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Back to the fundamentals: Are you "actually" monitoring your Cloud? - Mohamed Elsakhawy

Recorded during the inaugural OpenInfra Days North America at Indiana University in 2024. Full playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqi-7yMgvZy_Rbq4lElWJyuqh7gDmo_2t&si=JYblzWYAQJk4nso2

For more information about the author or the event, visit: https://oidiu2024.sched.com/event/6ce7d5ac122e37f150e1aca07cf98462

Abstract
This session discusses the essentialls of monitoring an on-prem Cloud enviorment. It explains the indusrty standards in observability and monitoring, the best practices and the common pain points. It guides the audience on how to move from an ad-hoc monitoring/observability practices to a more standardized approach

The talk will also point to the differences of monitoring between different use-cases for the Cloud and where they intersect. The talk will end with a short demo of using Zabbix to monitor an on-prem Openstack environment.

About OpenInfra Days NA at IU https://go.iu.edu/oid-iu2024
This first OpenInfra Days North America, hosted by Indiana University, US, was jointly organized by participants from the United States, Mexico, and Canada. We encouraged involvement from users and companies from these countries and had lively networking and community-building from within North America.

OpenInfra Days is a great opportunity to hear directly from prominent open infrastructure leaders, learn from user stories, network, and get plugged into your local community.

About OpenInfra Foundation https://openinfra.dev/about/
The OpenInfra Foundation supports the development and adoption of open infrastructure globally, across a community of over 110,000 individuals in 187 countries, by hosting open source projects and communities of practice.

Staying true to its mission of helping people build and operate open infrastructure, OpenInfra Foundation hosts open source projects that contribute to the advancement of today’s infrastructure. From cloud hosting to the driving force behind 5G, these projects are code first and operate under the guiding principles we call the “Four Opens.” These projects include OpenStack, Airship, Kata Containers, OpenInfra Labs, StarlingX, and Zuul. Additional initiatives supported by the OpenInfra Foundation include OpenDev, project hosting, continuous integration tooling, and virtual collaboration spaces for open source software projects and Superuser, an online publication where users and developers share how they're combining software from OpenInfra Foundation communities with other popular open source tools like Kubernetes, Ceph, Cloud Foundry, OVS, OpenContrail, Open Switch, OPNFV and more to power their open infrastructure.

Individual membership of the Open Infrastructure Foundation is free for anyone with an interest in open infrastructure. Individual Members are expected to participate in the community through technical contributions or community building efforts, and vote in an annual election for the Board of Directors.

Several initiatives at Indiana University helped to organize this event, including the National Science Foundation-sponsored projects Jetstream2 and the Midwest Research Computing and Data Consortium Scientific Cloud Affinity Group as well as Research Technologies, a division of University Information Technology Services and a center in the Pervasive Technology Institute.

Видео Back to the fundamentals: Are you "actually" monitoring your Cloud? - Mohamed Elsakhawy канала IUPTI
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