Home » Monitoring and logging
LogFusion: Because Sometimes You Just Want to See the Logs Roll In Not every problem needs a dashboard. Sometimes all that’s needed is a clear window into what’s happening right now — no dashboards, no databases, no scraping metrics from half a dozen endpoints. Just logs, plain and immediate.
That’s where LogFusion quietly earns its place. It doesn’t try to be a full-stack observability suite. Instead, it’s the tool you reach for when you want to watch a log file live — whether it’s an install
Nagwin: When You Just Need Monitoring That Works (Even on a USB Stick) Let’s be honest — most modern monitoring stacks assume you’re running Kubernetes, fluent in YAML, and happy to deploy ten containers just to check CPU load. But sometimes, all that’s needed is something simple. Something that runs on plain Windows, with no agents, no daemons, no cloud.
That’s where Nagwin still makes sense.
It’s a portable, self-contained build of Nagios tailored for Windows — no virtual machines, no WSL, n
Prometheus: When Guessing Isn’t Good Enough Anymore Metrics aren’t flashy. They don’t crash, they don’t throw errors — they just drift. Slowly. Until something’s wrong and no one saw it coming.
Prometheus was built for those moments. It’s the tool that doesn’t just collect data — it makes patterns visible before the red lights start flashing. Simple in design, but endlessly flexible, it became the backbone of observability in systems that must not fail.
No dashboards out of the box. No pretens
Grafana Loki: When Logs Deserve Prometheus-Level Respect Logs tend to pile up. Noisy, inconsistent, barely structured — and almost always ignored until something breaks. And yet, they’re the only witnesses to what actually happened when a system went sideways.
Grafana Loki flips the script.
It treats logs like time series — aligned with metrics, queryable by labels, and tightly integrated with Grafana dashboards. It doesn’t try to parse everything. It doesn’t care what’s in the log. It just st