PRTG Manual: HTTP Advanced Sensor
The HTTP Advanced sensor monitors the source code of a web page using HTTP. It supports authentication, content checks, and other advanced parameters.
The monitored content size is uncompressed.
For a detailed list and descriptions of the channels that this sensor can show, see section Channel List.
- Dutch: HTTP Geavanceerd
- French: HTTP avancé
- German: HTTP (Erweitert)
- Japanese: HTTP アドバンスト
- Portuguese: HTTP (avançado)
- Russian: HTTP (расширенный)
- Simplified Chinese: HTTP 高级
- Spanish: HTTP (avanzado)
Consider the following remarks and requirements for this sensor:
Remark |
Description |
---|---|
SRP ciphers |
This sensor does not support Secure Remote Password (SRP) ciphers. If you need to use SRP ciphers, use the Compatibility engine. |
HTTP compression |
This sensor does not support HTTP compression. If you need to use it anyway, select Compatibility engine in the sensor settings. |
Smart URL replacement |
This sensor supports smart URL replacement. |
IPv6 |
This sensor supports IPv6. |
Performance impact |
This sensor has a medium performance impact. |
Fast internet connections |
Bandwidth monitoring of fast internet connections might be inaccurate. |
Knowledge Base |
|
The sensor has the following default tags that are automatically predefined in the sensor's settings when you add the sensor:
- httpsensor
For more information about basic sensor settings, see section Sensor Settings.
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Timeout (Sec.) |
Enter a timeout in seconds for the request. Enter an integer. The maximum timeout value is 900 seconds (15 minutes). If the reply takes longer than this value, the sensor cancels the request and shows a corresponding error message. |
URL |
Enter the URL that the sensor connects to. If you enter an absolute URL, the sensor uses this address independently of the IP Address/DNS Name setting of the parent device. You can enter the URL of a web page (to measure the loading time of the page's source code), or enter the URL of an image or of a page asset to measure this element's availability and loading time. The URL must be URL encoded. If you monitor an image or a page asset, this can create a high amount of memory load. We recommend that the size of the elements that you want to monitor does not exceed 200 MB. PRTG uses a smart URL replacement with which you can use the parent device's IP address or Domain Name System (DNS) name setting as part of the URL. For more information, see section Smart URL Replacement. |
Request Method |
Select an HTTP request method to determine how the sensor requests the URL:
|
Postdata |
This setting is only visible if you select POST above. Enter the data part for the POST request. No Extensible Markup Language (XML) is allowed here. |
Content Type |
This setting is only visible if you select POST above. Define the content type of the POST request:
|
Custom Content Type |
This setting is only visible if you select Custom above. Define the custom content type, for example, XML, JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), or HTTP. |
Server Name Indication |
The Server Name Indication (SNI) that the sensor automatically determines from the host address of the parent device or from the target URL of the sensor. For more information, see the Knowledge Base: My HTTP sensors fail to monitor websites which use SNI. What can I do? This sensor implicitly supports SNI, an extension to the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol. |
SNI Inheritance |
Define if you want to inherit the SNI from the parent device:
|
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Monitoring Engine |
Choose the monitoring engine that the sensor uses:
|
SSL/TLS Method |
This setting is only visible if you select Compatibility engine above. Select the SSL/TLS method:
|
Check SSL Certificates |
This setting is only visible if you select Compatibility engine above. Specify if the sensor checks the certificate of the URL:
|
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
HTTP Version |
Define the HTTP version that the sensor uses when it connects to the target URL:
|
User Agent |
Choose which user agent string the sensor sends when it connects to the target URL:
|
Custom User Agent |
This setting is only visible if you select Use a custom string above. Enter the string that the sensor uses as the user agent when it connects to the target URL. |
HTTP Headers |
Define if you want to send custom HTTP headers to the target URL:
|
Custom HTTP Headers |
This setting is only visible if you select Use custom HTTP headers above. Enter a list of custom HTTP headers and values that you want to transmit to the URL, each pair in one line. The syntax of a header-value pair is header1:value1 The sensor does not support the header field names user-agent, content-length, and host. Make sure that the HTTP header statement is valid. Otherwise, the sensor request cannot be successful. |
If Content Changes |
Define what the sensor does if the content of the web page changes:
|
Require Keyword |
Define if the sensor checks the result at the URL for keywords:
The content check is only intended for HTML websites and might not work with other target URLs. For example, binary files are not supported. This sensor loads the source code at the URL. If you set up a content check, only this source code is checked for the keywords. The code is not necessarily identical to the code used to display the page when opening the same URL in a web browser. This is because a reload might be configured or certain information might be inserted after loading, for example, via JavaScript. PRTG does not follow links to embedded objects nor does it execute scripts. Only the first page at the URL is loaded and checked against the expressions configured. |
Response Must Include |
This setting is only visible if you select Set sensor to warning status if keyword is missing or Set sensor to down status if keyword is missing above. Define the search string that must be part of the source code at the URL. You can enter a simple string in plain text or a regular expression (regex). If the source code does not include the search pattern, the sensor shows the status defined above. The search string must be case-sensitive. |
Search Method |
Define the method with which you want to provide the search string:
The characters * and ? work as placeholders. * stands for no number or any number of characters and ? stands for exactly one character. You cannot change this behavior. The literal search for these characters is only possible with a regex.
