Seite wählen

OSMC 2021 | Observability will not fix your broken Monitoring , or Culture

von | Feb 4, 2022 | OSMC

This entry is part 5 of 23 in the series OSMC 2021

OSMC 2021 has been over for almost three months now. It was a pretty interesting conference, and also my first one as a trainee at NETWAYS. The two-day conference including a workshop and hackathon was all about open source monitoring software like Icinga2, CheckMK or Prometheus.
Today I give you some insights about one of the talks:

About the Speaker

Kris Buytaert is a long time Linux and Open Source Consultant. He’s one of the instigators of the devops movement, currently working for Inuits. He is frequently speaking at or organizing different international conferences and has written about the same subjects in different Books, Papers and Articles. He spends most of his time working on bridging the gap between developers and operations with a strong focus on High Availability, Scalability, Virtualisation and Large Infrastructure Management projects hence trying to build infrastructures that can survive the 10th floor test, better known today as the cloud while actively promoting the devops idea!

The difference between Monitoring and Observability

Plenty of companies are jumping on a new hype train, Observability. The hope that is associated with the new technology: a replacement of the „legacy“ monitoring stack.
In his talk Kris Buytaert took a look at this development and pointed out why it is a wrong approach for a lot of people. To understand the problems that could come up with the implementation of Observability, he first introduced the differences between Monitoring and Obervability.

What is Monitoring?

So what exactly is monitoring? Summarizied in one question: what is going on in my system?
With this question in mind, experts look at a system to figure out the following points (and some more):

– High level overview of the state of a service or component
– Availability of this services
– Technical components of your setup
– What is the performance of my setup

What is Observability?

Observability on the other hand is trying to answer the question: Why is this going on?
For example, your services behave in a way that they shouldn’t because you or your colleagues didn’t tell the system to do this. With the help of Observability software you could figure out why your tech is behaving the way it is.
In practice Observability consists of three pilars:
Metrics
Logs
Traces

Whats your goal in observability?

After the short introduction of the differences between monitoring and observability, Kris Buytaert showcased some examples of failed implementation of observability. What all of the situations have in common? There was no flawless instance of monitoring on which the observability was placed.

But why are an increasing number of companies who turn to observabilty and what’s the goal of of this development?

In his talk he listed some reasons he experienced himself when talking to companies and employees:

– Expectation of increasing performance problems
– Already existing performance problems
– The monitoring data is chaos, observability will fix it and give a better insight in what is running in the system
– More hipster credit (e.g. ‚Our company is so advanced. We take on every new trend to show how progressive we are.‘)

The first steps of implementing observability

To end his talk, the speaker gave a few helpful first steps for everyone who is thining about implementing obervability.

1. Fix your monitoring. It can be an automated single source of truth about what is going on in your system.
2. Keep it GREEN!
3. Fix your metrics. Check if logshipping is partially broken, if theres a regression on shipping your metrics or if you have a broken dashboard.

Apart form the technical standpoint the speaker encourages everyone to ask some important questions before the implementation of a new system:

– Who exactly wants Observability? Is it the devs and ops or is it the upper management who insists on trying out something new.
– What do they really want? Do they really want Observability or are there other reasons they want it in your system.
– Will a new system fit into my existing ecosystem? If a vendor claims it works out of the box for everyone but your developers say it doesn’t…Trust your devs!

As the last words in his talk Kris Buytaert had some advice: ‚You might not need Observability (yet) but you do need to fix your monitoring.‘

 

Full talk and more from and about OSMC 2021

Watch the whole talk by Kris Buytaert here:

YouTube player

 

Since OSMC 2021 is unfortunately over we still have something for you: Did you already check out this year’s conference archives? They provide you slides and videos of each talk and also some photographs of the conference itself.

OSMC 2022 will take place from November 14 – 16 and we’re already looking forward  to meeting you all again!

Stay tuned!

Marc Rupprecht
Marc Rupprecht
Junior Consultant

Nach seinem Bachelorabschluss im Fach Technikjournalismus und zweieinhalb Jahren als Online-Redakteur hat Marc sich entschieden, die Medienwelt hinter sich zu lassen und den Wechsel in die IT vollzogen. Als Auszubildender zum Fachinformatiker für Systemintegration verstärkt er nun seit September 2021 das Team der NETWAYS Professional Services. In seiner Freizeit ist er seit vielen Jahren begeisterter Volleyballspieler und hat vor Kurzem das Scuba Diving für sich entdeckt. Ansonsten versucht er regelmäßig neue Länder auf seiner Weltkarte frei zu rubbeln und verbringt gerne auch den einen oder anderen Abend beim Zocken am PC.

0 Kommentare

Einen Kommentar abschicken

Deine E-Mail-Adresse wird nicht veröffentlicht. Erforderliche Felder sind mit * markiert

Mehr Beiträge zum Thema OSMC

OSMC 2023 | Take a Walk Down Memory Lane!

Exciting news – the OSMC 2023 archives are now online! Whether you attended or missed out, you can now catch up on all the talks, speaker slides, and awesome photos from the conference.   Video Recordings Dive back into the insightful talks of OSMC 2023. Our...

OSMC 2023 | Behind the Scenes Part 2/2

As a trainee in marketing, I had the opportunity to attend OSMC 2023 on 8th of November. Today, I will tell you about my first-hand experience at the event and give you a few insights into what happened behind the scenes. Insights on the Eventee App To enhance the...

OSMC 2023 | Day 3 Recap

Day two of the OSMC 2023 started rather quiet, but with a interesting set of talks. The following is a summary and review of some talks I watched and was interested in. Therefore not all of the talks are mentionend here and this should not be interpreted as a...

OSMC 2023 | Recap Day 2

SNMP Monitoring at scale After a warm welcome by Bernd and the sponsor Eliatra the talks started. The first talk I was interested in was "SNMP Monitoring at scale" by Rocco Pezzani from Würth Phoenix and Thomas Gelf from NETWAYS Professional Services. They teamed up...

Trainings

Web Services

Events

Series



Other posts in series: