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AWS Observability Handbook

You're reading from   AWS Observability Handbook Monitor, trace, and alert your cloud applications with AWS' myriad observability tools

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804616710
Length 504 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Fabio Oliveira Fabio Oliveira
Author Profile Icon Fabio Oliveira
Fabio Oliveira
Phani Kumar Lingamallu Phani Kumar Lingamallu
Author Profile Icon Phani Kumar Lingamallu
Phani Kumar Lingamallu
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Getting Started with Observability on AWS
2. Chapter 1: Observability 101 FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Overview of the Observability Landscape on AWS 4. Chapter 3: Gathering Operational Data and Alerting Using Amazon CloudWatch 5. Chapter 4: Implementing Distributed Tracing Using AWS X-Ray 6. Part 2: Automated and Machine Learning-Powered Observability on AWS
7. Chapter 5: Insights into Operational Data with CloudWatch 8. Chapter 6: Observability for Containerized Applications on AWS 9. Chapter 7: Observability for Serverless Applications on AWS 10. Chapter 8: End User Experience Monitoring on AWS 11. Part 3: Open Source Managed Services on AWS
12. Chapter 9: Collecting Metrics and Traces Using OpenTelemetry 13. Chapter 10: Deploying and Configuring an Amazon Managed Service for Prometheus 14. Chapter 11: Deploying the Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana Stack Using Amazon OpenSearch Service 15. Part 4: Scaled Observability and Beyond
16. Chapter 12: Augmenting the Human Operator with Amazon DevOps Guru 17. Chapter 13: Observability Best Practices at Scale 18. Chapter 14: Be Well-Architected for Operational Excellence 19. Chapter 15: The Role of Observability in the Cloud Adoption Framework 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

What is observability?

If you are reading this book, the odds are you have already read about or heard the term observability elsewhere, and have decided to apply it to your AWS workloads. You are in the right place. But even being a book for the practitioner, we can’t start this book without defining some terms. They will become our guide for the rest of this book, helping us drive our discussions. Let’s start with the main one: observability.

The engineer Rudolf E. Kálmán coined the term observability (abbreviated as o11y) in 1960.

In his 1960 paper, Kálmán describes what he calls observability in the field of control theory: the measure of how well someone can infer a system’s internal states from knowledge of its external signals/outputs.

Observability is another borrowed term, in the same way as software architecture, software engineering, and design patterns. We borrow a complex, mathematical term from an older, more mature field and make it ours in our younger computing field. And to do that, we need to make it softer to make it usable.

So, in this book, we will say an application has observability if the following is true:

  • You can read any variable that affects the application state
  • You can understand how the application reached that state
  • You can execute both the aforementioned points without deploying any new code

So, your application is observable if you can answer questions that you knew you should ask, but you can also answer questions that you didn’t know you needed to ask.

So far, we have defined what observability is. But if you are like me, the first time I saw a description of observability like the one provided here, it didn’t help me understand it or even what made it different from our old friend: monitoring. But I like examples, so let me try to do a better job to help you. In the next section, we will see a small application example, we will apply monitoring practices to keep our application up and running, and we will fail. Let’s discuss why we failed and how observability principles can improve the situation in our sample scenario.

You have been reading a chapter from
AWS Observability Handbook
Published in: Apr 2023
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781804616710
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