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The latest News and Information on Log Management, Log Analytics and related technologies.

0 to Observable: From Kubernetes Logs to Container Observability with Coralogix

In this video, we begin with a local Kubernetes cluster. From there, we will add a collector agent, the Open Telemetry Collector and configure it to push logs to Coralogix. However, we won't stop there. We'll then use the Logs2Metrics feature to transform those logs into some key container metrics, and visualise them using a DataMap. From 0 to observable in 15 minutes.

How Logz.io Uses Observability Tools for MLOps

Logz.io is one of Logz.io’s biggest customers. To handle the scale our customers demand, we must operate a high scale 24-7 environment with attention to performance and security. To accomplish this, we ingest large volumes of data into our service. As we continue to add new features and build out our new machine learning capabilities, we’ve incorporated new services and capabilities.

What is Istio Service Mesh, and Do I Need It?

Development teams build modern applications using microservice architectures. Individual services are built and maintained by separate teams, and then these services are combined using container-based orchestrators to comprise a complete product offering. Microservices are a standard development method because they allow teams to iterate releases, providing ongoing new customer-facing features and bug fixes without needing to redeploy an entire platform or app.

Collect GitHub audit logs and scanning alerts with Datadog

For most organizations, GitHub is mission critical. Your GitHub repositories likely also contain some of your organization’s most sensitive data. GitHub provides tools to help you protect and govern this data, with tools such as audit logs, code scanning alerts, and secret scanning alerts. However, analyzing these logs and alerts through GitHub’s UI can be challenging. For example, looking for trends in your code scanning alerts over time through GitHub’s UI is just not possible.

Where Are You In Your Observability Journey?

Observability is the ability to see and understand the internal state of a system from its external outputs. Logs, Metrics, and Traces, collectively called observability data, are three external outputs widely considered to be three pillars of observability. Now more than ever, organizations of all sizes must employ the necessary processes and technologies to harness the power of their data and make it more actionable.

How to Enrich Logs and Metrics with OpenTelemetry Using BindPlane OP

Data enrichment is the process of adding additional context or attributes to telemetry data at the source that increases its value during analysis. OpenTelemetry, a collaborative open source telemetry project with the largest organizations in the observability space, can be configured to enrich logs and metrics from dozens of sources. This blog will show you the basics of how to use BindPlane OP to easily deploy and configure OpenTelemetry to enrich data from a source.

Q&A from Our Recent Observability Webinar

Earlier this month I hosted the “Everything You’ve Heard About Observability is Wrong (Almost)” webinar– thanks to all of you who attended. I wanted to follow-up with the attendees as well as those who were not able to join. As promised, it wasn’t the same old Observability presentation that we have grown accustomed to you know, all marketing with little value.

No query, no problem: How LM Logs is built for everyone

So your team has access to a logging tool? Great! What’s the first thing you want to find? The latest config change gone wrong? Data from 30 days ago when a specific server was at high capacity? Or maybe you’d like to access logs for a certain IP on a certain day for specific HTTP and servers with counts and averages. Hopefully there was training to teach you the specific query languages and expert skills required to answer these questions.