How to Monitor a VPC Network
-
by Blog Admin
- 16
How to Monitor a VPC Network
A system that tracks server performance metrics and sends alerts when issues are detected.
Monitoring a Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network enables the management and verification of the network information. You can view attached instances and subnet information by monitoring a VPC network.
Follow this guide to monitor VPC networks using the Vultr Customer Portal, API, or CLI.
Vultr Customer Portal
- Navigate to Products, expand the Network drop-down and select VPC Networks from the list of options.
- Select your target VPC network to open its management page.
- Click Add Routes to create new static routes in your network, or click Edit Routes to modify the existing route information.
Vultr API
- Send a
GET
request to the List VPCs endpoint to view all VPC networks in your Vultr account and note the target VPC network ID.console$ curl "https://api.vultr.com/v2/vpcs" \ -X GET \ -H "Authorization: Bearer ${VULTR_API_KEY}"
- Send a
GET
request to the Get a VPC endpoint to view information about the target VPC network.console$ curl "https://api.vultr.com/v2/vpcs/{vpc-id}" \ -X GET \ -H "Authorization: Bearer ${VULTR_API_KEY}"
Vultr CLI
- List all VPC networks in your Vultr account and note the target VPC network’s ID.
console
$ vultr-cli vpc list
- Get information about the VPC network.
console
$ vultr-cli vpc get <vpc-id>
How to Monitor a VPC Network A system that tracks server performance metrics and sends alerts when issues are detected. Monitoring a Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network enables the management and verification of the network information. You can view attached instances and subnet information by monitoring a VPC network. Follow…
How to Monitor a VPC Network A system that tracks server performance metrics and sends alerts when issues are detected. Monitoring a Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network enables the management and verification of the network information. You can view attached instances and subnet information by monitoring a VPC network. Follow…