![]() ![]() But it also offers to send alerts, and more – so this might be "abused" to plug in some other logging, when needed. Monitorix uses RRDtool for logging, so you'll have RRD files (Round-Robin-Database). Remote managing (via network): sure, simply get a command-line via the network (e.g.Both command-line and GUI, or at least command-line: Monitorix is a Perl program, which can be managed via command-line (start/stop, editing its plain-text config, etc.).Monitorix is a web-based tool, so you won't have that "interactive view" from the AIDA64 screenshot in your question. In your case: find the graph with the highest peak to see which component is "overheating", for example. Monitorix saved my day more than once, as its "raw overview" makes it pretty easy to track down problems and to see where to have a closer look at. I'm using it for quite a while now, and found the software that convincing I volunteered to maintain the Debian packages for it (← disclosure). ![]() It also supports HP ProLiant System Health, NVIDIA temperatures and usage, plus several more. Monitorix makes use of a lot of back-ends, such as the already mentioned lm-sensors Debian package. At the moment I am using 3 screens in FullHD resolution: laptop and 2 monitors (one in vertical. I am using Dell for work with Dell Dock WD19 on my Linux Mint 20.3 (upgrading quite regularly). Monitorix: Complete LM-Sensors and GPU temperatures / Disk drive temperatures and health (source: Monitorix click to enlarge) External GPU for high-res multi-monitor setup. It can be used asīut it also monitors "local resources" such as CPU, disks, and – sensors: Let me repeat a recommendation I already placed twice: Monitorix.
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