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StackState has always believed in the importance of open source and open standards, and we’ve demonstrated our commitment through ongoing support of open technologies. From the beginning, StackState supported StatsD and OpenMetrics. Even our agent is open source, designed to help organizations easily onboard our platform and to give them an extensible open way to observe their services. StackState is now proud to announce our next big open source step.
One Friday afternoon we got a Slack message from one of our early customers, letting us know that there was an issue with updating our SDK. Apparently, our SDK introduced a new dependency to the code that their team wasn’t able to meet: graphql@16.0.1. This made it impossible for the customer to upgrade to a newer version of our SDK and became a blocker for them.
InfluxDB is increasingly being used in IoT solutions to store data from connected devices. Now it can also be used on IoT edge gateways as a data historian to analyze, visualize and eventually transmit aggregated IoT data up to a centralized server. In this article we’re going to look at three simple ways you can connect an instance of InfluxDB on your IoT Edge device to another instance of InfluxDB in the cloud.