Ionhour Docs
Monitoring

Dashboard

See your workspace's overall health at a glance — uptime, incidents, SSL certificates, and outstanding follow-ups.

The Dashboard is the first screen you see when you open Ionhour. It's a bird's-eye view of your workspace: how healthy things are right now, what's gone wrong recently, and what still needs attention.

Ionhour dashboard overview

At the very top of the dashboard, above the KPI cards, a row of shortcut cards gives you one-click access to common tasks — like adding a check, managing your status page, or inviting a teammate.

  • Click any card to jump straight to that task.
  • Click the settings icon to open a checklist of available shortcuts and choose which ones to pin here. Only a limited number can be pinned at once.
  • If nothing is pinned yet, you'll see a prompt to add shortcuts instead of empty cards.
  • Click the X to hide the row for the rest of your session. A Show recommended actions button takes its place so you can bring it back anytime.

Recommended actions shortcut row at the top of the dashboard

Uptime and incident KPIs

Just below the recommended actions row, four cards summarize a key metric for the current calendar month:

  • Overall Uptime — the percentage of time your checks were up this month.
  • Healthy Dependencies — how many of your external dependencies are currently reporting healthy.
  • Incidents This Month — the number of incidents opened this month.
  • Mean Time to Resolve (MTTR) — the average time it took to resolve an incident this month, shown as a duration.

Every card also compares the current month against the previous one. The comparison is color-coded — green when the change is an improvement, red when it's a step backward. A rising uptime percentage is good news (green), but a rising MTTR is not (red), so the coloring always reflects whether things are actually getting better, not just whether the number went up.

No data yet?

Overall Uptime and Mean Time to Resolve show a dash instead of a number when there's genuinely nothing to measure yet this month — for example, no signals have come in, or no incidents have been resolved. Incidents This Month always shows a real count, including "0" when none have opened. If there's no prior month to compare against, a card shows its current value without a comparison line.

KPI cards showing uptime, healthy dependencies, incidents, and MTTR

Incident History timeline

Below the KPI cards, the Incident History timeline shows your recent incidents as horizontal bars laid out against a calendar.

  • Time range — switch between Week, Month, and Quarter to view incidents over the last 7, 30, or 90 days.
  • Bar color — green bars are incidents that were resolved; red bars are incidents that are still active or being monitored, so anything that still needs attention stands out immediately.
  • Assignees — each bar shows small avatars for the people assigned to that incident (up to two, with a "+N" badge if there are more).
  • Today marker — a vertical line marks today's date so you can see at a glance how recent (or how old) an incident is.

Click any bar to jump straight to that incident's detail page. Hovering over a bar shows a tooltip with the full incident title, its current state, and its exact date range (useful when the bar itself is too short to show all of that).

Once at least one incident has loaded, a View all incidents link appears at the bottom of the panel — whether or not the history actually overflows the visible area — so you can always jump to the full list.

Switch the time range

Click Week, Month, or Quarter above the timeline to widen or narrow the window of incidents shown.

Open an incident

Click any colored bar to open that incident's full detail page, including its timeline and postmortem (if one exists).

Incident history timeline switching between Week, Month, and Quarter, then opening an incident from a bar

Activity

In the right-hand rail, the Activity feed lists recent events across your workspace — checks going up or down, incidents opening and resolving, alerts firing, and similar happenings — each with an icon, a short message, and how long ago it happened.

If nothing has happened yet, the feed lets you know that events will show up here as your checks, incidents, and alerts start happening.

Activity feed widget listing recent workspace events

Members

Further down the right-hand rail, the Members widget shows your workspace's team as a grid of avatars, with the total member count next to the heading. If your workspace has more members than fit in the grid, the extra members are summed up as a "+N" badge.

Click Manage members at the bottom of the widget to open your workspace's member management settings.

Members widget showing workspace teammate avatars

Issue Status

Also in the right-hand rail, the Issue Status widget breaks down every incident from the last 30 days by its current stage:

  • Active — still open and unresolved.
  • Monitoring — the underlying problem is fixed but the check is still being watched to confirm it holds.
  • Resolved — closed out.

A thin stacked bar shows the relative share of each stage, with exact counts and percentages listed underneath. If nothing has gone wrong in the last 30 days, the widget simply tells you every monitored service is healthy.

Issue Status widget with Active, Monitoring, and Resolved counts

Coverage Gaps

If your workspace uses on-call schedules, the Coverage Gaps widget rounds out the right-hand rail with a look at how well your on-call coverage is holding up:

  • A weekly trend chart of the percentage of time with a coverage gap, switchable between a few different week-long windows.
  • A list of currently active gaps, showing which schedule is affected, the time window, and how long the gap has lasted.

If every schedule is fully covered, the widget simply confirms there are no gaps.

Coverage Gaps widget showing a weekly trend chart and a list of active gaps

SSL Certificates

The SSL Certificates panel lists every monitored HTTPS endpoint that has certificate data, so you can see at a glance which certificates are expiring soon — before they cause an outage.

Each row shows:

  • The check's name and current status.
  • Its URL (on wider screens).
  • The certificate issuer (on wider screens).
  • The expiry date, with a badge like "in 12 days" or "Expired" — color-coded by how urgent it is.
  1. Use the search box to filter by check name or URL.
  2. Click the Name or Expires column header to sort by that column; click again to reverse the order.
  3. Click the refresh icon on a row to re-check that certificate right away — useful right after you've renewed one. It takes a few seconds for the updated details to appear.

Certificates are paginated, with controls at the bottom of the panel to change rows per page or jump between pages.

Nothing showing up?

Only checks with an HTTPS URL and certificate data appear here. If the panel is empty, add or configure an HTTPS check on the Checks page.

SSL Certificates panel listing checks with expiry dates and status badges

Milestone Tracker

If your workspace uses deployments, the Milestone Tracker sits alongside Action Items and charts your deployment activity over time — how many deployments started versus how many completed, bucketed across the time range you choose.

Switch between the available time ranges above the chart, from as short as one month up to a year. If there's been no deployment activity in the selected range, the chart area simply says so.

Milestone Tracker chart showing started versus completed deployments

Action Items

The Action Items card lists outstanding follow-up tasks pulled from your team's incident postmortems — the write-ups your team completes after an incident to capture what happened and what to fix. The card is part of your workspace's incident postmortem tools; if there's nothing outstanding, it stays visible and simply says there are no open action items rather than disappearing.

Each item shows:

  • A checkbox to mark it complete.
  • The task description and the incident it came from.
  • The incident's severity and (if set) an owner tag.
  • A link to jump straight to the related incident.

Only the incident's owner can check an item off — anyone else sees a disabled checkbox with a tooltip explaining why. If there are more open action items than fit in the card, a View all action items link appears at the bottom.

Complete an action item

If you're the owner of the related incident, click the circle next to an action item to mark it done. The circle briefly shows a loading spinner while the change saves, then the item shows a strikethrough once it's confirmed complete.

Didn't save?

If the action item list changed elsewhere while your update was saving, you'll see a notification and the list refreshes — just try checking it off again.

Checking off a completed action item on the dashboard as the incident owner

Next Steps