<%NUMBERING1%>.<%NUMBERING2%>.<%NUMBERING3%> PRTG Manual: Probe Health Sensor
The Probe Health sensor monitors internal PRTG parameters. It shows the status of the probe system and checks various parameters of the probe system that can affect the quality of the monitoring results.
Probe Health Sensor
For a detailed list and descriptions of the channels that this sensor can show, see section Channel List.
Sensor in Other Languages
- Dutch: Probe Status
- French: État de la sonde
- German: Zustand der Probe
- Japanese: プローブ正常性
- Portuguese: Funcionamento da sonda
- Russian: Работоспособность зонда
- Simplified Chinese: 探针健康状况
- Spanish: Salud de sonda
Remarks
Basic Sensor Settings
Click the Settings tab of a sensor to change its settings.
Basic Sensor Settings
|
|
Sensor Name
|
Enter a name to identify the sensor.
|
Parent Tags
|
Shows tags that the sensor inherits from its parent device, parent group, and parent probe.
This setting is for your information only. You cannot change it.
|
Tags
|
Enter one or more tags. Confirm each tag with the Spacebar key, a comma, or the Enter key. You can use tags to group objects and use tag-filtered views later on. Tags are not case-sensitive. Tags are automatically inherited.
It is not possible to enter tags with a leading plus (+) or minus (-) sign, nor tags with parentheses (()) or angle brackets (<>).
For performance reasons, it can take some minutes until you can filter for new tags that you added.
The sensor has the following default tags that are automatically predefined in the sensor's settings when you add the sensor:
|
Priority
|
Select a priority for the sensor. This setting determines the position of the sensor in lists. The highest priority is at the top of a list. Choose from the lowest priority () to the highest priority ().
|
Usually, a sensor connects to the IP Address/DNS Name of the parent device. See the device settings for details. For some sensors, you can explicitly define the monitoring target in the sensor settings.
Sensor Display
Sensor Display
|
|
Primary Channel
|
Select a channel from the list to define it as the primary channel. In the device tree, the last value of the primary channel is always displayed below the sensor's name. The available options depend on what channels are available for this sensor.
You can set a different primary channel later by clicking below a channel gauge on the sensor's Overview tab.
|
Graph Type
|
Define how different channels are shown for this sensor:
- Show channels independently (default): Show a graph for each channel.
- Stack channels on top of each other: Stack channels on top of each other to create a multi-channel graph. This generates a graph that visualizes the different components of your total traffic.
You cannot use this option in combination with manual Vertical Axis Scaling (available in the channel settings).
|
Stack Unit
|
This setting is only visible if you enable Stack channels on top of each other as Graph Type. Select a unit from the list. All channels with this unit are stacked on top of each other. By default, you cannot exclude single channels from stacking if they use the selected unit. However, there is an advanced procedure to do so.
|
Inherited Settings
By default, all of these settings are inherited from objects that are higher in the hierarchy. We recommend that you change them centrally in the root group settings if necessary. To change a setting for this object only, click under the corresponding setting name to disable the inheritance and to display its options.
For more information, see section Inheritance of Settings.
Scanning Interval
Scanning Interval
For more information, see section Root Group Settings, section Scanning Interval.
Access Rights
Access Rights
For more information, see section Root Group Settings, section Access Rights.
Channel Unit Configuration
Which channel units are available depends on the sensor type and the available parameters. If no configurable channels are available, this field shows No configurable channels.
Channel Unit Configuration
For more information, see section Root Group Settings, section Channel Unit Configuration.
Channel List
Which channels the sensor actually shows might depend on the target device, the available components, and the sensor setup.
|
|
CPU Load
|
The CPU load in percent that the probe process causes. Extensive CPU load can lead to false, incomplete, and incorrect monitoring results. This value should usually stay below 50%.
|
Downtime
|
In the channel table on the Overview tab, this channel never shows any values. PRTG uses this channel in graphs and reports to show the amount of time in which the sensor was in the Down status in percent.
|
Handles
|
The counter for the data structures of the operating system. It is responsible for internal resource management. Investigate obviously increasing values that occur repeatedly.
|
Health
|
The sum of the probe state as a value between 100% (healthy) and 0% (failing). Investigate frequent or repeated health values below 100%.
This channel is the primary channel by default.
|
Interval Delay non-WMI&SNMP
|
The interval delay in percent for all sensors that are not of the type Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) or Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI). If this value is above 0%, try to increase the scanning intervals or distribute your sensors among probes.
|
Interval Delay SNMP
|
The interval delay in percent for SNMP sensors. If this value is above 0%, there are probably too many SNMP v3 sensors that are very slow. In this case, try to increase the scanning intervals or distribute the sensors among probes.
|
Interval Delay WMI
|
The interval delay in percent for WMI sensors. If this value is above 0%, WMI sensors were not able to check the target device according to their interval. 100% means that WMI sensors are checked with twice their interval on average. For values above 0%, try to increase the scanning intervals or distribute the sensors among probes to keep the number of WMI sensors per probe below 120 (with a 60-second scanning interval) or 600 (with a 300-second scanning interval).
|
Lost Flow Packets
|
The number of lost Flow (NetFlow, jFlow, sFlow, IPFIX) packets in percent. The higher this value, the less flow packages PRTG can handle. Usually, this value should be 0%. Investigate increasing values.
|
Memory Usage
|
The amount of memory that is used by the PRTG probe service as reported by the memory manager. Investigate obviously increasing values that occur repeatedly. If the value is constantly above 2 GB, this indicates that PRTG runs at its limits. In this case, you should distribute some sensors among remote probes.
|
Message Queue
|
The number of monitoring results that have not been processed by the core yet. This value should usually stay below 1/10 of the sensor count.
|
Open Requests
|
The number of active monitoring requests. This value should stay below the maximum of 500 open requests.
|
Syslog Buffer
|
The number of buffered syslog packages. Usually, this value should be 0 (or very low). Investigate increasing values.
|
Syslog Drop
|
The number of dropped syslog packages
|
Threads
|
The number of program parts that are running simultaneously. This value can increase with heavy load. Usually, the number should not exceed 100.
|
Toplist Memory
|
The amount of RAM that the Toplists on this probe are using. Stay below 1 GB memory usage (depending on the available memory on the probe system). If necessary, reduce the number of Toplists or distribute them among probes.
|
Trap Buffer
|
The number of buffered SNMP traps. Usually, this value should be 0 (or very low). Investigate increasing values.
|
More
Knowledge Base
My probe system is running out of disk space. What can I do?
What security features does PRTG include?