Today
Chronosphere formally launched and
unveiled its first product - Chronosphere - a platform for monitoring
today's complex technology stacks at large scale. Chronosphere enables
customers to store and analyze more monitoring data than ever before and
leverages that data to gain higher level insights without compromising on
performance, reliability or cost. Chronosphere is currently in private beta and
will be showcased at Velocity Conference this week and at KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon North America later this month.
"Being able to store tens of billions of metrics is only half the battle," said
Martin Mao, co-founder and CEO of Chronosphere. "While that's a great first
step that large enterprises across sectors will need, making sense of the
data and using it effectively is even more challenging and that's where our
platform is focused."
Having met at Microsoft while working together on the initial launch of
Office365, Chronosphere founders Martin Mao (CEO) and Rob Skillington (CTO)
reunited at Uber during its hyper-growth phase to help the company scale
up its infrastructure. During that time, the volume and complexity of
monitoring data being produced and consumed increased by 10x year on year.
This growth was driven by the movement from a few monolithic applications to
thousands of microservices as well as the migration from hundreds of servers
to millions of containers.
It quickly became obvious that neither the open source solutions Mao and
Skillington were using at the time, nor commercially available solutions, could
sustain the level of scale, performance and cost required by the team.
The only course of action they saw was to build a new solution - M3 -
which they developed in open source from day one for the benefit of the
community at large. Over the course of four years, Mao and Skillington led
the team that scaled M3 to one of the largest production metrics systems in the
world, storing tens of billions of time series while both ingesting and
querying billions of datapoints per second. This provided Uber with
comprehensive insight into its infrastructure and applications for engineers
and real time visibility of the overall business for operations teams.
"We started by writing an open source streaming metrics aggregator and
distributed time series database that would scale with the business and operate
with zero downtime when availability zones experienced failures," said
Skillington. "At Chronosphere, the team is focused on providing something that
companies can start using within minutes, while we continue to develop and
maintain M3 as open source."
After recognizing that other high growth companies struggled with the same
challenges as they moved to a cloud native architecture, Mao and Skillington
went on to found Chronosphere so they could bring the benefits of M3 to
enterprises everywhere while continuing to support the open source community
which comprises 7 of the Fortune 200 including Comcast and FedEx.
The first Chronosphere product is a hosted end-to-end monitoring platform which
is built on top of M3. Chronosphere's platform adds enterprise features such as
intelligent rate limiting, resource management and security and access
controls such that all teams within an organization can leverage the power of a
single centralized platform. Chronosphere also provides visualization and
alerting capabilities that are designed to provide for sane operability at
scale given the volume of underlying data. The platform also helps
auto-categorize the data and extracts higher level meaning for deeper
insights.
Today Chronosphere also announced $11 million in Series A funding led by
Greylock with participation from Lux Capital.
"For enterprises, there is a huge unmet need for high dimensionality (HD)
metrics at scale with global reliability and low cost," said Jerry Chen,
partner at Greylock. "Chronosphere enables enterprises to run their
business at a resolution that isn't available from existing open source and
commercial offerings. It's like using a 4K monitor to run your
business: once you use HD you can't go back to VGA."