Do It Yourself: Programmable Metrics using OpenTelemetry
06-14, 14:00–14:40 (Europe/Berlin), Palais Atelier

Using metrics to measure how good or bad things are going is a proven way to ensure a software-based system is going in the right direction. Most metrics are created and monitored automatically by agent technologies installed in our infrastructure, making us hostages of the set of metrics that these agents are programmed to address. But what if you need to handle your own set of metrics?

This is a question that often drives developers mad because they fear spending development cycles building something that will end up being locked into a particular monitoring/observability vendor. But OpenTelemetry — a CNCF observability framework that provides a vendor-neutral approach to tackle metrics, logging, and tracing needs, can change everything.

This talk will explain how the OpenTelemetry framework allows the creation of custom metrics in a standard, scalable, and reusable way. It will provide an example in Java of a set of metrics that are continuously updated based on the execution of the code and how to hook that data with a compatible observability backend.


Get your ticket now!

Register for Berlin Buzzwords in our ticket shop! We also have online tickets and reduced tickets for students available and you can find more information about our Diversity Ticket Initiative here!

Ricardo is Senior Developer Advocate at AWS, working in the developer relations team for North America. With +20 years of experience, he may have learned a thing or two about distributed systems, fast data analytics, software architecture, databases, and observability. Before joining AWS, he worked for software vendors like Elastic, Confluent, and Oracle. Ricardo is known for his natural ability to explain complex topics. He craftily breaks them down into bite-sized pieces until anyone can understand.

While not working, he loves barbecuing in his backyard with his family and friends, where he finally gets the chance to talk about anything unrelated to computers. He currently lives in North Carolina, USA, with his wife and son. Follow Ricardo on Twitter: @riferrei.