| | 6 | |
| | 7 | The Nagios web page is sometimes very graphically charged and does not necessarily contain the information you need at a glance. |
| | 8 | For example, it is quite complicated to restart controls on multiple hosts in one click. |
| | 9 | |
| | 10 | For example, a server that is down should take only one line and not one per service... |
| | 11 | Similarly, a service that has been down for 5 minutes or since yesterday has more weight than a service that has fallen for 15 days. |
| | 12 | |
| | 13 | * With Velvice Panel, a broken down server takes only one line. |
| | 14 | Services that have been falling for a long time gradually lose their color and become pastel colors. |
| | 15 | |
| | 16 | * With Velvice Panel, it is possible through a single click to redo a check of all services that are in the CRITICAL state. |
| | 17 | Similarly, it is possible to restart a check on all SSH services in breakdowns... |
| | 18 | In order not to clog the Nagios server, checks are shifted by 2 seconds in time. |
| | 19 | |
| | 20 | There is also a link to the web page of the main Nagios server. |
| | 21 | For each computer, you have a direct link to its dedicated web page on this server. |