FTMON v2 - lightweight local systems monitor with MCP integration
Project description
FTMON
FTMON is a lightweight, local systems monitor for Linux desktops, workstations, and standalone servers. It detects problems such as memory leaks, CPU hogs, disks filling, service failures, and notable journal events while keeping bounded metric history on the monitored machine.
It is designed for people who need more history and alerting than htop or
btop, but do not need a central monitoring stack such as Nagios, Zabbix, or
Prometheus and Grafana for one independently managed server.
Development status: FTMON v2 is pre-release software. Interfaces and data formats may change before the first stable release.
Live demo: Explore the read-only interface at demo.ftmon.org. It uses clearly labelled synthetic data and does not monitor the demo server or expose an operational FTMON installation.
Why FTMON?
- Runs locally as your user or a dedicated service account, without a central monitoring server or cloud account.
- Provides a CLI and accessible offline web dashboard with historical charts.
- Stores metrics and incidents in SQLite with bounded retention.
- Uses editable, declarative TOML monitor definitions.
- Sends durable alerts through email, ntfy, generic webhooks, or desktop notifications, with each channel retrying independently.
- Offers a local stdio MCP server for AI-assisted investigation and definition drafting, with explicit user approval for changes.
- Ships deterministic unit and end-to-end tests for its monitoring behavior.
A practical monitor for one server
FTMON is suitable for a small hosted server, VPS, home server, or lab machine that needs dependable local monitoring without operating a separate monitoring platform. The server profile disables desktop popups, runs under a dedicated unprivileged account, retains history locally, and can notify an administrator through remote channels when an incident opens or recovers.
The operational dashboard remains bound to loopback and is reached through an SSH tunnel. This keeps the unauthenticated management interface off the public Internet while still making it useful on a remote headless host. A hardened systemd unit and complete single-server installation procedure are provided in the installation guide.
Bring your own checks
FTMON opens the collection boundary without turning the daemon into a general plugin host. Administrators can register local scripts or separately installed Nagios-compatible plugins, then use ordinary declarative monitor definitions to add confirmation, incidents, notifications, history, baselines and Trends over their returned performance data.
That means an existing HTTP, TLS-certificate, DNS, mail, database, UPS or sensor check can answer “is it broken now?”, while FTMON adds “has it been degrading?” and “what changed before the incident?” The executable remains outside FTMON; AI-authored definitions may reuse an approved alias but cannot introduce a command or credentials. See External checks, Why FTMON?, and the normative contract in SPEC.md.
Quick start
FTMON requires Python 3.11 or newer and uv.
git clone https://github.com/dannysheehan/ftmon.git
cd ftmon
uv sync
uv run ftmon init --profile desktop
uv run ftmon check
uv run ftmon daemon
In another terminal, start the local dashboard:
uv run ftmon web
Then open http://127.0.0.1:8420/. FTMON binds only to loopback and the web UI loads no external assets.
For a headless single server, initialize with --profile server. This writes
explicit settings with desktop popups disabled; remote ntfy, webhook, and SMTP
channels use environment or protected-file credential references and maintain
independent durable retry state.
For a user-level service or a hardened dedicated ftmon server account,
follow the installation guide. The operational dashboard
stays on loopback; reach it remotely with an SSH tunnel rather than exposing
the unauthenticated UI through a public reverse proxy.
The live public demonstration is a different, GET-only application over deterministic synthetic data. Its reproducible DNS, Caddy, systemd, verification, update, and rollback runbook is in the installation guide. Never expose an operational FTMON database as a demo.
Documentation
- User manual — concepts, daily use, tuning, trends, and troubleshooting.
- Installation guide —
uv, systemd, web, MCP, actions, and backups. - Monitor definition reference — TOML schema, expression language, and examples.
- External checks — scripts, Nagios plugins, performance-data mappings, privileges, and security boundaries.
- Product specification and technical design — normative behavior, rationale, architecture, and requirement IDs.
- Contributing guide — development and documentation standards.
- Why FTMON? — product positioning, intended users, and the value of extensible checks.
Original FTMON
This repository is a from-scratch Python successor to the original Fast Track Systems Monitor, a Perl monitoring engine first published in 2002. The original GPLv2 project and its downloads remain available from the official FTMON project on SourceForge.
The original source is not included in this repository. Keeping the projects separate makes their provenance and licensing boundaries clear: this v2 repository is MIT licensed, while the original SourceForge project is GPLv2.
Development
uv sync
uv run ruff check src tests
uv run pytest -q
Tests reference stable requirement IDs from SPEC.md. When changing behavior, update the relevant specification, design rationale, tests, and user documentation together.
License
FTMON v2 is available under the MIT License. The separately published original FTMON project retains its own GPLv2 license.
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