Thanks everyone for their suggestions. We looked at pretty much everything,
and ended up using NVD3. An example of its output in our deployment is here:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ox6vsy111ichccd/NVD3.png
(Power usage for a rack in our DC)
On 2 May 2014 14:33, Ed Butler e...@tn13.com wrote:
On 5 June 2014 07:25, Ed Butler e...@tn13.com wrote:
Thanks everyone for their suggestions. We looked at pretty much everything,
and ended up using NVD3. An example of its output in our deployment is here:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ox6vsy111ichccd/NVD3.png
Out of curiosity are you monitoring
We're using C-Matic's strips which are installed in the distribution
boards. I had a look but can't find their website, the closest I can get to
is this:
http://www.schneider-electric.co.uk/sites/uk/en/company/brands/cmatic.page
On 5 June 2014 09:59, Nat Morris n...@nuqe.net wrote:
On 5 June
On 05/06/2014 07:25, Ed Butler wrote:
Thanks everyone for their suggestions. We looked at pretty much
everything, and ended up using NVD3. An example of its output in our
deployment is here:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ox6vsy111ichccd/NVD3.png [2]
Nice :)
IIRC when we were putting our DC
Hi,
Graeme Fowler wrote:
On 2 May 2014 17:01:09 Charl Tintinger ctintin...@gmail.com wrote:
Logstash is also worth considering
+1 to this. Have recently been introduced to logstash and it it is, frankly,
brilliant.
+1 to the +1. If you have a lot of log events and you need to search them
On 02/05/2014 21:14, Graeme Fowler wrote:
On 2 May 2014 17:01:09 Charl Tintinger ctintin...@gmail.com wrote:
Logstash is also worth considering
+1 to this. Have recently been introduced to logstash and it it is,
frankly, brilliant.
Caution needed however: you really need to understand
Quite a big fan of highcharts (http://www.highcharts.com/) for any custom
graphing I need to do.
Are you using a relational database for this data? - a word of warning that
time series databases exist for a reason :). Take a look at Graphite / Grafana
for a good (almost) out-of-the-box
We are introducing a new bandwidth collection model, where instead of using
off the shelf tools like RRD etc, we are bringing data into a database. The
challenge we have currently with this is how to display the data to clients
in as pretty a way as possible.
We've found the libraries nvd3.org
On Fri May 02, 2014 at 02:33:42PM +0100, Ed Butler wrote:
We are introducing a new bandwidth collection model, where instead of using
off the shelf tools like RRD etc, we are bringing data into a database. The
challenge we have currently with this is how to display the data to clients
in as
On 05/02/2014 09:33 AM, Ed Butler wrote:
We are introducing a new bandwidth collection model, where instead
of using off the shelf tools like RRD etc, we are bringing data into
a database. The challenge we have currently with this is how to
display the data to clients in as pretty a way as
Logstash is also worth considering, Splunk is good but gets very pricy when
you start working with lots of data.
On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 4:47 PM, Keith Mitchell ke...@uknof.org.uk wrote:
On 05/02/2014 09:33 AM, Ed Butler wrote:
We are introducing a new bandwidth collection model, where
On 2 May 2014 17:01:09 Charl Tintinger ctintin...@gmail.com wrote:
Logstash is also worth considering
+1 to this. Have recently been introduced to logstash and it it is,
frankly, brilliant.
Caution needed however: you really need to understand your data stream. And
be good with regex.
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