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Modern Distributed Tracing in .NET

You're reading from   Modern Distributed Tracing in .NET A practical guide to observability and performance analysis for microservices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837636136
Length 336 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Liudmila Molkova Liudmila Molkova
Author Profile Icon Liudmila Molkova
Liudmila Molkova
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introducing Distributed Tracing
2. Chapter 1: Observability Needs of Modern Applications FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Native Monitoring in .NET 4. Chapter 3: The .NET Observability Ecosystem 5. Chapter 4: Low-Level Performance Analysis with Diagnostic Tools 6. Part 2: Instrumenting .NET Applications
7. Chapter 5: Configuration and Control Plane 8. Chapter 6: Tracing Your Code 9. Chapter 7: Adding Custom Metrics 10. Chapter 8: Writing Structured and Correlated Logs 11. Part 3: Observability for Common Cloud Scenarios
12. Chapter 9: Best Practices 13. Chapter 10: Tracing Network Calls 14. Chapter 11: Instrumenting Messaging Scenarios 15. Chapter 12: Instrumenting Database Calls 16. Part 4: Implementing Distributed Tracing in Your Organization
17. Chapter 13: Driving Change 18. Chapter 14: Creating Your Own Conventions 19. Chapter 15: Instrumenting Brownfield Applications 20. Assessments 21. Index 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 13 – Driving Change

  1. Using a single backend for all signals has certain advantages. It should be easier to navigate between signals: for example, get all logs correlated with the trace, query events, and traces together with additional context, and jump from metrics to trace with exemplars. So, using a single backend would reduce cognitive load and minimize duplication in backend-related configuration and tooling.

Using multiple backends can help reduce costs. For example, it’s usually possible to store logs in a cheaper log management system, assuming you already have everything up and running for logs and metrics. But these backends don’t always support traces well. Adding a new backend for traces and events only would make total sense.

Tools such as Grafana may be able to provide a common UX on top of different backends to mitigate some of the disadvantages.

  1. There are a few things that we need to do:
    • Lock down the context propagation...
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