Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

How JMX Monitoring Works for Java Applications

The Java Management Extensions (JMX) framework is a Java technology that includes tools for managing and monitoring applications, system objects, and service-oriented networks. The JMX framework is designed to simplify the management of local and remote Java applications. The JMX framework introduces the concept of MBeans for real-time management of applications, whereby resources are represented by objects called MBeans (Managed Beans).

What is the difference between availability and reliability?

When you buy a service, it’s crucial to be able to access it any time of day or night. In the world of enterprise IT, however, you can’t always guarantee these levels of quality. Organizations have to evaluate the service levels necessary for running their business smoothly. And when there are IT outages, they know what will work best for them without much disruption.

Best Practices and Processes to Organize Your Work Orders

Most enterprises have a lot of equipment and assets that require routine maintenance, if it is done over time, asset performance starts to decline, and asset breakdown risks rise. The work order process is necessary for maintenance since accurate tracking of the work is very important. It takes a lot of work to process, prioritize, and keep track of incoming work orders, especially from various channels, including emails, meetings, messages, phone calls, and more.

Six Key Observability Principles for Understanding Modern Applications

The rise of modern applications has kicked basic monitoring tools to the curb. With observability, teams can proactively know, in real-time, what’s happening across the entire stack. Observability allows us to take a holistic view of our IT systems and learn about the current state based on the environment and the data it generates. But how do you properly implement observability? Here are 6 guiding principles to make sure your IT and DevOps teams are set up for success.

Morgan Logger | Tutorial on how to use in an Express application

Morgan is a popular HTTP logging library for Node.js. It is designed to be a simple and flexible tool for logging HTTP requests and responses in Node.js applications. Using Morgan, you can easily log requests made to your Node.js server, including information such as the request method, the URL of the request, the status code of the response, and the length of the response body. You can also customize the format of the log messages and specify which requests should be logged and which should be ignored.

Launching the CloudFabrix Space Craft into the Orbit!

NASA’s Nov’16 2022 launch kicked off highly anticipated Artemis 1 mission, sending an uncrewed Orion capsule on a nearly 26-day trek to the moon and back. The Space Launch Systems (SLS) megarocket appeared to perform exactly as planned during the liftoff, and was “simply eye-watering,” said the agency. Drawing analogies, we here at CloudFabrix had our own “Artemis 1 moment”.

Qovery Demo Day Summary - December 2022

Our last Qovery Demo Day took place on a live on Tuesday, 20th of December. This event aims to give you some insights into what we did during the past month and what’s next and showcase some of our new features. This Demo Day was a bit special, as it was the last of the year, and to celebrate, we brought the entire team along to do a retrospective of the year and answer any questions you might have about our product.

Tips & Tricks for using Kubernetes

Businesses around the world are increasingly turning to container technology to streamline the process of deploying and managing complex, cloud native applications. Containers bundle all necessary dependencies into a single package, offering portability, speed, security, scalability, and ease of management, making them the preferred choice over traditional virtual machines (VMs).

2022 Year in Review

If you are like me, I always look forward to reading (here writing) a company's Year in Review and this year is no different. However, as I reflect back on 2022, I realized we achieved a five year anniversary. An anniversary of completing a very big vision of transforming customer’s cloud object storage such as AWS S3 into the first stream-based Search+SQL Analytic Database. Initially providing access via the Elastic (Search) API, then Presto (SQL), at scale and in production.