MickSlash 1 Posted March 19, 2017 Share Posted March 19, 2017 Hi, I don't know if it's already been asked, but what do you think to include an indicator for hw usage(ram,bandwith,cpu...)? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smn8600 2 Posted March 19, 2017 Share Posted March 19, 2017 Hi, I don't know if it's already been asked, but what do you think to include an indicator for hw usage(ram,bandwith,cpu...)? A hard drive usage gauge would be most helpful. I have a small disk, I'd like to know when I need to start deleting stuff without having to leave emby theater. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution trifleneurotic 44 Posted March 21, 2017 Solution Share Posted March 21, 2017 FWIW - I use monit with its UI counterpart m/monit to monitor my Emby server (the process itself, hard drive space, CPU usage, memory, load averages, etc.) It is relatively easy to set up and is meant for small-scale alerting and monitoring. I have configured it to send alerts when necessary, although I can always login to my m/monit instance to check status. Then again, having a monitor within Emby would preclude having to set any of that up (: In the meantime, check out monit for Linux, *BSD, Mac OS X. For Windows, there has to be similar packages out there. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luke 37065 Posted March 22, 2017 Share Posted March 22, 2017 Great info, thanks ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mastrmind11 717 Posted March 22, 2017 Share Posted March 22, 2017 FWIW - I use monit with its UI counterpart m/monit to monitor my Emby server (the process itself, hard drive space, CPU usage, memory, load averages, etc.) It is relatively easy to set up and is meant for small-scale alerting and monitoring. I have configured it to send alerts when necessary, although I can always login to my m/monit instance to check status. Then again, having a monitor within Emby would preclude having to set any of that up (: In the meantime, check out monit for Linux, *BSD, Mac OS X. For Windows, there has to be similar packages out there. Very cool, thanks for this. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chef 3745 Posted June 25, 2019 Share Posted June 25, 2019 If you are in windows you could check out core temp application. It puts all those stats in the sys tray. I find it very useful Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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