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Foglight APM for Real User Experience 5.9.11 - User Guide

Getting started with Foglight APM Monitoring Transactions Viewing Real User Activity from a Geographical Perspective Assessing real user experiences during key sequences Monitoring the performance of web sites and endpoints Searching APM data Replaying sessions, hits, and sequences Visualizing search results Creating Custom Drag-and-Drop Dashboards APM Tile and View Reference

Getting started with Foglight APM

You can start assessing your real user experiences of your monitored web sites and web applications using any of the APM dashboards. Depending on your job function, however, you may be more interested in some results than others. The following table lists common getting started tasks, the dashboard to use, and the people who primarily use the dashboard.

Monitor real user activity on your sites and applications. Investigate alarms and any tiles with a non-normal status.

 

Monitoring Transactions

Find out the locations where your site or application performs well/poorly or experiences high/low volume.

 

Viewing Real User Activity from a Geographical Perspective

Assess the health of your sites and applications as well as all the monitored endpoints (server + port). Investigate alarms and any tiles with a non-normal status.

Monitoring the performance of web sites and endpoints

If a real user reports having issues with your web site, you can search for the session and replay it to see what your user experienced.

 

Searching APM data

Monitor critical paths in your sites and applications.

Assessing real user experiences during key sequences

Monitoring Transactions

A transaction occurs when a user or synthetic robot makes a request to a monitored application. Depending on the components in your installation, Foglight APM can capture and correlate transactional activity at multiple layers including:

With the Transactions dashboard, you can examine transactional data in the following ways:

The tiles on the Transactions dashboard represent different transactional views. Use the table below to quickly determine the type of transaction, then review Investigating real user APM transactions or Investigating application server transactions for an overview of how to drill down for more information.

Foglight APM for Real User Experience transaction.

For more information, see Real User (APM) Performance detail view.

Foglight Experience Monitor/Viewer End User transaction.

For more information, see Real User (FxM) Performance detail view.

Foglight for Java EE Technologies or Foglight for Microsoft .NET transaction.

For more information, see Application Server detail view.

Foglight Transaction Recorder Synthetic User transaction.

For more information, see Synthetic Result detail view.

Sequence.

For more information, see Sequence tile.

Pivot - Browsers.

For more information, see Pivot tiles.

Pivot - Content Types.

For more information, see Pivot tiles.

Pivot - Endpoints.

For more information, see Pivot tiles.

Pivot - Locations.

For more information, see Pivot tiles.

Pivot - OSes.

For more information, see Pivot tiles.

For example, in the following image, the Physician group of tiles represents a real user perspective with pivot data. The performance summary on each tile includes an alarm state overview and other key metrics. For a full description of the metrics displayed on each type of tile, see APM Tile and View Reference.

For more information, see the following topics:

Investigating real user APM transactions

The Transactions dashboard enables you to visualize end user data without the need to create services in Foglight. Use this dashboard to quickly identify if any transactions are having issues, to determine the magnitude of impact on the user population, and to view preliminary information that can aid in troubleshooting, including geographic discrepancies and whether the performance problems are in the back-end architecture, or the client-side browser or network.

2
Click the down arrow in the Show transactions in box and select the transaction group you want to view from the list.
3
Locate a transaction group that is experiencing errors. For example, users in the Physician transaction group are experiencing poor performance. The health status icon indicates Warning status . The transaction has not yet experienced a complete failure, but some component needs attention.
TIP: The detail view, and the tabs available, depend on the type of transaction selected. For example, drilling down on a Real User (APM) tile opens a performance detail view (as shown), while drilling down on a pivot result opens a summary view with tiles for each type of pivot you have defined (see Pivot Breakdown detail view for details).
5
Click the Pages tab. Here you can see that the Warning status has been triggered by the Service Level Attainment for Back End dropping below an acceptable threshold.
6
Click Find Related Hits to investigate further.
The dark grey arrows (Paths in the current timeslice) indicate the path taken by at least one request in the current timeslice (for example, between 3:20 and 3:25pm).
The light grey arrows (Paths in selected time range) indicate the path taken by at least one request in the time range selected with the zonar (for example, the last four hours).
Click Explore Breakdowns to open the Response Time Breakdown Explorer. For more information, see Examining Response Times.
Click Explore Errors to open the Error Breakdown Explorer. For more information, see Examining Error Breakdowns.

For more information about the tiles, detail views, and metrics, see APM Tile and View Reference.

Investigating application server transactions

The Transactions dashboard allows you to visualize application-specific transaction data (that is, Java EE or .NET® transactions) with or without end user data. Use this dashboard to quickly identify if any transactions are having issues, and to view preliminary information that can aid in troubleshooting, including geographic discrepancies and whether the performance problems are in the back-end architecture, or the client-side browser or network.

In order to populate the Transactions dashboard or the SOC Transactions tab with data from Foglight for Java EE Technologies or Foglight for Microsoft .NET (version 5.9.1 or later), ensure that you used the appropriate procedures in Configuring request breakdowns.

2
Click the down arrow in the Show transactions in box and select the transaction group you want to view from the list.
In this example, MedRec1Server1 is causing a bottleneck. It is performing poorly, as indicated by the warning icon ().
4
Click the name of the transaction (/physician-web/physician (phys...)) in the title bar of the tile to drill down for more information.
The dark grey arrows (Paths in the current timeslice) indicate the path taken by at least one request in the current timeslice (that is, the most recent sample period reported by the agent).
The light grey arrows (Paths in current time range) indicate the path taken by at least one request in the time range selected with the zonar (for example, the last four hours).
Click Explore Breakdowns to open the Response Time Breakdown Explorer. For more information, see Examining Response Times.
Click Explore Errors to open the Error Breakdown Explorer. For more information, see Examining Error Breakdowns.
Click the Application Infrastructure tab to investigate the application components. This tab displays a tile for each component. In this example, there is a host (medrecapp1.example.domain) and an application server (MedRec1Server1).
For example, click medrecapp1.example.domain to investigate the host performance in the Host detail view. Or click MedRec1Server1 to investigate the requests in the Application Server detail view.

For more information about the tiles, detail views, and metrics, see APM Tile and View Reference.

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