Understanding Monitoring Alerts and Notifications
Effective alert management ensures you're notified of issues without being overwhelmed by notifications. This guide explains how Faciotech's monitoring alerts work and how to configure them optimally.
Types of Alerts
Downtime Alerts
Triggered when your website becomes unavailable:
- Down notification - Sent when site goes offline
- Up notification - Sent when site recovers
- Still down reminder - Periodic reminder while offline
Performance Alerts
Triggered by slow response times:
- Slow response warning - Site is loading slowly
- Performance recovered - Speed returned to normal
SSL Alerts
- Certificate expiring - Warning before SSL expires
- Certificate error - Invalid or misconfigured SSL
Alert Channels
Email Notifications
The default alert method. Includes:
- Monitor name and URL
- Current status
- Response time (if applicable)
- Error details
- Time of incident
SMS Notifications
For critical alerts requiring immediate attention:
- Shorter message format
- Faster delivery than email
- Ideal for on-call staff
Webhook Notifications
For integration with other systems:
- Slack channels
- Discord servers
- Custom applications
- Incident management tools
Configuring Alert Settings
Alert Threshold
How many consecutive failures before alerting:
- 1 failure - Immediate alert (may cause false positives)
- 2-3 failures - Recommended (balances speed and accuracy)
- 4+ failures - Very conservative (may delay real alerts)
Alert Delay
Time to wait before sending the alert:
- Immediate - Alert as soon as threshold is met
- 5-10 minutes - Filters out brief outages
Repeat Interval
How often to resend alerts while issue persists:
- Never - Only alert once
- 15-30 minutes - Regular reminders
- 1 hour - Less frequent reminders
Alert Management Best Practices
Avoid Alert Fatigue
- Set appropriate thresholds to prevent false positives
- Group related monitors to reduce duplicate alerts
- Use escalation policies for critical systems
- Review and tune alerts regularly
Alert Escalation
For critical systems, consider escalation:
- First alert - Primary contact via email
- After 15 min - Add SMS to primary contact
- After 30 min - Alert secondary contact
- After 1 hour - Alert management
Maintenance Windows
Pause alerts during planned maintenance:
- Go to your monitor settings
- Click "Schedule Maintenance"
- Set start and end time
- Monitoring continues but alerts are suppressed
Reading Alert Details
Down Alert Contains:
[DOWN] Main Website - yourdomain.com
Status: DOWN
URL: https://yourdomain.com
Error: Connection timeout
Time: 2024-01-15 14:32:00 UTC
Duration: Ongoing
Check your server status or contact support.
Recovery Alert Contains:
[UP] Main Website - yourdomain.com
Status: UP
URL: https://yourdomain.com
Response Time: 450ms
Time: 2024-01-15 14:47:00 UTC
Downtime Duration: 15 minutes
Your website is back online.
Responding to Alerts
When You Receive a Down Alert
- Don't panic - verify the issue first
- Try accessing your site from different networks
- Check server status in your Client Area
- Review recent changes that might have caused issues
- Contact support if you can't identify the problem
When You Receive a Slow Alert
- Check if it's a temporary spike
- Review server resource usage
- Check for traffic spikes or attacks
- Consider optimization or upgrade if persistent
Contact Management
Adding Alert Contacts
- Go to Monitoring → Alert Contacts
- Click "Add Contact"
- Enter name, email, and optional phone
- Set which monitors should alert this contact
Alert Contact Types
- Primary - First to receive all alerts
- Secondary - Backup when primary doesn't respond
- Group - Multiple people for critical systems
Need Help?
If you need assistance with alerts or are experiencing issues, contact our support team.