Synology cloud station backup cpu temperature
This object has been deprecated in favour of 'ssCpuRawIdle(1.3.6.1.11.53)', which can be used to calculate the same metric, but over any desired time period." Quote: "The percentage of processor time spent idle, calculated over the last minute. This object has been deprecated in favour of 'ssCpuRawUser(1.3.6.1.11.9.50)', which can be used to calculate the same metric, but over any desired time period." Quote: "The percentage of CPU time spent processing user-level code, calculated over the last minute. "I believe you are using (.1.3.6.1.10.1.5.1) which is described as "System load average within the last 1 minute" The percentage value of the CPU Load channel now matches your Synology CPU load average based on a scale of 0 to 4 cores having 0 to 100% CPU load. In the appearing Maximum (%) field, enter the result of 100 multiplied by the number of CPU cores.In section Data, select the option Display in percent of maximum.Open the channel settings of the Synology CPU Load channel.Navigate to the Overview tab of your SNMP Synology System Health sensor.So if your Synology NAS has four CPU cores, you can show the percentage of the maximum 100*4 in the channel. With the knowledge from above, you can adjust the display of the CPU load value of your Synology System Health sensor depending on the number of existing CPU cores. However, you can change the way the CPU load channel displays the value. We cannot adjust the CPU load display of the SNMP Synlogy System Health sensor to automatically adapt to the number of CPU cores because the according information of the Synology device is missing. Because of this, you can even see CPU load values that are over 100% in PRTG. This means that the maximum load that Synology returns is not 100% but 100% multiplied by the number of CPU cores in the Synology station. This cannot be changed.įor CPU load, consider the following: Synology reports the 1-minute average load as a dimensionless number and sums up the CPU load of the single cores.
The way PRTG calculates the memory usage for your Synology device explains potential differences to the memory values you might see in the resource monitor GUI of your Synology.
The SNMP Synology System Health sensor shows, among other values, CPU load and memory usage in percent to indicate the health status of your Synology Network Attached Storage (NAS).
This article applies to PRTG Network Monitor 19 or later Monitoring Synology CPU load and memory usage