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jQuery is a cross-platform JavaScript library designed to simplify the client-side scripting of HTML. | It is a robust and comprehensive monitoring platform that ensures the smooth operation of your websites and applications. It provides real-time insights, proactive alerts, and seamless incident management. |
| - | Uptime monitoring;
Heartbeat monitoring;
Service monitoring;
Keyword monitoring;
Port monitoring;
Incident management;
Status page;
Application performance monitoring |
Statistics | |
GitHub Stars 59.6K | GitHub Stars - |
GitHub Forks 20.5K | GitHub Forks - |
Stacks 195.3K | Stacks 0 |
Followers 70.6K | Followers 2 |
Votes 6.6K | Votes 0 |
Pros & Cons | |
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Integrations | |
| No integrations available | |

AngularJS lets you write client-side web applications as if you had a smarter browser. It lets you use good old HTML (or HAML, Jade and friends!) as your template language and lets you extend HTML’s syntax to express your application’s components clearly and succinctly. It automatically synchronizes data from your UI (view) with your JavaScript objects (model) through 2-way data binding.

Lots of people use React as the V in MVC. Since React makes no assumptions about the rest of your technology stack, it's easy to try it out on a small feature in an existing project.

It is a library for building interactive web interfaces. It provides data-reactive components with a simple and flexible API.
Whether you're building highly interactive web applications or you just need to add a date picker to a form control, jQuery UI is the perfect choice.

If you've ever built a JavaScript application, the chances are you've encountered – or at least heard of – frameworks like React, Angular, Vue and Ractive. Like Svelte, these tools all share a goal of making it easy to build slick interactive user interfaces. Rather than interpreting your application code at run time, your app is converted into ideal JavaScript at build time. That means you don't pay the performance cost of the framework's abstractions, or incur a penalty when your app first loads.

Grafana is a general purpose dashboard and graph composer. It's focused on providing rich ways to visualize time series metrics, mainly though graphs but supports other ways to visualize data through a pluggable panel architecture. It currently has rich support for for Graphite, InfluxDB and OpenTSDB. But supports other data sources via plugins.

Kibana is an open source (Apache Licensed), browser based analytics and search dashboard for Elasticsearch. Kibana is a snap to setup and start using. Kibana strives to be easy to get started with, while also being flexible and powerful, just like Elasticsearch.

Prometheus is a systems and service monitoring system. It collects metrics from configured targets at given intervals, evaluates rule expressions, displays the results, and can trigger alerts if some condition is observed to be true.

Flux is the application architecture that Facebook uses for building client-side web applications. It complements React's composable view components by utilizing a unidirectional data flow. It's more of a pattern rather than a formal framework, and you can start using Flux immediately without a lot of new code.

Nagios is a host/service/network monitoring program written in C and released under the GNU General Public License.