The Good Tech Companies - How to Start Using Globalping Without Getting Overwhelmed
Episode Date: April 8, 2026This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-to-start-using-globalping-without-getting-overwhelmed. Learn how to get started with Glo...balping using the web tool, CLI, dashboard, API, and integrations for testing, monitoring, and automation. Check more stories related to machine-learning at: https://hackernoon.com/c/machine-learning. You can also check exclusive content about #artificial-intelligence, #software-development, #software-engineering, #infrastructure, #data-science, #performance, #globalping-guide, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @globalping. Learn more about this writer by checking @globalping's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Learn how to get started with Globalping using the web tool, CLI, dashboard, API, and integrations for testing, monitoring, and automation.
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How to start using GlobalPing without getting overwhelmed by GlobalPing. As GlobalPing offers more
ways to run tests, getting started can seem overwhelming for newcomers. If you want to start
using GlobalPing, are unsure whether it is the right tool for you, or don't know which tools to
use, this blog post is for you. In this guide, you can find a list of typical use cases,
along with our recommended tools and integrations for each. First, we introduce you to the core
tools that are useful to almost anyone in most situations. Afterward, pick your own adventure.
Find the use case that sounds most like you to get started with GlobalPing. The core tools.
Some GlobalPing tools and integrations are valuable to all users, regardless of their requirements.
Let's have a look at these tools and what makes them great.
WebTool visit our website at GlobalPing. I owe to find our web tool at the top of the
the page. Here, you can create and configure tests by filling out the form. The magic location
field helps you pick probe locations to run tests from, with a suggestion box that updates
as you type. Note that there will be no suggestions when you use filters. Click the cog icon to
find advanced and test specific configuration options. You run the test directly on our website and get
the results displayed below a map showing the probes used for your measurement. The web tool is ideal for
quick, one-off tests or when you don't want to install anything on your machine. All you need is an
internet connection to run free tests on our website. Commandline interface IF you're comfortable with the
terminal and use it in your daily work, the global ping CLI is likely a great choice. It is useful for
running single or repeated tests and integrating tests into scripts or development workflows. With the CLI,
you can run all test types and see results in a human-friendly format. The CLI offers additional options,
flags and can be used in your automation scripts, making it more flexible and efficient than the
web tool for technical users or frequent test runs. You can find more details, as well as set up
instructions for Linux, MacOS and Windows in our GitHub repo. G-L-O-B-A-L-P-I-N-G dashboard iF
you want to get more out of GlobalPing or host and manage your own Probe's fourth network. The dashboard
is the tool for you. GlobalPing gives you 250 free tests per hour at the time of writing, by default,
which are counted against your IP address. If multiple users run tests from the same IP address,
they share the same allowance. Creating a free account with your GitHub user increases your
hourly tests to 500 at the time of writing and counts usage against your account rather than your
IP address. Just authenticating your chosen tool, such as the CLI tool, to start using your accounts for
free tests. If you need more, you can earn credits by hosting a probe. Each probe that joins the
network makes it better and more reliable for everyone. Credits don't expire and you can spend them
on additional tests once your free hourly limit runs out. Adopt your probes in the dashboard to
fine-tune their location, add tags to target them in tests, and track your credits. Visit the
GlobalP-B-B-A-Dashboard and learn more about it on our blog. G-L-O-B-A-L-L-P-I-N-G-A-P-I- Finally,
the backbone of the platform, the GlobalPing API. Anybody can use it to create measurements,
get the results, check online probes, and view current limits, free tests. If you want to build a
tool or app with GlobalPing, the APE is a great starting point. There are also libraries for
TypeScript, Go, Python, Java, and Net if you prefer to work in your language of choice.
Choose your use case. I want to explore and run quick tests. I want to troubleshoot DNS, latency,
or API availability. I work in a team and want to test, verify, and collaborate. I need a global
uptime monitoring solution. I want to automate tests and build workflows. I want to contribute to an
open source project. I am looking to promote my infrastructure. I want to explore and run quick
tests. You are a curious developer, home user, newbie to the networking world, or simply want to run
quick tests, potentially on the go. Maybe you've heard of global ping and want to try it out, or
Maybe you just need to check if your website is available in Japan.
Whatever it is, you just want TORN a quick test without committing to setting up a global
ping tool yet.
The web tool is the fastest way to use global ping in this scenario.
Just visit our website and fill out the form to run a test, no registration needed.
And since each test gets a shareable link, it's also a great way to share results with others.
When you're ready and comfortable using your terminal, install the CLI.
It supports all the same test types and options as the web tool and adds features such as the option for the full API response, including measurement results and probe details. Web tool. CLI on GitHub. I want to troubleshoot DNS, latency, or API availability. You are a developer. Let's say you've updated your app or service, but something isn't right. Maybe DNS hasn't propagated everywhere. Latency is higher than it should be in a specific region, or your API returns errors you can't reproduce.
on your machine. That's where GlobalPings Global Testing comes in. The CLI is probably the best
option here. Run DNS lookups, HTTP checks, or race routes from any location and get instant
results. If you're working in VS code or one of its forks, such as cursor, you can use our
official extension to do the same without leaving your editor. You can also integrate tests in
your own app or automate tests during deployment. Our API and libraries for TypeScript, Go, Python,
and NET give you full programmatic access to GlobalPings functionality.
