coroot
qryn
coroot | qryn | |
---|---|---|
33 | 10 | |
3,771 | 943 | |
9.5% | 3.7% | |
9.2 | 9.6 | |
5 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
coroot
- Coroot: Open-source alternative to Datadog/NewRelic
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Show HN: Coroot: Simplified Observability for Modern Environments
I'm Peter Zaitsev, co-founder at Coroot. I come from the database world where observability, or monitoring, was crucial for keeping databases running smoothly. But as technology evolves, so do the challenges we face.
Today, many applications are built using microservices architecture, making it harder to pinpoint issues. Developers now have more ownership over the entire environment, but they lack the expertise to navigate intricate infrastructure details. And with the complexity of modern observability systems, crucial components often go unmonitored, leaving blind spots.
That's where Coroot comes in!
We're excited to announce the release of Coroot 1.0 – a simplified observability platform designed to provide actionable insights for modern environments. With Coroot you get:
- Comprehensive Visibility: Coroot covers your entire environment, ensuring no information gaps. Whether you're on Kubernetes, traditional VMs, or cloud services, Coroot has you covered.
- Simple Deployment: We've made deploying Coroot a breeze. Leveraging modern Linux features like eBPF and Netlink, setup requires zero configuration. Coroot also identifies and configures additional components for you.
- Actionable Insights: Coroot prioritizes the most important information, helping you resolve issues up to 80% faster than with legacy solutions.
And the best part? Coroot has open-source version. If you prefer a hosted solution, there is Coroot Cloud, which comes with a free trial and transparent affordable pricing.
While Coroot is already an awesome open-source observability platform, we're not stopping there. We have ambitious plans to automate issue resolution and minimize human intervention.
Got ideas? Let us know on GitHub - https://github.com/coroot/coroot
See detailed overview of Coroot Features - https://coroot.com/overview
- Coroot – Open-source Datadog/NewRelic alternative
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Grafana Labs Observability Survey 2024
Take a look at https://github.com/coroot/coroot (Apache 2.0). It offers plenty of ready-to-use dashboards and inspections
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All you need is Wide Events, not "Metrics, Logs and Traces"
I think ClickHouse is becoming a default storage for observability nowdays: https://clickhouse.com/use-cases/logging-and-metrics
And there are quite a few solutions on top of it.
A couple of examples that seem to be interesting (however I didn't use them in real life):
https://coroot.com/
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Show HN: Coroot – A Copilot for Application Performance Troubleshooting
Landing page: https://coroot.com
- Show HN: Coroot – Copilot for Application Performance Troubleshooting
- Ask HN: Which project(s) made you go “I can't believe this is open-source”?
- Coroot v0.17 with Distributed Tracing capabilities + eBPF-based instrumentation for situations where integrating OpenTelemetry is not feasible
qryn
- Show HN: Pyroscope/Phlare drop-in compatible replacement with OLAP storage
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Coinbase (?) had a $65M Datadog bill per Datadog's Q1 earnings call
Thanks for mentioning qryn! We are a non-corporate alternative and feature full ingestion compatibility with DataDog (including Cloudflare emitters, etc), Loki, Prometheus, Tempo, Elastic & others for both on-prem (https://qryn.dev) and Cloud (https://qryn.cloud) deployments, without the killer price tag.
Note: in qryn s3/r2 are as close to /dev/null as it gets!
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What I like using Grafana Loki for (and where I avoid it)
qryn and vector get along very well! We use it all the time for testing and developing qryn and qryn.cloud and most of our users love it! But we're just as compatible with Loki/LogQL, Influx protocol for metrics and logs, Elastic Bulk, Prometheus for metrics, opentelemetry for everything... and more coming!
Feel free to open an issue on our repository if you end up trying it and/or would like us to help out!
https://qryn.dev
- Making a Homegrown ClickHouse Log for $20/mo
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Building the world’s fastest website analytics (2021)
> *it would be nice to use ClickHouse as a Prometheus backend*
Well... that's already possible and it works great! As you might know https://qryn.dev turns ClickHouse into a powerful Prometheus *remote_write* backend and the GO/cloud version supports full PromQL queries off ClickHouse transparently (the JS/Node version transpiles to LogQL instead) and from a performance point of view its well on par with Prometheus, Mimir and Victoriametrics in our internal benchmarks (including Clickhouse as part of the resource set) with millions of inserts/s and broad client compatibility. Same for Logs (LogQL) and Traces (Tempo)
Disclaimer: I work on qryn
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Think Prometheus, but for logs (not metrics). Simple, efficient, fast log store
Thanks for mentioning our project! qryn (formerly cloki) is currently more focused on the polyglot factor and trying to unify logs, metrics and telemetry on a single stateless platform, easy to scale without hundreds of services and moving parts. At this stage, its a lightweight Grafana Cloud alternative just requiring clickhouse - no sidecar databases, redis, or plugins needed, and no new query languages or rules to learn. Latest info is at https://qryn.dev
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Show HN: Distributed Tracing Using OpenTelemetry and ClickHouse
cloki can be used to read metrics out of any CH table so it should work fine.
we also just introduced experimental support for ingesting OTLP/ZIPKIN spans and a tempo-compatible API in cloki, looking for testers to validate this feature:
https://github.com/lmangani/cLoki/wiki/Tempo-Tracing#clickho...
Internally trace spans are stored as tagged JSON logs, meaning they are available from both Loki and Tempo APIs and can be used from pretty much any visualization, too!
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I Don't Think Elasticsearch Is a Good Logging System
There's also cLoki. It's a new project that puts a Loki gateway over a ClickHouse backend store. We're looking at it and plan a presentation from the author(s) at the next ClickHouse SF Bay Area Meetup.
https://github.com/lmangani/cLoki
What are some alternatives?
awesome-apm - A list of awesome APM products (commercial and OSS)
zeek-clickhouse
prometheus - The Prometheus monitoring system and time series database.
uptrace - Open source APM: OpenTelemetry traces, metrics, and logs
hubble - Hubble - Network, Service & Security Observability for Kubernetes using eBPF
vector - A high-performance observability data pipeline.
skywalking - APM, Application Performance Monitoring System
signoz - SigNoz is an open-source observability platform native to OpenTelemetry with logs, traces and metrics in a single application. An open-source alternative to DataDog, NewRelic, etc. 🔥 🖥. 👉 Open source Application Performance Monitoring (APM) & Observability tool
VictoriaMetrics - VictoriaMetrics: fast, cost-effective monitoring solution and time series database
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data
self-hosted - Sentry, feature-complete and packaged up for low-volume deployments and proofs-of-concept
syslog-ng - syslog-ng is an enhanced log daemon, supporting a wide range of input and output methods: syslog, unstructured text, queueing, SQL & NoSQL.