Application issues, downtimes and outages are the responsibility
of IT to resolve. However, at the end of the day they are,
essentially, business issues.
Businesses compete for customers online everyday and the latter
are not a patient bunch. Every second of your web application
performance counts building up or taking away both revenue
and brand reputation. There’s always a risk that even though
your application may appear to be working fine, its flow’s key
parts, such as shopping carts, registration pages, etc. may not
be functioning properly. So it’s critical to have a full
controll across the entire application delivery
chain. With Node.js, MySQL, Oracle, Java/JMX, Log, and
Tomcat application monitors, you can track your app’s
performance bottom-up.
Check out the infographic below to see …
Since 2011 e-commerce has grown from $856,000,000.00 to closing out 2013 at more than $1,248,000,000,000.00 in global revenues, a nearly 41% growth rate over a two year span. The forecast for 2014 is targeted at $1,500,000,000,000.00, another 20% increase is gross revenues (see chart below). With trillions of dollars in play year on year now, and astounding revenue growth rates still ahead, it is critical that any e-commerce site be diligently monitoring not just their website uptime, but more importantly their Web applications. Obviously it is critical that your customers be able to get to your website, but if it doesn’t build fast and complete client requests and transactions even faster then you will be losing clients and revenue at an alarming rate. The latest figures show that if your site doesn’t do a full page load in 3 seconds or less, …
[Read more]Here at Monitis, we’re on a mission to not only build the best product but also, at the same time, make it more user-friendly. We listen to your feedback and suggestions and take various steps to improve our services, tools and features to make YOUR life easier. In any given week, you can see a new feature or update in your Monitis dashboard. Here’s some of the stuff we’ve added since our last newsletter, three months ago. Stay-up-to-date and see all that we have to offer by reading about all our changes below:
Pluggable M3 (Monitis Monitor Manager) Framework
Who needs an introduction about M3? – Perhaps no one!
After gaining some reputation with M3, providing extra-easy
integration of any monitor into Monitis it was time to take it to the next
level.
Generally speaking, the work flow of M3 was described in detail in this article.
After some thought and design, we’ve decided it’d be best if M3
was pluggable. Pluggable in terms of being able to easily add
execution and parsing plugins.
The interface and behavior of M3 …
The MySQL database is a crucial part of a wide variety of products, particularly web applications. Naturally, it is very important to monitor the health status of MySQL. However, there is constant disagreement on which of the many MySQL status variables provide the best overview on MySQL health status and indicate that something is not right with a server.
It certainly depends on what your application does – tuning read performance is different than optimizing write operations and everything changes when you have a cluster. The average user can use small subset of variables while advanced user want to get more detailed picture of the situation. So there cannot be one set of “magic variables” to quietly optimize every situation. However, it is possible to have a more-or-less optimal set of metrics that will allow to get a “good enough” notion about the general health status of MySQL Server.
The new white paper “ …
[Read more]