8

Setting Up Triggers and Alerts From Graphs in AppSignal

 3 years ago
source link: https://blog.appsignal.com/2020/11/03/setting-up-triggers-and-alerts-from-graphs-in-appsignal.html
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

Setting Up Triggers and Alerts From Graphs in AppSignal

Wes Oudshoorn, Milica Maksimović on Nov 3, 2020

“I absolutely love AppSignal.”


Discover AppSignal

Building reliable applications and meeting the expectations of your users is not an easy task. Every now and then, a tiny bug can creep up into your production code and cause some trouble to your users. On some days, external API hick-ups may cause difficulties in keeping your application working smoothly.

This is where AppSignal comes in. As a 5-in-1 monitoring tool, it can detect anomalies in your app’s behavior and send you a warning message. In this post, we’ll go through the changes we’ve made in our interface that help you set up triggers and alerting for your application more easily.

Creating a Trigger From Custom Metrics

Custom metrics and triggers are a match made in heaven. Like salt and pepper. Like gin and tonic. Like developers and mechanical keyboards… You get the idea 😀

Custom metrics are an amazing way to measure those specific details that indicate your application’s health. By setting up triggers for these custom metrics, you get alerted when they go outside their healthy ranges.

Improvements: Quickly Creating Triggers

Creating triggers just became a whole lot faster. Each graph in your dashboard now has a “create trigger” link that helps you create a new trigger for one of the metrics in a graph.

The trigger button works on the graphs on your custom and magic dashboards. Here’s a short video showing you the magic:

What to Create Metrics & Triggers For

Here are a few metrics that you could create a graph for on your dashboard and what trigger you could set:

Suggested metrics What they indicate Error rate & error count Bits are hitting the fan. Reponse times Slow requests aren’t good, performance is affected. Throughput High throughput = bad or unexpected, you might want to scale up your servers. Throughput Low throughput (0) might indicate that something isn’t working. Sidekiq queue lengths Big queues indicate poor performance. Sidekiq queue latency This metric shows how long it takes for the latest job to be processed, the longer the worse.

You Deserve a Stroopwafel 🍪

Our mission is to make the lives of developers easier and enjoyable. That’s why we offer AppSignal for free to amazing OSS projects and send out stroopwafels once you’ve set up AppSignal.

If you’re an existing user, you’ve probably already received them, but since you’ve reached the end of this post, you deserve some more! Feel free to message our support, and they’ll soon be on their way.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK