Open source monitoring for electricity, solar, storage, heat pumps and electric vehicle charging. A versatile and expandable system of sensors and integrations built on the Raspberry Pi and Arduino platforms. Expandable. Extensible. Self hosted.
FBI Watchdog is a threat intelligence tool that monitors domain DNS changes in real-time, specifically detecting law enforcement seizures (ns1.fbi.seized.gov and ns2.fbi.seized.gov). It alerts users via Telegram and Discord and captures screenshots of seized domains.
Only alerts over Telegram or Discord, though.
Beszel is a lightweight server monitoring platform that includes Docker statistics, historical data, and alert functions. It has a friendly web interface, simple configuration, and is ready to use out of the box. It supports automatic backup, multi-user, OAuth authentication, and API access.
Smaller and less resource-intensive than leading solutions. Easy setup, no need for public internet exposure. Configurable alerts for CPU, memory, disk, bandwidth, temperature, and status. Users manage their own systems. Admins can share systems across users. Supports many OAuth2 providers. Password auth can be disabled. Save and restore data from disk or S3-compatible storage.
Consists of a hub built on PocketBase that provides a dashboard for viewing and managing connected systems and an agent that runs on each system you want to monitor, creating a minimal SSH server to communicate system metrics to the hub.
Seems to be designed with system monitoring in mind, and as such isn't really that flexible.
I'm sure that, like me, you were asked to put your USB drive in an unknown device... and then the doubt: What happened to my poor dongle, behind the scene? Stealing my files? Encrypting them? Or just installing a malware? With USBvalve you can spot this out in seconds: built on super cheap off-the-shelf hardware you can quickly test any USB file system activity and understand what is going on before it's too late!
With USBvalve you can have an immediate feedback about what happen to the drive; the screen will show you if the fake filesystem built on the device is accessed, read or written.
Uppi is a robust uptime monitoring solution built with Laravel, designed to track the availability of your web services and notify you when issues arise. Continuously monitors the status of your web services in realtime. Get notified when services go down and when they recover. Visual representation of your monitors' status. Track and manage service disruptions. Multiple notification channels for alerts. Share your service status with your users, or embed it in your website.
Specifically gives you an installation process for building and deploying it, no Docker webshit. Has a mobile app. Looks like it can use both SQLite and MySQL as its datastore.
The project started when my mechanical Ferraris energy counter was replaced with a digital smart meter from eBZ. The DD3 model provides an IR signal which can be read once a second with a simple IR receiver. Initially I used just an Arduino with a photo transistor circuit on a breadboard to read the signal. Later I have built an IR dongle on a real PCB in a nice case for permanent mounting on top of the smart meter.
For the software side, the Smartmeter program reads the raw stream of data from the energy meter and forwards it as a JSON formatted string to a MQTT broker on the network. The data is stored in a TimescaleDB database and visualised on a Grafana dashboard.
In the AUR.
Acarsdec is a multi-channels acars decoder with built-in rtl_sdr, airspy front end or sdrplay device. Since 3.0, It comes with a database backend called acarsserv to store received acars messages.
Can decode up to 8 channels simultaneously. Does error detection and correction. Can take its input from rtl_sdr, airspy, or sdrplay software defined radios. Logs data over UDP in planeplotter or acarsserv formats to store data in a SQLite database, or JSON for custom processing. Can decode ARINC-622 ATS applications (ADS-C, CPDLC) via libacars library.
Multi-channel decoding is particularly useful with broadband devices such as the RTLSDR dongle, the AIRspy and the SDRplay device. It allows the user to directly monitor to up to 8 different frequencies simultaneously with very low cost hardware.
Looks like it interacts with the SDR directly because it has to control the frequencies it's listening on, so you can't piggyback it on, say, an existing ADS-B node.
Requires libusb, librtlsdr, libairspy, libmirsdrapi-rsp, and libacars (optional).
Wastewater surveillance may complement other existing human surveillance systems to monitor influenza. Wastewater data cannot determine the source of influenza A viruses. Detections could come from a human or from an animal (like a bird) or an animal product (like milk from an infected cow).
No API but the data can be downloaded as a CSV file: https://www.cdc.gov/e0e53cec-a7e1-4357-a582-dd64f0cc3b1f
There is some data here that can be analyzed: https://www.cdc.gov/wcms/vizdata/NCEZID_DIDRI/FluA/H5N1Map.json
This has a tl;dr: https://www.cdc.gov/wcms/vizdata/NCEZID_DIDRI/FluA/H5N1Databites.json
Security Onion is a free and open platform for threat hunting, enterprise security monitoring, and log management. It includes our own interfaces for alerting, dashboards, hunting, PCAP, detections, and more. It includes network visibility, host visibility, intrusion detection honeypots, log management, and case management.
