Sysdig announced the
availability of Sysdig Advisor, a Kubernetes troubleshooting feature
that consolidates and prioritizes relevant performance details in Sysdig Monitor.
By providing a single view of performance and event information, Sysdig
Advisor enables operations, developers, and site reliability
engineering (SRE) teams to troubleshoot issues faster while decreasing
the number of tools needed.
The
complexity of Kubernetes - with countless components and variables -
makes it extremely difficult to debug problems and prioritize actions.
Knowing how to debug, where to begin, or what to look for can be a
challenge. Operations teams and SREs are often forced to pull up the
command line interface and run tools like kubectl to inspect the
situation and search for the root cause. With so many moving parts in
Kubernetes-based applications, remediation can take hours or more,
decreasing availability and impacting the end-user experience.
With
a click of a button, Sysdig Advisor presents all relevant capacity,
event, alerts, and troubleshooting information. Since this information
is presented in the context of Kubernetes objects, users can quickly
drill down when looking for the source of a performance problem. Sysdig
Advisor displays a prioritized list of issues and related live logs to
surface the biggest problem areas and accelerate time to resolution.
"When
we get an alert for a problem in our Kubernetes environment,
troubleshooting can involve multiple tools and teams which increases our
MTTR. Having this information at our fingertips in Sysdig Advisor will
help us understand and resolve these problems more quickly," said Jeff
Henson, DevOps Engineer, Experian Health, Inc.
Key Benefits of Sysdig Advisor
- Accelerates troubleshooting by up to 10x: Sysdig
Advisor produces a prioritized list of issues, giving administrators
visibility into what problems to address first. When compared to
traditional methodologies, teams can resolve Kubernetes issues by up to
10x faster with Sysdig Advisor by reducing the time it takes to find
critical information, including capacity, utilization, event, and alert
data for clusters, namespaces, workloads, and pods.
- Reduces troubleshooting resource count: Sysdig
Advisor reduces the dependence on a side-by-side comparison of blogs,
dashboards, logs, and command line output needed to troubleshoot
Kubernetes environments. The simple user interface surfaces all the
important details in a single unified tool with a curated, actionable
set of steps for remediation.
- Increases troubleshooting access without increasing security risk: Security
teams are often concerned about providing broad access to command-line
tools, such as kubectl. Sysdig Advisor provides quick access to the same
level of information to users across the organization, without being
overly permissive.
"Kubernetes
is complex, with countless components and variables that make it
difficult to understand how, why, and when something goes wrong. Any SRE
knows the pain of wading through multiple tools and getting multiple
teams involved when troubleshooting an alert," said Loris Degioanni,
founder and CTO at Sysdig. "Now with Sysdig Advisor, they can
efficiently debug issues and get back to work on deploying new
releases."
The Sysdig Approach
Sysdig
is driving the standard for unified cloud and container security so
DevOps and security teams can confidently secure containers, Kubernetes,
and cloud services. Sysdig offers two products, Sysdig Secure and
Sysdig Monitor, and the Sysdig platform architecture underpins both
products. Sysdig Monitor provides cloud and Kubernetes monitoring that
is fully open source Prometheus compatible. With Sysdig Secure, teams
find and prioritize software vulnerabilities, detect and respond to
threats, and manage cloud configurations, permissions, and compliance.
Sysdig provides a single view of risk from source to run, with no blind
spots, no guesswork, no black boxes.
Availability
Sysdig
Advisor is available now to Sysdig Monitor users at no additional cost.
Additional troubleshooting features will be introduced over the coming
weeks.