How do we become an Observability Certified Professional (OCP)

What is an Observability? Today we’re going to be talking about observability, so let’s start with a definition. So observability is a property of your system’s software that helps you understand what’s going on with them, monitor what they’re doing. To achieve observability, you should have visibility into system software and applications then it is classified into three tiers on the basis of performances credibility as logging, metrics, and monitoring. On the account of observability, it performs a certain action

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Fixing Risk Sharing With Observability

Source:-https://devops.com/ Incentives are mismatched among SREs, SecOps, and application developers. These mismatches create challenges around how and what information is shared across siloed teams. This asymmetrical information creates a moral hazard where one team can shift deployment risk to another team, with no accountability back to the originating team. Risk shifting results in unstable applications, inefficient infrastructure, security issues and poor customer experience. All of that impacts your company’s bottom line. Closing the Information Gap Observability is positioned as a

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Rethinking Observability for Kubernetes

Source:-https://containerjournal.com/ Observability is a staple of high-performing software and DevOps teams. Research shows that a comprehensive observability solution, along with a number of other technical practices, positively contributes to continuous delivery and service uptime. Observability is sometimes confused with monitoring, but there is a clear difference between the two; it’s important to understand the distinction. Observability refers to a technical solution that enables teams to actively debug a system. It is based on exploring activities, properties and patterns that are

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Datadog to Meld Observability and DevSecOps

Source:-https://devops.com/ Datadog is planning to expand the scope of the security and observability services it provides following the acquisitions of Sqreen, an application security platform provider, and Timber Technologies, a provider of a tool, called Vector, for collecting and normalizing log data. Ilan Rabinovitch, vice president of product and community for Datadog, said Vector makes it possible to collect, enrich and transform logs and other observability data from both on-premises and in-cloud environments in a way that makes it easier

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