Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.
MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
Our generous forever free tier includes the full platform, including the AI Assistant, for 3 users with 10k metrics, 50GB logs, and 50GB traces.
Built on open standards like Prometheus and OpenTelemetry, Grafana Cloud includes Kubernetes Monitoring, Application Observability, Incident Response, plus the AI-powered Grafana Assistant. Get started with our generous free tier today.
This project can be applied to any Microsoft SQL Server database. It creates generic change logging triggers on selected tables, which will log all changes to a single log table.
PootyPedia is a tool to track the hardware in use by a software project. Its client software finds the hardware and reports it, while the server software tracks the reports and keeps them organized in a database.
A Front-End written in Perl to allow easy access to messages received by a syslog-ng server, with extra features such as device groups and access control based on user profiles.
SysLog2ODBC for Windows is a SysLog server with ODBC logging facility that can be run as a Win32 service. It starts listening on a configurable UDP port and, for each syslog message it receives, it executes a customizable SQL statement.
Itologmon is an alternative log file monitor for use with HP OpenView IT/Operations. It provides a mechanism for sending log file data to ITO via the opcmsg(3) API instead of the HP-supplied log file encapsulator (opcle).
This project offers a client/server tool to analyze the /var/log/auth.log in order to gather information about the login attempts. The information is sent to a server side where the datas are stored in a sqlite database.
An application that centralizes UNIX system status information from several machines into one web-accessible interface. A daemon gathers system stats and reports them stats via HTTP to a server which presents the most recent stats via a web page.