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CloudView NMS is a self-hosted network management, monitoring, and SCADA solution aimed more at traditional enterprise NMS and carrier-grade FCAPS use cases. It can automatically discover and monitor almost any device that supports SNMP or TCP/IP, and also covers servers, applications, websites, VoIP, environmental sensors, Android devices, fiber OTDR, and SCADA scenarios. The product can be used as a standalone GUI application, or run as a multi-user, distributed Master/Slave system.
CloudView has broad coverage in terms of protocols and platforms: SNMPv1/v2/v3, SSH, TL-1, Telnet, sysLog, TFTP, MTConnect, RESTful API, and XML/TL1/SNMP northbound interfaces are all mentioned. The server supports Windows, Linux, Mac OS, Solaris, and Raspberry Pi, while clients can access it through an HTML5 web console or a standalone GUI. It highlights hierarchical maps, geographic views, port/interface performance, Top 10 views, historical charts, alarm correlation, email/SMS notifications, Windows Event Log, SLA reports, and IT automation script execution. For internal-network devices that cannot be accessed directly, a free Agent can be used; MSPs can also place Slave-NMS boxes on customer sites and report back to a central Master.
Pricing is its most prominent selling point: there is a 30-day free trial with no registration required, and the commercial license is a one-time payment of $295. It covers one CloudView NMS Server, with no limits on monitored nodes, ports, remote users, or Agents, and includes long-term free upgrades and email support. If a Slave Server needs to be deployed at each remote site, it usually requires a separate license; simply monitoring remote servers via Agents does not incur additional charges. Payment is handled through PayPal, with guest checkout available for major credit cards.
The advantages are broad protocol support, strong cross-platform compatibility, local deployment, extremely low pricing, and no scale-based billing, making it suitable for complex heterogeneous networks and budget-sensitive teams. On the security side, it also mentions SNMPv3 AES-256, encrypted remote access, and two-factor authentication. The downsides are that the website and documentation feel dated, and the official materials acknowledge that the documentation cannot cover every feature. The learning curve and operational burden may be higher than with modern SaaS monitoring products. Support is mainly by email, with no clear SLA or enterprise support package described.
It is suitable for enterprise network administrators, carriers, MSPs, system integrators, hardware vendors, and teams that need SCADA, environmental, or fiber monitoring—especially scenarios that prioritize private deployment and SNMP. For access from mainland China, it is not possible to judge the stability of the official website from the text alone; however, related services such as Google Maps, Google Play, and PayPal may be restricted in China. Overall, it should be considered “partially restricted.” Alternatives include Zabbix, LibreNMS, OpenNMS, Nagios, PRTG, and Prometheus + Grafana.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on cloudviewnms.net official site.
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