Need more free tests per hour?
Create a free dashboard account to double them instantly.
CLI on GitHub.
VS code, cursor extension, API reference, libraries, dashboard.
I work in a team and want to test, verify, and collaborate.
You are part of a dev team, DevOps engineering team, or team led.
When something breaks during a deployment, your team needs to run test.
and share their findings quickly.
However, switching between tools and copy-pasting results can lead to errors and can also slow down the team.
With our official Slack and Discord apps, your team can run tests and see results directly in your channels.
As a result, you can keep the conversation and data in one place, add the right people, run additional troubleshooting tests,
and reach a solution more quickly.
If you want to run tests for yourself without sharing them with the whole team,
the CLI is always there for quick or scripted tests.
We also recommend that your Slack or Discord admin creates a dashboard account and then
authenticates with the app to increase the team's shared free hourly tests.
For your CLI tests, you can authenticate with your own dashboard account to use up your own allowance.
Slack app Discord app CLI on GitHub Dashboard, I need a global uptime monitoring solution.
You are a DevOps engineer, solo developer or self-hoster.
When monitoring your website, API, or service, knowing it's reachable from only one location isn't enough.
You want to test from different countries or regions to get alerts about outages that you would otherwise miss.
GlobalPing is built into several popular open source monitoring tools, giving you a global perspective without managing the infrastructure yourself.
You can find GlobalPing in Uptime Kuma, Uptime, Uptime Flair.
If you're already using one of these, you can check the tools documentation to learn how to add globalpink
tests in just a few steps. If not, we recommend giving them a try. In the end, you'll get a global
uptime monitoring solution that is open source, self-hosted, and free. Naturally, the more monitors you
run, the closer you'll get to spending all your free tests. So we also recommend setting up a free
dashboard account and connecting it to your monitoring tool in this scenario. Uptime KumaX global
pbing blog post. Uptime X global ping blog post. Uptime Flare X global ping blog post.
I want to automate tests and build workflows.
You are a dev ops engineer, part of a dev team, or a solo developer.
Whether you want to verify a deployment in a C-CD pipeline, trigger an alert during an incident,
or build a custom monitoring solution, running tests manually won't get you far.
Depending on what you want to achieve, there are a few good options.
If you're a developer building something custom, the API provides you with full programmatic
access to measurements and results.
you integrate the API directly, check whether one of our official libraries for TypeScript,
Go, Python, Java, and Net is a better fit for your stack. If you'd rather build workflows visually,
the GlobalPing nodes for N8N, available on both managed and self-hosted instances, and Zapier let you
connect GlobalPing to hundreds of other tools without writing any code. The MCP server is worth a look
if you're working with AI agents or building AI-powered workflows. You can run tests using natural language and
Ask It, for example, whether your website is reachable from a specific location without manually
configuring the tests. Running low on free tests? Create a free dashboard account connected to your
tool to double your hourly allowance. API reference libraries N8N node Zapier integration, MCP server
on GitHub dashboard. I want to contribute to an open source project. You are a home user,
server owner, company, or open source contributor. GlobalPing runs on a vast probe network
hosted mainly by the community. The more probes join, the more useful and reliable the platform
is for everyone. There are a couple of ways to be part of that. The easiest way to contribute is to
host a probe on a server running Docker. Even an old Raspberry Pi works. In return, you earn
credits you can spend Torin more tests. Create a dashboard account to adopt your probe, manage it,
and track your credits. If you're running Kubernetes, our Helm chart makes deploying multiple
probes more straightforward. You can also support the project by sponsoring via GitHub,
which helps us cover infrastructure and development costs. If you'd rather contribute code,
the community has already built libraries for Python, Java, and Net, as well as a home assistant
add-on. We welcome anyone building new integrations or adding global-ping support to their
open source tools. GlobalPing probe on GitHub, Helm chart, GitHub sponsors, community-built integrations,
I am looking to promote my infrastructure. You are, a network company, infrastructure provider,
or tech company. If you run network infrastructure, GlobalPing gives you a practical way to showcase
its performance to developers. Connect your GitHub organization to the dashboard to host
probes under your org tag. This makes your infrastructure directly targetable by any global
and you get a public profile page with your organization's name, logo, and a list of your
hosted probes.
You may also already have a Looking Glass page, a clean, branded, bookmarkable page on our website
where developers can run tests against your network directly.
It's a lightweight dev-facing marketing tool and can be interesting to link from your developer
docs or network status page.
Connect your GitHub org blog post dashboard, looking glass example pages, G-Core Labs, Delta
Fiber.
Orange, where to go from here. GlobalPing is easy to get started with, and all our official
tools and integrations are open source and free to use. Pick the use case that fits your situation,
get comfortable with one or two tools, and then check out other tools'es your needs change.
If you want to read more guides and tutorials, our global ping blog has you covered.
And if you have a feature request, an idea, or just want to follow the project, you can find
us on GitHub. Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by Artifeng
official intelligence. Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.
