Operations | Monitoring | ITSM | DevOps | Cloud

Getting started with Cloud Logging

Want to make sure that your cloud services are free from any vulnerabilities, threats, or errors that can make it unreliable? In this episode of Stack Doctor, we show you the new features in Google Cloud Logging, teach you how to navigate the new and improved Logs Viewer and build log queries, and give you an in-depth analysis of the Log Router. Watch to learn what’s new with Cloud Logging!

Live Kubernetes Debugging with the Elastic Stack - Philipp Krenn (Elastic)

Your Kubernetes app is down. Your users start ranting on Twitter. Your boss is standing right behind you. What do you do? This talk walks you through a live debugging session without panicking: We are using the Elastic Stack in this demo with a special focus on its Kubernetes integration with metadata enrichment and autodiscovery in combination with APM / tracing, metrics, logs, and health checks.

DevOps Patterns and Antipatterns for Continuous Software Updates - Baruch Sadogursky (JFrog)

So, you want to update the software for your user, be it the nodes in your K8s cluster, a browser on user’s desktop, an app in user’s smartphone or even a user’s car. What can possibly go wrong? In this talk, we’ll analyze real-world software update fails and how multiple DevOps patterns, that fit a variety of scenarios, could have saved the developers. Manually making sure that everything works before sending an update and expecting the user to do acceptance tests before they update is most definitely not on the list of such patterns.

NodeJS Instrumentation - Adding Custom Tags to Spans | Datadog Tips & Tricks

In part 1 of this 4 part series, you’ll learn how to use manual instrumentation to add additional detail to traces. We’ll add new tags, or attributes, to the spans generated by our NodeJS application, allowing for more insightful data visualizations in App Analytics.

NodeJS Instrumentation - Creating Custom Spans for Method-Level Visibility | Datadog Tips & Tricks

In part 2 of this 4 part series, you’ll learn how to instrument your NodeJS application to capture custom method-level spans, allowing visibility into how specific methods behave in your application. Flame graphs allow for deep insight into the performance of your code. During instrumentation, we can capture custom spans for deeper layers of visibility in the resulting flame graphs. In this video, we use instrumentation to capture a method-level span, allowing us to see the performance of that specific method in our flame graphs in the Datadog UI.

NodeJS Instrumentation - Adding Analyzed Spans for Improved Data Analytics | Datadog Tips & Tricks

In part 4 of this 4 part series, you’ll learn how to add Analyzed Spans to your traces to open up even more data search and aggregation capabilities via App Analytics. In this video, we will walk you through how you can turn any span into an Analyzed Span. Analyzed Spans function like the root spans of a trace, allowing us to turn the tags embedded in them into facets for advanced data aggregation and searching in App Analytics. You can check out how to add tags to spans—and how to utilize them in App Analytics—in our first video of the series here.

Debugging, distributed tracing, and profiling for web applications

Google Cloud offers many tools that can help you manage your application services. In this video, we teach you how to set up and utilize Cloud Trace, Cloud Profiler, and Cloud Debugger to collect latency data across different services, memory-allocation information, and inspect application code locations without compromising the performance of your web application.