- Elastic Cloud Serverless
- Elasticsearch
- Elastic Observability
- Get started
- Observability overview
- Elastic Observability Serverless billing dimensions
- Create an Observability project
- Quickstart: Monitor hosts with Elastic Agent
- Quickstart: Monitor your Kubernetes cluster with Elastic Agent
- Quickstart: Monitor hosts with OpenTelemetry
- Quickstart: Unified Kubernetes Observability with Elastic Distributions of OpenTelemetry (EDOT)
- Quickstart: Collect data with AWS Firehose
- Get started with dashboards
- Applications and services
- Application performance monitoring (APM)
- Get started with traces and APM
- Learn about data types
- Collect application data
- View and analyze data
- Act on data
- Use APM securely
- Reduce storage
- Managed intake service event API
- Troubleshooting
- Synthetic monitoring
- Get started
- Scripting browser monitors
- Configure lightweight monitors
- Manage monitors
- Work with params and secrets
- Analyze monitor data
- Monitor resources on private networks
- Use the CLI
- Configure a Synthetics project
- Multifactor Authentication for browser monitors
- Configure Synthetics settings
- Grant users access to secured resources
- Manage data retention
- Scale and architect a deployment
- Synthetics Encryption and Security
- Troubleshooting
- Application performance monitoring (APM)
- Infrastructure and hosts
- Logs
- Inventory
- Incident management
- Data set quality
- Observability AI Assistant
- Machine learning
- Reference
- Get started
- Elastic Security
- Elastic Security overview
- Security billing dimensions
- Create a Security project
- Elastic Security requirements
- Elastic Security UI
- AI for Security
- Ingest data
- Configure endpoint protection with Elastic Defend
- Manage Elastic Defend
- Endpoints
- Policies
- Trusted applications
- Event filters
- Host isolation exceptions
- Blocklist
- Optimize Elastic Defend
- Event capture and Elastic Defend
- Endpoint protection rules
- Identify antivirus software on your hosts
- Allowlist Elastic Endpoint in third-party antivirus apps
- Elastic Endpoint self-protection features
- Elastic Endpoint command reference
- Endpoint response actions
- Cloud Security
- Explore your data
- Dashboards
- Detection engine overview
- Rules
- Alerts
- Advanced Entity Analytics
- Investigation tools
- Asset management
- Manage settings
- Troubleshooting
- Manage your project
- Changelog
Errors
editErrors
editErrors are groups of exceptions with a similar exception or log message. The Errors overview provides a high-level view of the exceptions that APM agents catch, or that users manually report with APM agent APIs. Like errors are grouped together to make it easy to quickly see which errors are affecting your services, and to take actions to rectify them.
A service returning a 5xx code from a request handler, controller, etc., will not create an exception that an APM agent can catch, and will therefore not show up in this view.

Selecting an error group ID or error message brings you to the Error group.

The error group details page visualizes the number of error occurrences over time and compared to a recent time range. This allows you to quickly determine if the error rate is changing or remaining constant. You’ll also see the top 5 affected transactions—enabling you to quickly narrow down which transactions are most impacted by the selected error.
Further down, you’ll see an Error sample. The error shown is always the most recent to occur. The sample includes the exception message, culprit, stack trace where the error occurred, and additional contextual information to help debug the issue—all of which can be copied with the click of a button.
In some cases, you might also see a Transaction sample ID. This feature allows you to make a connection between the errors and transactions, by linking you to the specific transaction where the error occurred. This allows you to see the whole trace, including which services the request went through.