The latest News and Information on Log Management, Log Analytics and related technologies.
Ever heard the expression “A picture is worth a thousand words”, well with Sematext Experience we want you to have a picture of the thousand words your customers want to tell you, but usually don’t. At Sematext, we’ve learned over time that we cannot count on customers or visitors on our website to tell us about issues they encounter while using our product or visiting our webpage.
We’re happy to announce official support for Zeek in Logz.io Security Analytics for easier security monitoring! Logz.io Security Analytics provides a unified platform for security and operations designed for cloud and DevOps environments. It’s built on top of Logz.io’s enterprise-grade ELK Stack and is extremely easy to set up and integrate with.
CHAOSSEARCH is building a new standard (a new category) in data analytics. Beyond the cost and complexity of Warehousing, Hadoop, or even Elasticsearch solutions. CHAOSSEARCH is a new kind of big data platform that delivers both search and analytics at a price and simplicity yet experienced. At CHAOS, we are primarily focused on transforming object storage (such as S3) into the first multi-model database, where the user provides read-only access to their S3 storage and CHAOS provides the rest.
As we’ve rolled out Loki internally at Grafana Labs, we wanted logs beyond just simple applications. Specifically while debugging outages due to config, Kubernetes, or node restarts, we’ve found Kubernetes events to be super useful. The Kubernetes events feature allows you to see all of the changes in a cluster, and you can get a simple overview by just retrieving them: This also captures when nodes go unresponsive and when a pod has been killed along with the reason.
RabbitMQ is an open source message broker that was built to implement AMQP in 2007, and over the past twelve years has grown to include HTTP, STOMP, SMTP and other protocols via an ever growing list of plugins.
If you are reading this article, you’re probably familiar with syslog, a logging tool that has been around since the 1980s. It is a daemon present in most Linux-based operating systems. By default, syslog (and variants like rsyslog) on Linux systems can be used to forward logs to central syslog servers or monitoring platforms where further analysis can be conducted. That’s useful, but to make the very most of syslog, you also want to be able to analyze log data.
Launched at KubeCon North America last December, Loki is a Prometheus-inspired service that optimizes storage, search, and aggregation while making logs easy to explore natively in Grafana. Loki is designed to work easily both as microservices and as monoliths, and correlates logs and metrics to save users money. Less than a year later, Loki has almost 6,500 stars on GitHub and is now quickly approaching GA.