Just as an FYI, Evident ClearStone supports monitoring of Cassandra clusters.
Our product supports various NoSQL products (including Cassandra) and other
distributed caching technologies.
The product aggregates metrics (from JMX) across all the nodes in the
cluster. We also monitor JVM stats lik
Cloudkick does monitor JMX now. That + custom alerts is pretty powerful.
I work for Cloudkick, btw
On Sun, Sep 12, 2010 at 9:39 AM, Dave Viner wrote:
> I haven't tried cacti, but I'm using CloudKick as an external service for
> monitoring Cassandra. It's super easy to get setup. Happy to sha
ubject: Re: Monitoring with Cacti
This is my first encounter with cacti, and it's feels a lot like having
a cactus violently inserted in me :) Hopefully this week I can get back to it
with a clearer head, part of my annoyance was probably trying to rush it
through on a Friday and it
From: Aaron Morton [mailto:aa...@thelastpickle.com]
Sent: Sunday, September 12, 2010 3:40 PM
To: user@cassandra.apache.org
Cc: user@cassandra.apache.org
Subject: Re: Monitoring with Cacti
This is my first encounter with cacti, and it's feels a lot like having
a c
I use nagios + nrpe + some custom scripts to monitor our cassandra/hadoop
nodes. Given our long time comfortability with nagios, i didn't find any
major gotchas ..
regards
ranjib
On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 2:10 AM, Aaron Morton wrote:
> This is my first encounter with cacti, and it's feels a lot lik
This is my first encounter with cacti, and it's feels a lot like having a cactus violently inserted in me :) Hopefully this week I can get back to it with a clearer head, part of my annoyance was probably trying to rush it through on a Friday and it's somewhat taxing configuration. Over the weekend
Thanks but this is an internal only application. CheersAaronOn 13 Sep, 2010,at 04:39 AM, Dave Viner wrote:I haven't tried cacti, but I'm using CloudKick as an external service for monitoring Cassandra. It's super easy to get setup. Happy to share my setup if that'd help.It doesn't currently moni
I haven't tried cacti, but I'm using CloudKick as an external service for
monitoring Cassandra. It's super easy to get setup. Happy to share my
setup if that'd help.
It doesn't currently monitor JMX information, but it does offer some basic
checks like thread pool and column family stats -
https
On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 7:29 PM, aaron morton wrote:
> Am going through the rather painful process of trying to monitor cassandra
> using Cacti (it's what we use at work). At the moment it feels like a losing
> battle :)
>
> Does anyone know of some cacti resources for monitoring the JVM or Cass