A Linux temperature web monitor is a software tool that displays the temperature data from hardware sensors in a Linux system through a web interface. It allows remote monitoring of system temperatures.
A Linux temperature web monitor is a software application designed to display temperature sensor data from a Linux computer through a web browser interface. It works by collecting readings from hardware temperature probes and sensors inside the Linux system, including the CPU, GPU, motherboard and hard drives.
The temperature readings are then formatted into a graphical display and served through a web server, allowing the temperatures to be monitored remotely over the network through a web browser on another device. Typical features include displaying current temperatures, graphs over time, temperature alerts and notifications when certain thresholds are exceeded.
Linux web-based temperature monitors are useful for administrators for early detection of overheating problems. Seeing CPU, GPU and system temperatures remotely allows action to be taken before hardware is thermally damaged or made unreliable through overheating. Features like alerts, logging and thresholds makes them useful for monitoring server room environmental conditions as well.
Popular open source Linux temperature monitors include LibreHardwareMonitor, Phoronix Test Suite, Telegraf and others. They can run on common web servers like Apache or Nginx. Some monitors also allow expanding monitoring to other system parameters like network, disk and memory usage along with temperatures.
Here are some alternatives to Linux temperature web monitor:
Suggest an alternative ❐