As honk already noted it seems a bit of a niche tag, in a highly specific technology. There are so far only 149 questions asked in that tag and the top users are still in an everyone can win battle.
The technology the question asks about is for a scalable distributed system monitor tool for high-performance computing systems such as clusters and grids. I don't think many users work with that as opposed to, for example, Java, C/C++ or Regex.
The first point made by honk might be related as well. It could well be that the solution to the question is on the edge of what a developer does and were a system- or network engineer would take over. But only an expert in that tag can tell for sure.
Lastly the question itself is maybe a bit terse. Had the OP included a setting they found or tried (just including what you search for can be of help), the users that could answer the question would have known where to extent on the knowledge of the OP.
Bountied questions become active when the bounty is started (they will go to the front of the active tab of the tag) and they might be bumped to the homepage but on Stack Overflow there are so many posts competing that it won't stay there for long (less then 30 minutes if you're lucky). Beyond that the question will only be listed on the featured tab.
Keep in mind that a bounty is just like an ad in the newspaper. You pay upfront to have your ad printed on page 3 but you have no guarantee your ad will be seen by your potential customers, let alone if it leads to a higher conversion. if your sales stay at 0 you can't go ask for a refund.