Meet Horizon UI · 7/17: The Log Explorer
Part 7 of the Meet Horizon UI series: two log surfaces — a stored, indexed, trace-correlated log stream with a level histogram, and an on-demand live tail of a Kubernetes pod's container logs.
Part 7 of the Meet Horizon UI series: two log surfaces — a stored, indexed, trace-correlated log stream with a level histogram, and an on-demand live tail of a Kubernetes pod's container logs.
Part 5 of the Meet Horizon UI series: a single WebGL view of your whole deployment — every layer's services as cubes stacked on tiers, with live traffic, alarm beacons, and the calls between them.
Part 6 of the Meet Horizon UI series: a per-layer distributed-trace explorer — staged conditions, a duration-distribution chart you can box-select, three ways to read one trace, and a Zipkin tab beside the native one.
Introducing Apache SkyWalking Horizon UI — the next-generation web UI. A greenfield rewrite on the same OAP backend that you can observe, operate, govern, and customize, starting with a sidebar that mirrors your whole estate.
Part 2 of the Horizon UI series: how its dashboards are built from MQE expressions, hide the widgets that don't apply to the entity in front of you (skipping their queries on the server), and render OK instead of 1 and 45.1k instead of 4.51e4.
Part 3 of the Meet Horizon UI series: one template-driven topology engine that repaints for every layer, a filter to cut the noise, drill-down from a call into instances, the endpoint-dependency graph, and the cross-layer Smartscape overlay.
Part 4 of the Meet Horizon UI series: the Deployment tab turns the topology map inward to show one clustered service's own instances, and BanyanDB is modeled as the role- and tier-aware cluster it is — SkyWalking finally watching its own database the way it watches everything else.
Set up full-stack observability for your AI/LLM traffic using Envoy AI Gateway, SkyWalking OAP 10.4.0, and BanyanDB 0.10.0.
A case study in how AI changed the economics of architecture in a mature project by making better designs cheaper to prototype, validate, and refine.
A technical deep-dive into SkyWalking GraalVM Distro — how we turned a mature, reflection-heavy Java observability backend into a native binary with a repeatable migration pipeline.
Introduce what's new in SkyWalking 10, including Service Hierarchy, Kubernetes Network Monitoring by eBPF, BanyanDB, and more.
This blog will guide you to use SkyWalking for distributed tracing with Istio.