This is moodss version 21.45 and moomps version 5.8, powerful modular monitoring applications. For Unix Review, moodss is "a must-have application for today's network and systems administrators", and for Eric S. Raymond, in "The Art of UNIX Programming" book: "the code is polished, mature, and considered an exemplar in the Tcl community". For Joe Barr, at NewsForge: "I downloaded the moodss tarball from the website, decompressed it, and started it up. It's that easy. The main window is deceptively simple. Great power lurks just below the surface of that mild exterior". Moodss is a graphical application, which, in real-time mode, displays data processed by any number of dynamically loadable modules. Various data tools (graphs, pie charts, formula builders, thresholds manager, ...) are used to build complete dashboards, very easily by drag'n'drop, to monitor a single server up to a whole information system. Any displayed data can also be archived in a SQL database, which moodss can use for post-analysis and presentations, or even capacity planning by predicting the future, using sophisticated statistical methods and artificial neural networks. Moodss companion daemon, moomps, works similarly around the clock, and even allows distributed monitoring to feed remote moodss stations. Modules, the link between the moodss and moomps cores and the monitored data, can be easily created (in Tcl, Perl, Python, HTTP, C, ...). Many modules are provided, such as a comprehensive set for Linux system monitoring, MySQL, network, SNMP, Nagios compatibility, Python and Perl modules examples. For instance, thoroughly monitor a dynamic web server on a single dashboard with graphs, using the Apache, MySQL, ODBC, cpustats, memstats, ... modules. If you have replicated servers, dynamically add them to your view, even load the snmp module on the fly and let your imagination take over... There are currently about 100 usable modules for moodss (counting the Nagios plugins) Moodss is multi-lingual: English, Japanese and French are supported. Help with other languages is very warmly welcomed. Jean-Luc Fontaine mailto:jfontain@free.fr http://jfontain.free.fr/