Monitors web services such as SOAP, GET/POST, TCP, ICMP, & SSL Certificates for uptime, performance & functionality.
Monitor single page load times at an element level using real browsers from data centers around the world.
Monitor multi-step web transactions for performance, functionality, & accessibility around the globe.
Monitor performance & functionality of multiple Internet services through a highly configurable platform.
Monitor memory, disk utilization, & bandwidth through Linux, Windows, & custom performance counters across multi-locations.
LoadView by Dotcom-Monitor is an on-demand, cloud-based load testing platform for websites, web applications, & APIs.
Receive alerts when expiration dates approach or SSL issues occur.
Whether you’re one person managing a few websites, or an agency managing hundreds, get notified before your certificates expire and ensure no unpleasant surprises.
Find and display SSL certificate information to your teams and clients.
Users have the option to set an SSL certificate expiration alert that will remind them to update or renew certificates.
The alert can be customized to be sent a specific number of days prior to the expiration date and configured to be sent to specific alert groups (ex. IT Department) from the Dotcom-Monitor dashboard.
Our SSL monitor verifies the certificate and validates the website to which it is installed. Properties such as Certificate ity (CA) and Common Name (CN) should not change. SSL Certificate Monitoring detects changes that may indicate problems that are exposing website users to vulnerabilities.
Our testing verifies that the address assigned to the SSL certificate matches the URL. If the SSL certificate testing detects an address change has occurred or that the CN is changed, you are instantly alerted.
The SSL certificate checker tests intermediate chain of trust (aka, CA bundle) for changes, which may indicate problems. Save time with automated reports over manual monitoring.
Verify the chain of trust doesn’t contain a revoked certificate. An SSL certificate can become invalid and be revoked prior to the expiration validity period. An SSL test verifies whether or not the revocation state has changed.
Revocation can occur due to a change of name, change of association between a subject and CA, and compromise or suspected compromise of the corresponding private key. Under these types of circumstances, the issuing CA may revoke the certificate.
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