whatsuphome

Part 81: Thanks, initMAX! Now testing new custom widgets

Zabbix 7.0 custom widgets game is on! The wonderful team at initMAX gave me access to Pro versions of their new Zabbix 7.0 widgets, so of course I'm now testing them in my own style. The first widget I got my hands on is Message of the Day.

Part 80: Monitor your new Selenium

A quick tip to possibly give you new ideas.

As Zabbix got the new fantastic Selenium-based synthetic web tests, you will now have a new component to monitor. How do you monitori Selenium? With Zabbix, of course! If you are inpatient, feel free to download my very bare bones example template.

Part 78: Bullying the poor new Honeycomb widget

Earlier this week, I immediately installed Zabbix 7.0beta3 when it came out. Back then I quickly tried out the new Honeycomb widget with some actual data.

As a regular follower of a weird gaming channel Let's Game It Out on YouTube, I couldn't resist thinking in that channel host Josh voice in my head saying "I wonder if there's a limit..." (to the number of elements you can have on Honeycomb widget).

Select ALL the things!

My What's up, home? Zabbix is very small, with only 3172 active items.

Part 77: Welcome, Zabbix 7.0beta3

Zabbix 7.0beta3 got released today, so of course I immediately updated my What's up, home? environment to run it. Like usual, the update process was seamless and fast, going through everything in about a minute with my Raspberry Pi 4. 

As I updated Zabbix maybe ten minutes ago, these are very real-time impressions of the new version.

Part 76: I installed a Zabbix proxy for What's up, home

Recently I installed a Zabbix 7.0 proxy on a remote rental FreeBSD virtual server of mine. Why?

To give Zabbix 7.0 proxy some hard time

I do not envy my new proxy. If I would be a piece of software, I really would not want to be it. No, not because it would be challenging -- no, this one must be the most bored proxy of all time. It doesn't have too much to do, other than now it's testing this blog and few other websites instead of my home Raspberry Pi 4 doing that.

Part 74: Back to basics -- weird home monitoring

Lately I've been writing so much about GPT4All, synthetic monitoring and ProxySQL that this blog has drifted away from its original scope quite a bit. Let's return to roots for a while -- at least for this post, and see what's new on my home monitoring front. Or, not necessarily new, but details I have not shared with you earlier.

Part 73: Use ProxySQL to help your database

If you have a busy Zabbix system with lots of people using the web interface, perhaps Grafana with complex dashboards connecting to your Zabbix, and many other tasks directly communicating with the database, here's an idea: try out ProxySQL, a yet another nice open source product.

Part 72: Few dashboard panel ideas

After my few posts about synthetic monitoring over multiple Proton VPN tunnels, it's now time to show some weird widget ideas. I did already show you the standard widgets and panels I made, but how about something that's possible through open source and the fantastic community? The custom widgets really make the observability machine to hum smoothly. This time, I'm showing some Grafana panels to visualize the data gathered by Zabbix.

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