PRTG supports Perl Compatible Regular Expression (PCRE) regex. For more information, see section Regular Expressions. |
Exclude Keyword |
Define if the sensor checks the result at the URL for keywords:
The content check is only intended for HTML websites and might not work with other target URLs. For example, binary files are not supported. |
Response Must Not Include |
This setting is only visible if you select Set sensor to warning status if keyword is found or Set sensor to down status if keyword is found above. Define the search string that must not be part of the source code at the specified URL. You can enter a simple string in plain text or a regular expression. The search string must be case-sensitive. If the data does include this string, the sensor shows the status defined above. |
Search Method |
Define the method with which you want to provide the search string:
The characters * and ? work as placeholders. * stands for no number or any number of characters and ? stands for exactly one character. You cannot change this behavior. The literal search for these characters is only possible with a regex.
PRTG supports Perl Compatible Regular Expression (PCRE) regex. For more information, see section Regular Expressions. |
Download Limit (KB) |
Enter the maximum amount of data (in kilobytes) that the sensor transfers per request. If you set content checks, be aware that they might be incomplete because only the content downloaded up to this limit is checked for search expressions. |
Result Handling |
Define what the sensor does with the data loaded at the URL:
For debugging, select Store result to write the source code file to disk and to look up what exactly PRTG gets when it calls the URL. If the URL does not point to a web page but to a binary file, for example, to an image, you usually do not check for content. This option is not available when the sensor runs on the hosted probe of a PRTG Hosted Monitor instance. In a cluster, PRTG stores the result in the PRTG data directory of the master node. |
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Authentication |
Define if authentication is necessary on the web page:
|
User Name |
This setting is only visible if you select Web page needs authentication above. If the proxy requires authentication, enter the user name for the proxy login. Enter a string. |
Password |
This setting is only visible if you select Web page needs authentication above. Enter a password. |
Authentication Method |
This setting is only visible if you select Web page needs authentication above. Select the authentication method that the URL uses:
|
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Primary Channel |
Select a channel from the list to define it as the primary channel. In the device tree, PRTG displays the last value of the primary channel below the sensor's name. The available options depend on what channels are available for this sensor. You can set a different primary channel later by clicking below a channel gauge on the sensor's Overview tab. |
Graph Type |
Define how this sensor shows different channels:
|
Stack Unit |
This setting is only visible if you select Stack channels on top of each other above. Select a unit from the list. PRTG stacks all channels with this unit on top of each other. By default, you cannot exclude single channels from stacking if they use the selected unit. However, there is an advanced procedure to do so. |
By default, all of these settings are inherited from objects that are higher in the hierarchy. We recommend that you change them centrally in the root group settings if necessary. To change a setting for this object only, click under the corresponding setting name to disable the inheritance and to display its options.
For more information, see section Inheritance of Settings.
Instead of entering a complete address in the URL field of an HTTP sensor, you can only enter the protocol followed by a colon and three forward slashes (this means that you can enter either http:/// or https:///, or even a simple forward slash / as the equivalent for http:///). PRTG automatically fills in the parent device's IP Address/DNS Name in front of the third forward slash.
Whether this results in a valid URL or not depends on the IP address or Domain Name System (DNS) name of the parent device. In combination with cloning devices, you can use smart URL replacement to create many similar devices.
For example, if you create a device with the DNS name www.example.com and you add an HTTP sensor to it, you can provide values in the following ways:
- If you enter https:/// in the URL field, PRTG automatically creates the URL https://www.example.com/
- If you enter /help in the URL field, PRTG automatically creates and monitor the URL http://www.example.com/help
- It is also possible to provide a port number in the URL field. It is taken over by the device's DNS name and is internally added, for example, http://:8080/
Smart URL replacement does not work for sensors that run on the probe device.
Which channels the sensor actually shows might depend on the target device, the available components, and the sensor setup.
Channel |
Description |
---|---|
Bytes Received |
The number of bytes received |
Download Bandwidth |
The download speed |
Downtime |
In the channel table on the Overview tab, this channel never shows any values. PRTG uses this channel in graphs and reports to show the amount of time in which the sensor was in the Down status |
Loading Time |
The loading time This channel is the primary channel by default. |
Time To First Byte |
The time to the first byte |
KNOWLEDGE BASE
Which user agent should I use in the HTTP Advanced sensor's settings?
My HTTP sensors fail to monitor websites which use SNI. What can I do?
Which HTTP status code leads to which HTTP sensor status?
What security features does PRTG include?
Why do my HTTP Advanced sensors differ in the bytes received value?
My HTTP sensors don't work. What can I do?