Datadog is a monitoring and analytics platform for cloud-scale application infrastructure. Combining metrics from servers, databases, and applications, Datadog delivers sophisticated, actionable alerts, and provides real-time visibility of your entire infrastructure. Datadog includes 100+ vendor-supported, prebuilt integrations and monitors hundreds of thousands of hosts.
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You'll probably want PostgreSQL and Storage Accounts as well - be VERY careful provisioning that; if you play with the Azure Cost Calculator you'll see it's pretty easy to make a PostgreSQL instance that's ~$80 and also one that's ~$8. Similarly, there are features on e,g. Storage Accounts (namely SFTP access) that you REALLY don't want to turn on. (SFTP access on a storage acct is like $250 USD a month!). Source: 12 months ago
I agree with you, pricing in a cloud and pay-per-use world can be challenging. Now as you mentioned the pricing calculator is a great starting point: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/calculator/. Source: 12 months ago
What type of resources and consumption plans are you using? The lowest I can find on the Azure Pricing Calculator is about $14/mo for just an App Service and a SQL Database. Source: about 1 year ago
Here is a pricing calculator so you can see monthly pricing: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/calculator/. Source: about 1 year ago
Use the pricing calculator to estimate the cost you will pay. Source: about 1 year ago
Ideally, if we had access to the underlying infrastructure, we could probably install the Datadog Agent and configure it to send our logs directly to Datadog, or even use AWS Lambda functions or Azure Event Hub + Azure Functions in case we were facing some specific cloud scenarios. - Source: dev.to / 9 months ago
Currently supported : Datadog, Jenkins, DNS, HTTP. Source: over 1 year ago
Datadog is a powerful monitoring and security platform that gives you visibility into end-to-end traces, application metrics, logs, and infrastructure. While Datadog has great documentation on their Kubernetes integration, we've observed that there's some missed nuance that leads to common pitfalls. - Source: dev.to / almost 3 years ago
.. Is to see you email address being silently distributed to every single company that I've watched a talk from. And now suddenly get several promotional spam emails per day from some 4-5 different domains like instana.com, datadoghq.com, snyk.io, cockroachlabs.com (some of them send even multiple emails per day!). Source: about 3 years ago
We're commonly doing this with logging, using services such as Loggly or DataDog. We're using managed databases, be it on AWS, Heroku or database-vendor-specific solutions. We're storing binaries on S3. Externalising user authentication and authorization might be a good candidate as well. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
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