| 1) Limon was developed to help network managers visualize and understand the traffic on their networks, but it can be used all kinds of other jobs, as well. |
| 2) Monitors host resources such as CPU utilization, memory utilization, disk utilization, and response time. |
| 3) Monitors processes running in Linux systems. |
| 4) Based on the configurations, notifications and alerts are generated when service or host problems occur and get resolved. |
| 5) Web interface for viewing network status, Performance graphs and reports. |
| 6) Monitoring of network services (PING, POP3, IMAP, SMTP, HTTP, etc.) |
| 7) Ability to define network host hierarchy, allowing detection of and distinction between hosts that are down and those that are unreachable. |
| 8) Authentication scheme that allows you restrict what users can see and do from the web interface. |
| 9) Provides you plugins that allows users to easily develop their own host and service checks. |
10) User based management allows administrators to create users and assign different levels of permissions to the Limon interface. |
| 11) Limon will create web pages showing hourly, daily, weekly and yearly in-bound and out-bound packet traffic on one or many routers/ports. |
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