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MariaDB High Performance

You're reading from   MariaDB High Performance Familiarize yourself with the MariaDB system and build high-performance applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783981601
Length 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Pierre Mavro Pierre Mavro
Author Profile Icon Pierre Mavro
Pierre Mavro
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Performance Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Performance Analysis 3. Performance Optimizations 4. MariaDB Replication 5. WAN Slave Architectures 6. Building a Dual Master Replication 7. MariaDB Multimaster Slaves 8. Galera Cluster – Multimaster Replication 9. Spider – Sharding Your Data 10. Monitoring 11. Backups Index

Other monitoring solutions


Monitoring generally means being alerted. However, monitoring can also be graphing, historical data, log centralization, log correlation altering, and so on. We're going to see some free and open source solutions here that can be useful, in addition to Nagios.

In the following sections, we won't dive deep into existing solutions, as that could cover several dedicated books; however, you will see what is the key to good monitoring and what solutions exist.

Graphs

Using graphs to view history is very important. It helps to know what happened in the past and what the evolution of MariaDB was (or any other component).

For example, it can be interesting to have an idea of the number of threads during a year. It can help to understand if an application is usually updated, how is it evolving, and if modifications have to be made on the application side or on the MariaDB architecture side.

The most popular solution is called Cacti, which uses RRD to graph data. You can find...

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