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Network Performance Monitoring Is Now Available in New Relic One

 3 years ago
source link: https://newrelic.com/blog/nerd-life/network-performance-monitoring?utm_campaign=Feed%3A+NewRelic+%28New+Relic+Blog%29
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Today, we’re announcing that Network Performance Monitoring is now generally available as part of New Relic One. We’ve partnered with Kentik, a leading network observability provider, to give you Network Performance Monitoring in New Relic One, so you have the data to understand how your network is impacting your overall system performance.

Quickly answer the question: Is it the network?

When system performance suffers, you need to know if it’s due to your code, your infrastructure, or the underlying network. And you need to know quickly so you can focus your efforts at the right layer of your stack with the right team.

Now with Network Performance Monitoring in New Relic One, you can correlate and analyze all your telemetry data in one place—your applications, infrastructure, digital experience, and network data. This way, you can engage the right team at the right layer of the stack faster than ever before. And when it is the network, you can provide network engineering teams with proper context for faster resolution.

Quickly detect alerting entities to pinpoint problems in your network.

Like any other data flowing into New Relic One, network data is parsed into a set of golden signals. Golden signals are automatically curated performance data, such as latency, packet loss, and jitter. As seen in the image below, Lookout uses automatic anomaly detection signals to help you discover network anomalies by default. In the graphic, the color of the circle represents whether a value is increasing or decreasing, and the size represents the relative amount. Network-related alerting means you can collaborate on potential problems with network engineers before they manifest into larger issues.

Discover network anomalies across your golden signals with zero configuration.

Network data has high cardinality, which means it consists of many distinct attributes. This granularity is useful when you need to ask ad hoc, unanticipated, and exploratory questions of your data. New Relic One is unique in that you get the power and scalability to ingest, store, and query high-cardinality network data to give you the details necessary as you’re troubleshooting.

Analyze flow data by isolating unique conversations by source, destination, and TCP port, which can be used to answer questions like “What’s using all the bandwidth?”

Get started

To collect network data, click Add more data in New Relic One, select the Network Performance Monitoring tile, and follow the on-screen instructions. Check out the walk-through videos below—or read the Network Performance Monitoring docs, if that’s more your style.

As a New Relic One customer, you can start using Network Performance Monitoring today without any new licenses or SKUs. Like metrics from other parts of your stack, network data costs $0.25/GB after you exceed your free tier. If you’re using New Relic on a legacy pricing plan, contact your sales representative to move to New Relic One.

If you’re not already using New Relic, sign up here to get free, forever access to all of New Relic, including Network Performance Monitoring.

Learn how to deploy Network Performance Monitoring on New Relic One so you can answer the question, “Is it the network?” faster!

Learn how to use Network Performance Monitoring and troubleshoot network data in Navigator and Lookout.

Learn how to use Network Performance Monitoring and isolate network problems using Workloads.


John Withers is a Principal Product Marketing Manager at New Relic—and an obsessive dog lover.

The views expressed on this blog are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of New Relic. Any solutions offered by the author are environment-specific and not part of the commercial solutions or support offered by New Relic. Please join us exclusively at the Explorers Hub (discuss.newrelic.com) for questions and support related to this blog post. This blog may contain links to content on third-party sites. By providing such links, New Relic does not adopt, guarantee, approve or endorse the information, views or products available on such sites.


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