Documentation forIpMonitor

ipMonitor 10.9 system requirements

SolarWinds strongly recommends that you install ipMonitor on a server that is protected from unauthorized access by the public. If your use of ipMonitor does not need to be public or internet-facing, install it on a server that is neither public, nor internet-facing. To learn about best practices for configuring your ipMonitor installation securely, see Best practices to secure SolarWinds Products.

Updated March 7, 2019

See the following sections for the minimum supported requirements:

For additional information, see the ipMonitor 10.9 Release Notes.

Hardware requirements

Set up your SolarWinds ipMonitor server using the following minimum hardware requirements.

Hardware or Software Requirements
CPU Single core 2.0 GHz
Memory 512 MB
Hard drive space 240 MB

Software requirements

Set up your SolarWinds ipMonitor server using the following software requirements.

Software Requirements
Operating system

Windows Server 2012 with .NET Framework 3.5

Windows Server 2012 R2

Windows Server 2016

Windows 8

Windows 10

Web browser

Apple Safari

Google Chrome

Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE) 11 or later

Mozilla Firefox

Port requirements

Below are the local and monitor port requirements for ipMonitor.

Local ports

Type Port
HTTP 8080 (default)
HTTPS 443 (SSL or administrator assigned)

Monitor ports

The following table provides the various ports that are used in ipMonitor, depending on which monitor is enabled.

Monitor Type Port Protocol
ACTIVE DIRECTORY Active Directory 389 TCP
BANDWIDTH USAGE Bandwidth 161 UDP
BATTERY Battery 161 UDP
CPU USAGE Processor Usage 161 UDP
DIRECTORY MONITOR Directory Usage N/A

SMB

NFS

DNS-QA Quality Assurance Domain Name Service 53 TCP
DNS-TCP Domain Name Service - Transmission Control Protocol 53 TCP
DNS-UDP Domain Name Service - User Datagram Protocol 53 UDP
DRIVE SPACE Drive Space Availability 161 UDP
EVENT LOG NT Event Log Monitor N/A N/A
EXCHANGE SERVER Microsoft® Exchange Server N/A N/A
EXTERNAL PROCESS Executable File N/A N/A
FAN MONITOR Fan Status 161 UDP
FILE PROPERTY Any File Type N/A

SMB

NFS

FILE WATCHING Any File Type N/A

SMB

NFS

FINGER Finger Information Server 79 TCP
FTP File Transfer Protocol 21 TCP
FTP-QA Quality Assurance File Transfer Protocol 21 TCP
GOPHER Menu driven front end to resource services, such as anonymous FTP 70 TCP
HTML / ASP HyperText Transfer Protocol 80 TCP
HTTP HyperText Transfer Protocol 80 TCP
HTTP-QA Quality Assurance HyperText Transfer Protocol 80 TCP
HTTPS Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure 443 TCP
HUMIDITY Humidity Levels 161 UDP
IMAP4 Internet Message Access Protocol 143 TCP
IMAP4-QA Quality Assurance Internet Message Access Protocol 143 TCP
IPMONITOR ipMonitor

80

443

TCP
IRC Internet Relay Chat 6667 TCP
KERBEROS 5 Kerberos 5 88 UDP
LDAP Lightweight Directory Access Protocol 389 UDP
LINK-QA Quality Assurance Link 80 TCP
LOTUS NOTES Lotus Notes™ Transport 1352 TCP
MAPI-QA Microsoft Messaging Application Program Interface N/A N/A
MEMORY USAGE Physical Memory (RAM) 161 UDP
NETWORK SPEED Speed or Bandwidth Monitor 19 TCP
NNTP Network News Transfer Protocol 119 TCP
NTP Network Time Protocol 123 UDP
PING Packet InterNet Groper N/A ICMP
POP3 Post Office Protocol 110 TCP
POP3-QA Quality Assurance Post Office Protocol 110 TCP
RADIUS Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service Protocol 1812 UDP
RWHOIS Recursive WhoIs Information Server 4343 TCP
SERVICE Windows NT Service Monitor N/A NT Specific
SMTP Simple Mail Transfer Protocol 25 TCP
SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol 161 TCP
SNMP-QA Quality Assurance Simple Network Management Protocol 161 UDP
SNMP TRAP-QA Simple Network Management Protocol Traps 162 UDP
SNPP Simple Network Pager Protocol 444 TCP
SQL: ADO Structured Query Language: ActiveX Data Objects N/A NT Specific
SQL: ADO-QA Structured Query Language: ActiveX Data Objects N/A NT Specific
SQL SERVER Structured Query Language Server N/A NT Specific
TELNET Remote Terminal Protocol 23 TCP
TEMPERATURE Temperature Levels 161 UDP
WHOIS WhoIs Information Server 43 TCP

ipMonitor traps

Any agent you configure to send traps to ipMonitor must use the same IP address and port combination.

If the Windows SNMP Trap Service is enabled on the ipMonitor host computer, it may conflict with the ipMonitor SNMP Trap Listener. Both are bound by default to port 162.

The POP3 User Experience monitor delivers an email to the SMTP server on port 25 for the recipient address you specify. The monitor then logs in to the POP3 Mail Server on port 110 and retrieves the LIST of queued mail.