For network visibility, we offer signature based detection via Suricata, rich protocol metadata and file extraction using either Zeek or Suricata, full packet capture using either Stenographer or Suricata, and file analysis. For host visibility, we offer the Elastic Agent which provides data collection, live queries via osquery, and centralized management using Elastic Fleet. Intrusion detection honeypots based on OpenCanary can be added to your deployment for even more enterprise visibility. All of these logs flow into Elasticsearch and we’ve built our own user interfaces for alerts, dashboards, threat hunting, case management, and grid management.
It's a pretty heavy stack, but they're aiming for the enterprise environment so it has to be.
This website is dedicated to covering tropical activity in the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico. The Eyewall was founded in June 2023 by Matt Lanza and Eric Berger, who work together on the Houston-based forecasting site Space City Weather.
Our purpose is to extend our no-hype approach to forecasting weather to hurricanes across the entire Atlantic basin so that residents and business owners at risk for storms can have access to quality forecasts and make informed decisions about protecting their families, property, and businesses.
What started as just a simple tool for managing Nvidia GPUs from command line or in text mode evolved into a project that now lives up to it's Blissful designation! I present to you "Blissful Nvidia Tool" - a lovely little tool for admining your modern (Maxwell or higher should be supported) Nvidia GPU from the command line on Linux. It only requires Python3 and pynvml/nvidia-ml-py and up to date drivers. It's capable of over and underclocking, changing power limits, controlling fans, and has a nice little curses based monitor built in capable of nearly realtime monitoring of GPU status with support for saving and loading profiles! It also supports fully offline operation meaning it can be called in scripts and the like. You accept ALL responsibility for the use of this tool. Monitoring can be done as any user but overclocking control requires root. License is MIT.
SniffleToTAK is a proxy tool that bridges the gap between the Sniffle Bluetooth 5 long range extended sniffing and the TAK (Team Awareness Kit) system. This tool allows users to utilize a Sniffle compatible dongle to detect Bluetooth 5 long range extended packets and relay them to TAK servers or multicast them on a network for ATAK (Android Team Awareness Kit) devices.
Basically, some drones use long-range Bluetooth 5 for beaconing and telemetry. This means that if you can pick up and decode that traffic you can track those drones.
Requires Sniffle and a compatible Bluetooth interface as its inputs. Outputs to an ATAK device for tracking.
They keep track of what bands are touring, where, and when, and lets you know when somebody you like will be in town.
DO exposes performance metrics for hosted databases from their API. This talks about how to access them programmatically.
You'll be familiar with web bugs, the transparent images which track when someone opens an email. They work by embedding a unique URL in a page's image tag, and monitoring incoming GET requests.
Imagine doing that, but for file reads, database queries, process executions or patterns in log files. Canarytokens does all this and more, letting you implant traps in your production systems rather than setting up separate honeypots.
Canarytokens are a free, quick, painless way to help defenders discover they've been breached (by having attackers announce themselves.)
Includes web bugs, DNS hostnames, fake AWS keys, login certificates, commands, documents, API keys, and more.
Uses machine learning to identify files in misconfigured buckets across a large number of providers, including AWS, Azure, Digital Ocean, GCP, and Alibaba. Requires an account to get results but the free tier is pretty useful in itself.
API documentation: https://openbuckets.io/api-docs
You have to have a Bounty Hunter subscription or higher to use it, though. Good luck unsubscribing from their mailing list, even asking them personally to help doesn't work.
An Android app for interfacing with WeeWX remotely. In the Android store. Requires the installation of the "Inigo" addon from the same Github repository.
Fan Control is a highly focused fan controlling software for Windows. No installation required. Low on resources, high on power.
Fan Control has extensive support for a variety of motherboards, GPUs, and other hardware, like AIOs. Say goodbye to the "silo" approach of using multiple softwares to control your different fans. Have all of them controlled by a single smart entity, and start thinking about cooling and noise as a system-wide concern. Fan Control has ALL the parameters. Response time, hysteresis, hysteresis direction, step up, step down... Fine tune to your heart's desire. Control your fan's start and stopping logic, for smooth 0 RPM operation.
The Open Hardware Monitor is a free open source software that monitors temperature sensors, fan speeds, voltages, load and clock speeds of a computer.
The CPU temperature can be monitored by reading the core temperature sensors of Intel and AMD processors. The sensors of ATI and Nvidia video cards as well as SMART hard drive temperature can be displayed. The monitored values can be displayed in the main window, in a customizable desktop gadget, or in the system tray. The free Open Hardware Monitor software runs on 32-bit and 64-bit Microsoft Windows XP / Vista / 7 / 8 / 8.1 / 10 and any x86 based Linux operating systems without installation.
To install just unpack the zip archive and run OpenHardwareMonitor.exe with Administrator rights. Without Administrator rights most hardware sensors are not accessible.
Github: https://github.com/openhardwaremonitor/openhardwaremonitor
Python Code for an FM Scanner using a Raspberry Pi and rtlsdr SDR.