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Modern Network Observability

You're reading from   Modern Network Observability A hands-on approach using open source tools such as Telegraf, Prometheus, and Grafana

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835081068
Length 506 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Christian Adell Christian Adell
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Christian Adell
David Flores David Flores
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David Flores
Josh VanDeraa Josh VanDeraa
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Josh VanDeraa
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Understanding Monitoring and Observability
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Monitoring and Observability FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Role of Monitoring and Observability in Network Infrastructure 4. Chapter 3: Data’s Role in Network Observability 5. Part 2: Building an Effective Observability Stack
6. Chapter 4: Observability Stack Architecture 7. Chapter 5: Data Collectors 8. Chapter 6: Data Distribution and Processing 9. Chapter 7: Data Storage Solutions for Network Observability 10. Chapter 8: Visualization – Bringing Network Observability to Life 11. Chapter 9: Alerting – Network Monitoring and Incident Management 12. Chapter 10: Real-World Observability Architectures 13. Part 3: Using Your Network Observability Data
14. Chapter 11: Applications of Your Observability Data – Driving Business Success 15. Chapter 12: Automation Powered by Observability Data – Streamlining Network Operations 16. Chapter 13: Leveraging Artificial Intelligence for Enhanced Network Observability 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix A

All-in-one open source tools

Since the beginning of open source network monitoring systems, the most common (and easiest) way to build a solution was to package together all the key components – data collection, storage, and visualization.

In the early 2000s, the RRDtool database was the king database in network observability data. It was used by Cacti (https://www.cacti.net/), and other similar tools. Cacti is a Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)-only tool that provides graphs of collected data. Here is an example of a Cacti graph from the Midwest Internet Cooperative Exchange (micemn.net):

Figure 10.2 – The Midwest Internet Cooperative Exchange Cacti graph

Figure 10.2 – The Midwest Internet Cooperative Exchange Cacti graph

These early monitoring tools shared the same persistence system but also came as a complete solution, including SNMP data collection and visualization.

Technologies have evolved over time, but this approach of packaging all functions together is still very common in solutions...

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