Friday, March 26, 2010

My Impressions About MONyog

At work we have been looking for tools to monitor MySQL and at the same time provide as much diagnosis information as possible upfront when an alarm is triggered. After looking around at different options, I decided to test MONyog from Webyog, the makers of the better known SQLyog. Before we go on, the customary disclaimer: This review reflects my own opinion and in no way represents any decision that my current employer may or may not make in regards of this product.

First Impression

You know what they say about the first impression, and in this where MONyog started with the right foot. Since it is an agent-less system, it only requires to install the RPM or untar the tarball in the server where you're going to run the monitor and launch the daemon to get started. How much faster or simpler can it be? But in order to start monitoring a server you need to do some preparations on it. Create a MONyog user for both the OS and the database. I used the following commands:

For the OS user run the following command as root (thank you Tom):
groupadd -g 250 monyog && useradd -c 'MONyog User' -g 250 -G mysql -u 250 monyog && echo 'your_os_password' | passwd --stdin monyog
For the MySQL user run:
GRANT SELECT, RELOAD, PROCESS, SUPER on *.* to 'adm_monyog'@'10.%' IDENTIFIED BY 'your_db_password';
Keep in mind that passwords are stored in the clear in the MONyog configuration database, defining a MONyog user helps to minimize security breaches. Although for testing purposes I decided to go with a username/password combination to SSH into the servers, it is possible to use a key which would be my preferred setting in production.

The User Interface

The system UI is web driven using Ajax and Flash which makes it really thin and portable. I was able to test it without any issues using IE 8 and Firefox in Windows and Linux. Chrome presented some minor challenges but I didn't dig any deeper since I don't consider it stable enough and didn't want to get distracted with what could've been browser specific issues.

In order to access MONyog you just point your browser the server where it was installed with an URL equivalent to:
http://monyog-test.domain.com:5555 or http://localhost:5555
You will always land in the List of Servers tab. At the bottom of this page there is a Register a New Server link that you follow and start adding servers at will. The process is straight forward and at any point you can trace your steps back to make any corrections as needed (see screenshot). Once you enter the server information with the credentials defined in the previous section, you are set. Once I went through the motions, the first limitation became obvious: You have to repeat the process for every server, although there is an option to copy from previously defined servers, it can become a very tedious process.

Once you have the servers defined, to navigate into the actual system you need to check which servers you want to review, select the proper screen from a drop down box at the bottom of the screen and hit Go. This method seems straight forward, but at the beginning it is a little bit confusing and it takes some time to get used to it.

Features

MONyog has plenty of features that make it worth trying if you're looking for a monitoring software for MySQL. Hopefully by now you have it installed and ready to go, so I'll comment from a big picture point of view and let you reach your own conclusions.

The first feature that jumps right at me is its architecture, in particular the scripting support. All the variables it picks up from the servers it monitors are abstracted in JavaScript like objects and all the monitors, graphics and screens are based on these scripts. One the plus side, it adds a a lot of flexibility to how you can customize the alerts, monitors, rules and Dashboard display. On the other hand, this flexibility present some management challenges: customize thresholds, alerts and rules by servers or group of servers and backup of customized rules. None of these challenges are a showstopper and I'm sure MONyog will come up with solutions in future releases. Since everything is stored in SQLite databases and the repositories are documented, any SQLite client and some simple scripting is enough to get backups and workaround the limitations.

The agent-less architecture requires the definition of users to log into the database and the OS in order to gather the information it needs. The weak point here is that the credentials, including passwords, are stored in the clear in the SQLite databases. A way to secure this is to properly limit the GRANTs for the MySQL users and ssh using a DSA key instead of password. Again, no showstopper for most installations, but it needs some work from Webyog's side to increase the overall system security.

During our tests we ran against a bug in the SSH library used by MONyog. I engaged their Technical Support looking forward to evaluate their overall responsiveness. I have to say it was flawless, at no point they treated me in a condescending manner, made the most of the information I provided upfront and never wasted my time with scripted useless diagnostic routines. They had to provide me with a couple of binary builds, which they did in a very reasonably time frame. All in all, a great experience.

My Conclusion

MONyog doesn't provide any silver bullet or obscure best practice advice. It gathers all the environment variables effectively and presents it in an attractive and easy to read format. It's a closed source commercial software, the architecture is quite open through scripting and with well documented repositories which provides a lot of flexibility to allow for customizations and expansions to fit any installations needs. For installations with over 100 servers it might be more challenging to manage the servers configurations and the clear credentials may not be viable for some organizations. If these 2 issues are not an impediment, I definitively recommend any MySQL DBA to download the binaries and take it for a spin. It might be the solution you were looking for to keep an eye on your set of servers while freeing some time for other tasks.

Let me know what do you think and if you plan to be at the MySQL UC, look me up to chat. Maybe we can invite Rohit Nadhani from Webyog to join us.

2 comments:

  1. I have been trialing MONyog for the past couple of weeks and agree with most everything you have said.

    I'm also trialing it side by side with Kontrollbase. Both have their own strengths, and weaknesses.

    Together they cover most of the bases. Kontrollbase is definitely worth a look for anyone who is trialing MONyog. They hit different notes but if MONyog isnt quite right for you, Kontrollbase might be. Matt Reid the developer has been great to work with on problems and responsive to ideas and comments. That bodes well for the project.

    http://kontrollsoft.com/software-kontrollbase

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  2. I wish to add that MONyog web interface makes it really easy for you to extend the access to outside your company and even mobile browsers.

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