

Can you explain why this is happening?Ī: You have full control over this. Q #4: Since using your Network Logging Pro I am getting reports from the 3rd party monitoring company that your application is trying to contact a number of web sites for an unknown reason. Typical usage with the default settings is about 5% of CPU on one core.

That way your machine stays cool and has almost all of it’s power available for other tasks. Q #3: Does Network Logger Pro use a lot of CPU time?Ī: Since Network Logger Pro is designed to run for weeks or months at a time, a lot of care has gone into designing it to use very little CPU time. … Will your tool meet our needs, or do you know of a tool that will fulfill these needs?Ī: Yes, logging outages over arbitrary periods is one of Network Logger Pro’s features. I’m looking for an Internet Monitoring tool that I can run for a day or two that will continuously check the connection (to the primary DNS server?) and log “outages” so that I can “prove” to the ISP that it’s occurring, and when /how long outages occur. We’ve had the ISP replace the router/modem, check the line on their end, etc. Q #2: We have recently moved to a new internet provider and are finding recurring, but inconsistent internet service periods “randomly” (it seems) – we lose our connection for 1 to 4 minutes and then it magically restores itself. The application is a universal binary which runs natively on both M series Apple Silicon and Intel Macs. Q #1: What are the system requirements for Network Logger Pro/IT?Ī: Network Logger Pro supports macOS Monterey and back to OSX 10.10 Yosemite.

#Logger pro 3 manual
You can find the User Manual and Quick Explainer Videos for Network Logger Pro under the application’s “Help” menu in the menu bar at the top of the screen.
