is an open source (Apache Licensed), browser based analytics and search dashboard for Elasticsearch. Kibana is a snap to setup and start using. Kibana strives to be easy to get started with, while also being flexible and powerful, just like Elasticsearch.
Grafana
Grafana is a general purpose dashboard and graph composer. It's focused on providing rich ways to visualize time series metrics, mainly though graphs but supports other ways to visualize data through a pluggable panel architecture. It currently has rich support for for Graphite, InfluxDB and OpenTSDB. But supports other data sources via plugins.
Sentry
Sentry’s Application Monitoring platform helps developers see performance issues, fix errors faster, and optimize their code health.
Amazon CloudWatch
It helps you gain system-wide visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and operational health. It retrieve your monitoring data, view graphs to help take automated action based on the state of your cloud environment.