Nobl9 today launched a next-generation platform for managing service level objectives (SLOs) in a way that promised to improve overall reliability.
Brian Singer, chief product officer for Nobl9, said in addition to enabling DevOps teams to meet SLOs, the Nobl9 Reliability Center also now provides a single source of truth about the state of reliability in an application environment.
That capability is critical because as DevOps teams add new features to applications, they need insights into how they are impacting the reliability of the software environment, said Singer. No matter how great any new capabilities might be, it won’t matter much if the application environment slows to a crawl or outright crashes, he added.
Nobl9 Reliability Center addresses that need by providing dashboards and reports to assign reliability scores based on the metrics collected from the SLOs defined. Those scores can then be shared with senior business and IT leaders so they can better understand the actual state of an application environment, noted Singer.
In addition, the platform will recommend SLOs and policies and can be used to automate runbooks to improve reliability. The goal is to enable DevOps teams to continuously monitor and manage using SLOs via alerts that are received in a way that is timely enough to act on, added Singer.
That approach enables DevOps teams to make sense of conflicting alerts generated today by multiple monitoring and management tools. A recent survey published by Nobl9 found 72% of respondents are using six or more monitoring and observability tools.
The Nobl9 platform collects SLOs by tracking workflows through more than 50 integrations with various DevOps tools and platforms.
SLOs, of course, are not a new idea. They have been used as a metric to track the performance of IT services for decades.
However, as more microservices-based applications are built and deployed, it’s becoming more challenging to maintain SLOs across applications that have many more dependencies than legacy monolithic applications. Ultimately, each IT team needs to provide some sort of objective benchmark that assesses their overall effectiveness at delivering application services. The Nobl9 platform makes it simpler to track whether SLOs are achieved and maintained.
That’s crucial because as more organizations depend on software to deliver digital services, any disruption is likely to have a direct impact on profit and revenue. As such, the reliability of application environments has become a major concern. The issue, of course, is that many of those application environments have dependencies on legacy platforms that, in some cases, have been running for years. Each feature and application programming interface (API) added over time conspires to adversely impact performance. In an era where IT teams are now trying to manage distinct services rather than individual applications, latency can significantly slow down response times.
Each organization will need to determine for themselves how aggressively they need to manage SLOs. But thanks to the rise of digital business transformation, more senior IT and business leaders are focused on them than ever.