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    How can I monitor my VPS?

    You can configure a TCP monitor in the control panel for each of your VPS' public IP addresses. The selected ports of your VPS are then automatically monitored by our systems. Should one or more of your selected ports become unreachable, you'll then automatically receive a notification per email and/or SMS.

    The following settings can be changed for the TCP monitor:

    • The ports to be tested
    • The monitor interfal (1-6 minutes)
    • The number of time-outs after which you receive a notification
    • Whether you'd like to receive a notification per e-mail and/or SMS
    • The phone number / email address on which to receive the notification
    • Hours during which the monitor is not active.

    In case your server will go down and then up again, you will receive a total of two messages. If your VPS is reachable then of course you will not receive any notifications.

    The monitoring service is free for all BladeVPS packages starting from the X4 and up. If you choose to receive SMS messages for your monitoring service, then you will be charged € 0,25 ex VAT (€0,3025 inc VAT) per message. 
    You can also add monitoring to your BladeVPS X1 for € 9,99 ex VAT (€12,10 inc VAT). It is cheaper though to just upgrade your VPS to the X4 package.


    Enabling the TCP monitor

     

    Step 1

    Log in to your control panel, navigate to the 'BladeVPS' tab and click the name of your VPS.


     

    Step 2

    Scroll down on the right hand side to 'TCP Monitoring' and click the cogwheel.

    vps tcp monitoring section


     

    Step 3

    Click on 'New monitor'.

    vps new tcp monitor button


     

    Step 4

    The configured ports will be tested at an interval of your choice. The interval can be set from 1 to 6 minutes. Additionally, you can configure after how many timeouts you receive a notification, who the contact person will be, and disable the monitoring between specific times.

    vps configure new tcp monitor


    Firewall

     

    Your VPS' firewall can block monitoring if, for example, the port you want to monitor is only accessible to specific IP addresses.

    The TCP connections to your servers are made by the VPS monitor from 87.253.155.96/27 & 2a01: 7c8: 7ca: ba11 :: / 64. Allow these IP ranges in your firewall if you want to monitor ports that are blacklisted in your firewall. Depending on which firewall you are using, you can use the following commands for Linux based systems:

    • This does not apply to ports that are open to the public. 
       
    • The IP ranges are used by our renewed monitoring system which is launched on May 15th 2021. Until that date, you also need to whitelist the IP addresses of our current monitoring system. These are: 80.69.67.10 / 2a01:7c8::ba11 
       
    • The IP addresses for TCP monitoring are automatically whitelisted in the VPS firewall in the control panel (you don't see this in the control panel).

    UFW (ubuntu/debian):

    sudo ufw allow from 87.253.155.96/27
        sudo ufw allow from 2a01:7c8:7ca:ba11::/64

    Firewalld (centos):

    sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=public --add-source=87.253.155.96/27
        sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=public --add-source=2a01:7c8:7ca:ba11::/64

    False positives

     

    The packages used to test your VPS' connection, have a low priority for your server and are easily dropped. As such we recommend choosing 4 or 5 timeouts, to decrease the chances of false positives.


     

     

    Should you have any questions left regarding this article, do not hesitate to contact our support department. You can reach them via the ‘Contact Us’ button at the bottom of this page.

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