But what about the basic functionality that people buy APM for - application monitoring? APM works great for Windows processes, and I'm sure it works great for wanting to monitor any number of odd things on both Windows and linux systems. I can't imagine that I'm the only one that sees this as a problem. Is my understanding correct on that?įirst, the underlying issue - I can't monitor individual processes on linux out of the box. If I do that though, how does APM get that information and store it? Or is that even possible? When I looked over the section on linux script monitoring in the Administrators Guide, it appears to function very similar to Nagios, where your script is expected to return a small range of status codes, followed by a message, but performance data isn't stored. ![]() So, I thought I might look into writing a script that finds the PID of the java process I'm interested in and prints out the cpu and memory information. I can use the template to add the 'java' process, but when I view the application details I have to know the PID of the individual processes to know which one is associated with the app of interest. For instance, on one of my boxes I have 3 'java' processes running, but I"m only interested in the performance of one of them. When I use the Process Monitor -SNMP template, I can browse the list of processes in a very generic fashion, but it doesn't give me the granularity I want. ![]() I'm trying to monitor the CPU and Memory utilization of a process on a linux server.
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