I use Zabbix a lot. There is very nice template for Postgres
http://pg-monz.github.io/pg_monz/index-en.html

On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 12:13 PM, Tim Smith <randomdev4+postg...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Try http://brendangregg.com/
>
> Lots of great tidbits there from a guy who really knows his performance
> stuff (ex-Sun, now Netflix)
>
> On Sunday, 14 December 2014, Vick Khera <vi...@khera.org> wrote:
>
>>
>> On Sat, Dec 13, 2014 at 1:55 PM, Edson Carlos Ericksson Richter <
>> edsonrich...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> I've been searching in web for guidelines on OS (Linux) and PostgreSQL
>>> (9.3.5) active monitoring best practices.
>>>
>>
>> Recent trends are more toward monitoring response latency by first
>> establishing a baseline level of activity and latency, then alerting when
>> those numbers get out of acceptable range.
>>
>> There are some open source tools to collect and sort and report this way
>> (see Kibana and Grafana and their underlying data stores). I've not seen
>> alerting tools based on this that are non-commercial, though. Two services
>> I know of are Ruxit and Circonus.
>>
>> Personally I still use Nagios to tell my staff when things are down or
>> not responding, but often that is too late to proactively fix things.
>>
>> One thing that'd be really cool is to use the new binary JSON storage in
>> the upcoming Pg release to store the time series data for use with
>> Grafana... but then you'd have a chicken/egg problem with monitoring
>> itself. :)
>>
>

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