Our main focus at the moment is node status - up or down. As I understand it, packet schedulers are more for QoS monitoring and WAN mini ports are for PPoE. I could be way off but I'm thinking I don't need to monitor these.

Thanks for the quick response. We currently have 40+ sites in roughly as many cities, with monitoring of core infrastructure - routers, switches, WLAN and APs, etc. and also ESX hosts and virtual environment. Mainly node and interface monitoring with a few AppInsight for SQL instances and a few other applications.


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There's reason to only monitor actual interfaces and drop items such as the Packet Scheduler. Removed items won't count against your license and it will cut down on the database size, CPU and memory usage. If you are using your WAN-Miniport, by all means monitor it, but if not I would disable it on the router and remove it from NPM.

If working with Windows systems and asking this, I'd recommend rather than using SNMP to monitor (since NIC properties are being broken out by wan miniport, packet scheduler, etc) use WMI to monitor these systems. It's a bit more overhead, but even going full tilt on some of our systems I haven't seen any impactful overhead to it. You also get simple interface information rather than each of the components of the NIC to monitor.

Anytime you can get information in a timely manner without eating up another Solarwinds "element" of monitoring, you're saving license element/node counts for something else more important that will come in tomorrow or next year.

I have a number of IP cameras that from time to time disconnected from the network, for whatever reasons. I want to know immediately when it has happened.

I'm thinking about running a small program on my Wemos board to keep monitoring the connection status of the, say 3 IP cameras. The Wemos and all 3 cameras are connected to the same wifi router. For the notification part, I can deal with it, but I have no idea how to do the monitoring part.

Thanks.

Starting the firmware 4.0.5, you can monitor your Original Prusa MINI over your local network via the web interface called Prusa Connect Local. Prusa Connect Local is still in development and is an initial release of Prusa Connect.

As routers and networks have different configurations, it is hard to provide support in this respect. Please check the documentation of your network to whether you need to grant access for the printer or similar. However, if the MAC Address, within 'LAN Settings', is displayed as "ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff" (red square picture below), it may indicate an issue with the Buddy mainboard. If this is the case, please contact Customer support.

It may seem odd at first, yet the Mac mini is mostly used to power up another device making it more of a flexible purchase. For example, if you already have a screen, keyboard and mouse, you can pair these with the Mac mini instead of purchasing new ones (although you can opt for the Mac mini to arrive with them).

If you want to connect to a TV screen you may need to purchase a mini-displayport-to-VGA adapter which will allow you to connect your Mac mini to a standard analog monitor, projector, or LCD that uses a VGA connector or cable.

The Mac mini is a great way to turn any screen into a digital sign. This allows you to pre-schedule and setup content to show on your digital screen such as social media feeds, presentations, travel updates, news feeds and more. Read the full guide on setting up digital signage with the Mac mini here.

The Mac Mini includes a SDXC card slot so you can simply remove the memory card from your camera and insert it. This allows you to view photos on a monitor, or share them with the room from your TV screen.

However, there are many situations where a smaller, more tactical device is the optimal solution. NetMon Freemium provides customers with a free and easy way to deploy NetMon on a small and compact system. This is ideal for the home network, branch offices, forensic go-kits, penetration testing drop boxes, and much more.

During testing at home, I find the mini PC doesn't always boot up completely and get stuck on a sign in page even if I don't have a password for it. That doesn't seem to always happen if a monitor is plugged it during boot up. There has to be something I am missing or is it just a fluke?

I have no such problem with my setup.......Boots every time, even if the monitor is not on. I turn the 7 inch LCD monitor on later, and the system is waiting for me.....and I have it set up to not use a password. I use Windows 10.

You did not ask. But I would strongly recommend a wireless keyboard/mousepad for this application. You can sit it on your lap, no table needed. They are around $20 or so. Compact, run for a while on simple AAA (I think, may be AA) batteries, and can be shut off when not in use (as can the monitor once the session starts).

I have no such problem with my setup.......Boots every time, even if the monitor is not on. I turn the 7 inch LCD monitor on later, and the system is waiting for me.....and I have it set up to not use a password. I use Windows 10.


You did not ask. But I would strongly recommend a wireless keyboard/mousepad for this application. You can sit it on your lap, no table needed. They are around $20 or so. Compact, run for a while on simple AAA (I think, may be AA) batteries, and can be shut off when not in use (as can the monitor once the session starts).


Alex

I agree with your observation that you may need to use an HDMI emulator. That said, if you plan on using the system remotely then you probably do want to have a small monitor and keyboard and mouse as a last resort so that you can troubleshoot any problems that happen in the field. I have a small, 12VDC-powered display and a keyboard with a built-in trackball just for that purpose.

Your system should also have a way to define what should happen when you press the power button on the mini PC. It may be that all you'd have to do is to signal a restart which might allow everything to work the second time around.

I have the Beelink U59 mini PC. I use a wifi router in the field to create a private network. I manage the mini computer through remote desktop. This lets me monitor imaging from my campervan along the course of the night.

For routine stuff where I'm not traveling very far (mostly outreach events within a 1 hour drive of my house) I just skip the LCD/keyboard/mouse and assume that the PC will boot properly, and that I'll be able to Remote Desktop into it. I bring a small travel router and my iPad. The PC logs into the travel router automatically (no DHCP--I've mapped an IP address to the MAC address), and I can Remote Desktop into the PC over the WiFi network using my iPad. It has failed twice in the last year. Once was because of a hardware issue after I dropped the PC (memory got jolted out of its socket). Having an LCD with me wouldn't have helped that night. The one other time it failed, it was because the PC somehow logged into another network, so I couldn't find it on the travel router. LCD would have helped that time. Overall, the approach has been reliable enough that I don't worry about bringing LCD/keyboard/mouse.

Headless mini-pc and small travel router for me as well. At home the router acts as an extender for my home network so I can connect from inside the house on my home WiFi. While I was at the CalStar star party last month I had some time during the day so I put together a video showing exactly how to set this up and make the connection. I posted the video here for anyone struggling to figure this out. It is actually not difficult at all once you get the idea.

If you need a monitor for emergency use, you don't want to carry a standard desktop type monitor with you. I have a software development Raspberry pi I built using a 7" flat panel display. The display plugs into a controller board that has an HDMI input. This display/control board are powered by a 12V power supply and definitely work on a 12V battery. The box I built to house this computer and the HDMI display is 9"x6.5"x2". This would be very easy to carry with you as an emergency display.

Headless mini-pc and small travel router for me as well. At home the router acts as an extender for my home network so I can connect from inside the house on my home WiFi. While I was at the CalStar star party last month I had some time during the day so I put together a video showing exactly how to set this up and make the connection. I posted the video here for anyone struggling to figure this out. It is actually not difficult at all once you get the idea.


Best Regards,

Curtis

At a dark site, I use a mini router to connect to the minicomputer. So I'll plug an ethernet cable into the mini router and then RDP into the minicomputer using the wifi from the mini router with a laptop, tablet or my phone. The phone works great to check things. I use the laptop if I need to get dirty, hardly every happens though. Note, if there is a very weak phone signal I put the phone in airplane mode with wifi on. If I don't do this sometimes the RDP connection will not work because it is trying to get the IP from the internet from the poor phone signal.

Regarding the emergency monitor. I always bring a mouse and USB video capture device. I can plug the video out from the mini computer into the device and plug the device into my phone (with a display app) for an emergency display. You can of course also use that on a tablet or laptop.

However, the mini computer and router are VERY reliable. Just make sure to reboot and check the headless mini computer the week before you go to a remote site to make sure Windows updates didn't screw anything up! 2351a5e196

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