The PerfMon Blog

July 6, 2009

Evolution of the Monitoring Client

Filed under: Performance Monitoring — Tags: , — Tyler Fullerton @ 10:55 am

I’ve been exposed to the monitoring industry for almost 5 years now.  In that time the industry has actually made some pretty major changes to how monitoring is performed.  The ultimate goal of monitoring is to provide the most accurate availability and performance metrics.  For now availability metrics are only made more accurate by monitoring more frequently.  Frequency of monitoring is not a major hurdle and availability really only has one consistent definition (either you’re up or you’re down) so the collection/reporting of availability isn’t very dynamic and will not be subject to a series of evolutionary steps (though you could argue that availability could be different depending on the browser type you use – an argument I make below).  However, performance metrics will evolve as the industry strives to provide more accurate performance metrics and also, provide those metrics for any number of browsers currently on the market.  Here’s the evolution so far:

  1. Internal web monitoring – Provides monitoring of systems applications, and network connections.  Because there are no major players out there the resources do not exist to allow for monitoring from an end users perspective.  Performance monitoring is a very subjective process where an end user has to describe how the perceive the performance of a website/application.
  2. External web monitoring – Starts to provide information about the performance of a website/application but it is rudimentary and usually the performance data is based off of a program that only hopes to emulate the performance of a browser against the site.  No actual browser is used for monitoring.
  3. External RIA monitoring – Applications are becoming more dynamic and rely on the capabilities of the browser to display the page more like a desktop application.  This requires that external monitoring take these pieces of behavior into account when considering the performance of a web application.

That’s where we’re at right now.  I think a logical next step would be:

  • Generic External RIA monitoring – This would be monitoring that would consider any (and every) platform possible for viewing the web application.  For simplicity just assume that it’s every browser on the market (Chrome, Safari, IE6, IE7, IEX, Firefox 2, etc.).

The browsers mentioned seem to be diverging and are trying to grab more market share by adding new functionality to their offerings.  So how does having performance data based on Chrome help you determine what your performance would be in IE7?    For the time being there really is no need for such distinctions…the important factor is that you have an actual browser that is generating your performance metrics.  Because of price and implementation I would suspect that monitoring solutions are going to become more decentralized.  Also, with all this new functionality there is going to be an increase in the different methods that are used for delivering functionality.

No Comments Yet »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.