![]() Q #6: My internet drops out quite often but usually only for a few seconds, would your logger note these short periods?Ī: Yes, but it would be unusual to have actual disconnects that behave like that. If your URL works in a browser, simply copy it from the browser’s URL field and paste it into Network Logger Pro. Q #5: Why doesn’t my URL work in the URL Monitor?Ī: Make sure your URLs is not malformed, meaning they contain spaces or other characters that don’t conform to the URL standard. More details on doing this can be found in the User Manual under the Help menu in Network Logger. In that case, if you still want outage logging with URLs of your own choosing, you can set up your own URL Monitor from the File menu. If you want to turn Automatic Connection Testing off you can do so in the Preferences. You can set the frequency of the connection tests in the Preferences, the default is 30 seconds. It’s not pulling data down, it’s seeing if it can reach the servers via ping and http header requests. You can see that activity in the ACT Activity window, under the Window menu. That traffic is generated by a feature called Automatic Connection Testing, which logs connection outages of your Internet service. Can you explain why this is happening?Ī: You have full control over this. Q #4: Since using your Network Logging Pro I am getting reports from the 3rd party monitoring company that your application is trying to contact a number of web sites for an unknown reason. Typical usage with the default settings is about 5% of CPU on one core. That way your machine stays cool and has almost all of it’s power available for other tasks. ![]() Q #3: Does Network Logger Pro use a lot of CPU time?Ī: Since Network Logger Pro is designed to run for weeks or months at a time, a lot of care has gone into designing it to use very little CPU time. … Will your tool meet our needs, or do you know of a tool that will fulfill these needs?Ī: Yes, logging outages over arbitrary periods is one of Network Logger Pro’s features. I’m looking for an Internet Monitoring tool that I can run for a day or two that will continuously check the connection (to the primary DNS server?) and log “outages” so that I can “prove” to the ISP that it’s occurring, and when /how long outages occur. We’ve had the ISP replace the router/modem, check the line on their end, etc. ![]() Q #2: We have recently moved to a new internet provider and are finding recurring, but inconsistent internet service periods “randomly” (it seems) – we lose our connection for 1 to 4 minutes and then it magically restores itself. The application is a universal binary which runs natively on both M series Apple Silicon and Intel Macs. Q #1: What are the system requirements for Network Logger Pro/IT?Ī: Network Logger Pro supports macOS Monterey and back to OSX 10.10 Yosemite. You can find the User Manual and Quick Explainer Videos for Network Logger Pro under the application’s “Help” menu in the menu bar at the top of the screen. ![]()
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