- Kibana Guide: other versions:
- What is Kibana?
- What’s new in 7.8
- Get started
- Set up Kibana
- Discover
- Dashboard
- Canvas
- Maps
- Machine learning
- Graph
- Visualize
- Logs
- Metrics
- APM
- Uptime
- SIEM
- Dev Tools
- Stack Monitoring
- Management
- Advanced Settings
- Alerts and Actions
- Beats Central Management
- Cross-Cluster Replication
- Index Lifecycle Policies
- Index Management
- Ingest Node Pipelines
- Index patterns and fields
- License Management
- Numeral Formatting
- Remote Clusters
- Rollup Jobs
- Saved Objects
- Security
- Snapshot and Restore
- Spaces
- Upgrade Assistant
- Watcher
- Ingest Manager
- Reporting
- Alerting and Actions
- REST API
- Kibana plugins
- Accessibility
- Limitations
- Breaking Changes
- Release Notes
- Kibana 7.8.1
- Kibana 7.8.0
- Kibana 7.7.1
- Kibana 7.7.0
- Kibana 7.6.2
- Kibana 7.6.1
- Kibana 7.6.0
- Kibana 7.5.2
- Kibana 7.5.1
- Kibana 7.5.0
- Kibana 7.4.2
- Kibana 7.4.1
- Kibana 7.4.0
- Kibana 7.3.2
- Kibana 7.3.1
- Kibana 7.3.0
- Kibana 7.2.1
- Kibana 7.2.0
- Kibana 7.1.1
- Kibana 7.1.0
- Kibana 7.0.1
- Kibana 7.0.0
- Kibana 7.0.0-rc2
- Kibana 7.0.0-rc1
- Kibana 7.0.0-beta1
- Kibana 7.0.0-alpha2
- Kibana 7.0.0-alpha1
- Developer guide
APM
editAPM
editThe APM app in Kibana is provided with the basic license. It allows you to monitor your software services and applications in real-time; visualize detailed performance information on your services, identify and analyze errors, and monitor host-level and agent-specific metrics like JVM and Go runtime metrics.
Visualizing application bottlenecks
editHaving access to application-level insights with just a few clicks can drastically decrease the time you spend debugging errors, slow response times, and crashes.
For example, you can see information about response times, requests per minute, and status codes per endpoint. You can even dive into a specific request sample and get a complete waterfall view of what your application is spending its time on. You might see that your bottlenecks are in database queries, cache calls, or external requests. For each incoming request and each application error, you can also see contextual information such as the request header, user information, system values, or custom data that you manually attached to the request.
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