About XSI
XMLSysInfo (XSI) is a system monitoring daemon that replies to network queries with XML-encoded system information and statistics. Its purpose is to provide a comprehensive overview of a system's various components, their health, resources, load, and many other things. It does so equally on all supported platforms. This data can then be analyzed, graphed or otherwise presented by a front-end, or put to any other imaginable use. XMLSysInfo is BSD-licensed and free for anyone to use for any purpose.
Or, because it sounds so much better:
XMLSysInfo is an agile, vertical XML application for mission-critical
enterprise environments that leverages collective synergy to drive "outside of
the box" thinking and formulate key objectives into a win-win game plan with a
quality-driven approach that focuses on empowering key players to drive-up
their core competencies and increase expectations with an all-around
initiative to drive up the bottom-line.
(Just kidding.)
Operating System Support
XSI supports the following operating systems, with only up to one feature missing:
- OpenBSD (4.0 or newer)
- FreeBSD (6.0 or newer)
- NetBSD (3.0 or newer)
- Linux (2.6.14 or newer)
- Solaris (10 or newer)
It already builds and runs on a large number of other operating systems. Work has begun to support the following:
- Darwin OS (10.4 or newer)
This example output shows how XSI output can look on a supported system.
Current version:
1.0-beta2
News
Proxsi 0.2 released
(2007-02-13)
XMLSysInfo 1.0-beta2 released
(2007-02-12)
Proxsi 0.1 released
(2007-02-01)