SystemGuard 💂
SystemGuard is your go-to tool for lightweight, user-friendly, and easy-to-set-up server monitoring. Track everything from CPU usage and memory to network speed and running processes—all in one place.
✨ Key Features
Comprehensive Server Monitoring:
Keep an eye on crucial server stats like CPU, memory, disk, and network usage.Network Speed Test:
Easily check your server’s network speed with a built-in speed test.Rate-Limited Speed Test:
Prevent abuse by limiting how often speed tests can be run.Process Management:
Identify and terminate processes consuming the most CPU with a single click.Real-Time Monitoring:
Get up-to-the-second updates on your server’s health metrics.Responsive Design:
Enjoy a seamless experience across mobile, tablet, and desktop devices.Self-Updating:
Automatically update to the latest version with no extra effort.Easy Installation:
Install SystemGuard effortlessly with a simple bash script.
💡 Why Choose SystemGuard?
SystemGuard offers a sleek, modern design that consolidates all your server health metrics in one place—without burdening your server's performance. Ideal for developers, IT professionals, and managers who need real-time insights into server operations.
🚀 Coming Soon: Threshold notifications, customizable dashboards, and plugin support to make SystemGuard even more powerful.
🌐 Explore & Contribute
Check out the source code, contribute, or report issues on GitHub. Your feedback and contributions are always welcome!
Top comments (2)
I realize you want to evangelize your project, and that's cool, but this shouldn't be tagged #python... or #programming... or #webdev. The fact that it's written in Python is irrelevant (proof: Python isn't mentioned once in the post), and more to the point, doesn't make this post relevant to the Python community on Dev. Ditto #programming, ditto #webdev.
I'd argue correct tags would be more like:
#sysadmin #server #monitoring #beginners
(Maybe a #devops thrown in there too, although that's a bit corporate.)
Thank you for pointing that out! I've removed the tags for now. Once I've updated the post to explain how it works, how Python is being used, and added other useful details for the community, I'll re-add the tag.