What is Web Site
Uptime Monitoring Service?
A Web site uptime monitoring service allows monitoring Webpages,
sites, servers or ports by sending requests to the user’s
server and check the availability. A service can test the
server to see if the Web server is running well, and can notify
when Web server is experiencing downtime.
The Web site uptime monitoring service can check HTTP pages, HTTPS,
FTP, SMTP, POP3, IMAP, DNS, Telnet, SSL, TCP and a range of
other ports with great variety of check intervals from every
4 hours to every one minute.
Web server monitoring services are used by individuals, ecommerce
companies, small businesses, ISPs and Web hosting providers
to effectively monitor server uptime from outside thier own
network.
How it Works?
Web site uptime monitoring services usually have a number of servers
around the globe - USA, Europe, Asia, Australia and other
locations. By having multiple servers in different geographic
locations, monitoring service can determine if a Web server
is available across different Networks worldwide. The more
locations the better picture on your website availability.
When you check uptime from a single computer using a single
internet connection it's possible that your network is down,
or that you cannot reach your website because of your ISP.
You should make sure that the monitoring service uses multiple
servers in different locations!
To monitor a Web page on a server (such as your homepage),
the service sends out simple requests from worldwide locations
to check if your services like HTTP or SMTP are accessible.
By checking for a valid response code for HTTP/HTTPS, they
are able to determine the accessibility of your pages. They
can ping the server, router by name or by IP address. Sometimes
when the service pings the server it may return ok result
but default Apache page may be displayed instead of your website.
That's why there is also a Webpage monitoring. Webpages are
usually checked for particular keyword making sure it is your
website which is currently displayed.
If a request to the server failed by one of the locations,
monitoring service will try again from another location in
a row. If the second attempt fails as well and your server
still does not respond, the Web site monitoring service notifies
you of a problem.
The ways of problem notifications varies between services,
with options including: Email, SMS, phone, ICQ, MSN, Pager,
etc. but in fact Email and SMS notifications are usually sufficient.
For Web hosting companies, this can be particularly useful
to catch any server downtime issues quickly - before customers
let them know of their downtime.
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