The latest News and Information on Cloud monitoring, security and related technologies.
At Lumigo, we heavily depend on a set of tests to deploy code changes fast. For every pull request opened, we bootstrap our whole application backend and run a set of async parallel checks mimicking users’ use cases. We call them integration tests. These integration tests are how we ensure: Recently, we changed our old “traditional log traversing” of integration tests into *amazing* OpenTelemetry traces graphs.
Azure Blob Storage is a cloud-based storage solution provided by Microsoft as part of its Azure platform. It enables users to store and manage unstructured data such as text, images, videos, and binary data in the cloud. This makes it a highly scalable and cost-effective way to store large amounts of data without having to worry about hardware maintenance or infrastructure management.
As enterprises build and scale business-critical applications on Azure, they need continuous visibility to understand the health and performance of their services. This can be a challenge, especially for enterprises with large-scale deployments that include an ever-increasing number of subscriptions, resources, and teams.
Have you ever heard of Azure Blob Storage? If you work with data storage, then chances are you’ve at least heard the name. But what exactly is it? In simple terms, Azure Blob Storage is a cloud-based storage solution provided by Microsoft. It’s used to store and manage unstructured data such as text and binary data, including documents, images, videos, and more.