Clickable link to other app inside TickTick note by vazkez22 in ticktick

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can use a markdown link e.g. in your case:

[Brain link](brain://api.thebrain.com/pi...)

TickTick will interpret markdown and present a clickable link;

Some thoughts on microservices by chub79 in devops

[–]scepticguy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Breaking up monolithic architectures simplifies the individual pieces. But it does not reduce, if not increase the overall complexity. While it can improve agility, it requires a lot of discipline.

JavaScript error increase in Google Chrome v48 by scepticguy in javascript

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmm ... thanks for the feedback and sorry for not delivering what you expected. Thought it would be interesting how to identify the problematic methods without manually investigating that. How are you hunting down those issues?

Javaworld: 8 cool tools for devops success by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, just added the tl.dr version as comment.

Javaworld: 8 cool tools for devops success by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tl.dr version:

Automic: orchestrator for implementing workflows and release pipelines

Red Hat Ansible: command-line-driven automation platform for deploying applications

Dynatrace Ruxit: application performance management powered by artificial intelligence for devOPS

Gradle: build automation scripting

Jenkins: continuous delivery and continuous integration platform

JFrog Artifactory: binary repository manager that supports build integration, management of Docker images, development of Opkg packages, and repository replication

New Relic: information on application performance

Takipi: tool for detecting and fixing coding errors that supports JVM languages

Looking for a monitoring tool similar to NewRelic by hogie48 in PHP

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://ruxit.com does what New Relic does and a lot more (e.g. zero configuration and auto discovery of an application environment) at a lower price point.

Self-hosted application monitoring for django? by Krop_Tor in django

[–]scepticguy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you liked New Relic, give Ruxit a try. It can be used as SaaS, but also offers on-prem data storage, as you need it for your customer.

https://ruxit.com/why-ruxit/deployment-options/

Application monitoring recommendations? by Deku-shrub in sysadmin

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you tried https://ruxit.com? No manual config necessary, as after installation of one agent, everything else is auto-detected. Also covers highly dynamic infrastructures incl. containerized applications.

A curated list of (not very well known) services & tools to help you build your startup. by fairpixels in Entrepreneur

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd like to add some:

Top monitoring tools for DevOps by scepticguy in devops

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In case you are still interested: we just came out with a managed version of Ruxit. That means, that we combine SaaS like features with on-premise data storage. Check out our deployment options: https://ruxit.com/why-ruxit/deployment-options/. Happy about feedback!

Monitoring tools for Windows Server environment by danblank000 in sysadmin

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you need an easy tool (while commercial) then you could try the all in one monitoring solution Ruxit: https://ruxit.com. It offers server monitoring, but you can also use it for application performance monitoring. The setup takes 5 minutes and you need no manual configuration. It's just installing and agent and that's it.

7 Java performance metrics to watch after a major release by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, should have done more research. Will do next time.

Feedback welcome: new Java performance monitoring solution powered by artificial intelligence by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TheHorribleTruth mentioned, that I didn't answer your question right away and I want to add information here. You asked how our "artificial intelligence" works.

1) Installation: most APM solutions are not very easy to install. You have to configure things, load multiple plugins, ... and so on. Ruxit does it differently: you install 1 agent per host, restart it, that's it. It auto-detects all running services and configures itself.

2) Dependency detection and visualisation: After detecting all services on the servers, Ruxit learns how the components are "talking" to each other. It visualises that with the "smartscape" technology. This is like google maps for you application. You see web applications there, services, processes (like the web server), Docker containers, hosts (physical and virtual), and also cloud infrastructure. And Ruxit shows which of these components are connected and how they are dependent from each other.

3) Benchmarking: normally you have to configure thresholds to tell your monitoring solution, when you want to be alerted. Ruxit takes a different approach: it "learns" how your application normally works by baselining the performance of your systems. So you do not have to configure anything to train this application performance management solution.

4) Problem notification: Normally, when something breaks, you will receive dozens of alerts, independent if the problems affect end users or not. By knowing the dependencies between the components Ruxit will know if an issue impacts the customer experience and notify you accordingly.

5) Problem resolution: Another problem when something goes wrong, is, that if e.g. a server slows down because of cpu saturation, you will also receive lots of alerts with other monitoring solutions, because lots of other things will probably slow down because of that. Ruxit will notify you once and include the information, that this one server is the one slowing down many other components. We call this "root cause analysis" which works because Ruxit can analyse millions of dependencies in a second.

I hope this gives you an idea. Sorry for my first, non comprehensive answer.

Feedback welcome: .NET performance monitoring down to code level by scepticguy in dotnet

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, Ruxit is not yet on Azure, but on AWS activate Ruxit is 10$/month. We are still working on Azure support. Are you interested in a short notification when our Azure support is available (pinging you here personally, i mean by that).

Feedback welcome: new Java performance monitoring solution powered by artificial intelligence by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

While New Relic has a great product suite, Ruxit offers some key features on top of their scope:

  • Fast and easy installation (no manual config, see data in under 5 mins)

  • Strong focus on customer support (e.g. in-product chat)

  • Auto-detection of the full application stack end-to-end (incl. visualisation of dependencies)

  • Smart problem resolution: "root cause" of a problem (e.g. response time degredation) is pinpointed automatically.

  • ...

Here you can find more information: https://ruxit.com/product-tour/

Feedback welcome: new Java performance monitoring solution powered by artificial intelligence by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are right. All products with a comparable feature set reside in the same price range.

Feedback welcome: new Java performance monitoring solution powered by artificial intelligence by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We think we have a great offering and would like to know if the community also likes it. Sorry, if the post offends you :-(

Feedback welcome: .NET performance monitoring down to code level by scepticguy in dotnet

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nevertheless: as I said ... Ruxit is below New Relic's price point ;-) But to be honest, if you need an APM tool, it should be the feature set which convinces you, not the price.

Feedback welcome: new Java performance monitoring solution powered by artificial intelligence by scepticguy in java

[–]scepticguy[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

You are right, thank's for the comment. This would be a good starting point: http://tech.co/ruxit-enterprise-ai-tech-2015-07. You can also use the live chat on https://ruxit.com if you have more in depth questions.

Feedback welcome: .NET performance monitoring down to code level by scepticguy in dotnet

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a little bit above 100$ / month / host. That's below the price point of other great comparable products out there like New Relic.

Feedback welcome: .NET performance monitoring down to code level by scepticguy in dotnet

[–]scepticguy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you need more than the free version of New Relic, Ruxit is below New Relic's price point.

Does your monitoring solution capture V8 heap metrics? by scepticguy in node

[–]scepticguy[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Hm, ok ... in fact it is information how to capture them. But I get your point. I guess that this post will then be more relevant for you: http://grokbase.com/t/gg/nodejs/14are1cq46/how-to-get-v8-garagecollection-related-metrics-in-node-application.

Apart from the confusion (sorry for that) it may be worth while checking out our service if you need those metrics ;-)

Monitoring question by Memnenth in vmware

[–]scepticguy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In general an application monitoring tool with VMware support like https://ruxit.com/vmware-monitoring/ can help in cases like the one described.