Linux server monitoring

Linux server monitoring with AI

ServerGuardian helps technical teams, SMBs and IT companies monitor Linux servers, track critical signals such as availability, resource usage, services, incidents and certificates, and interpret problems with AI-assisted diagnostics.

Who this is for

This solution is built for small technical teams, SMBs, IT companies, MSPs and professionals who manage one or many Linux servers and want a simple way to know what is happening.

It is useful for those who do not have a team watching servers around the clock and need alerts with context instead of scattered notifications.

What problems it solves

ServerGuardian helps you catch common Linux server problems earlier, before they affect customers or services.

  • A disk filling up without warning
  • Abnormal CPU or memory usage
  • Critical services that stop responding
  • SSL certificates about to expire
  • Failures discovered only when a customer complains

What data can be monitored

With the Linux agent, you can track internal metrics such as CPU, RAM, disk, load average, uptime, services and the most resource-hungry processes.

Without an agent, you can use external checks for websites, APIs, TCP ports, ping, SSL and heartbeats, which work regardless of the operating system.

How AI helps with diagnosis

AI-assisted diagnostics turn metrics and incidents into clear explanations, point to likely causes and suggest next steps for the team to check.

The AI does not run commands automatically. Any technical action should be validated by a person.

Differences from traditional tools

Traditional tools often require significant configuration and knowledge to deliver value. ServerGuardian focuses on being fast to set up and easy to interpret.

The goal is to provide context and priority, not just raw charts and alerts.

When ServerGuardian may not be the best fit

If you need very deep observability, complex custom metrics or specific integrations for large environments, a dedicated stack like Prometheus and Grafana or a platform like Datadog may be a better fit.

ServerGuardian focuses on teams that want clarity and simplicity, not the most advanced configuration possible.

Frequently asked questions

Does ServerGuardian monitor Linux servers? +

Yes. The agent focuses on Linux first, letting you track CPU, RAM, disk, load average, uptime, services and processes. External checks work on any operating system.

What data does the Linux agent collect? +

The agent collects server health metrics such as CPU, memory and disk usage, load average, uptime, service status and the most resource-hungry processes. It does not collect your application content or user data.

Does ServerGuardian run commands automatically? +

No. The AI helps diagnose and suggest next steps, but any technical action should be validated and run by a person.

Do I need to install an agent on every server? +

Not necessarily. You can start with external checks for uptime, SSL, ports and heartbeats, and install the agent only where you need internal metrics.