ServiceNow today announced it has agreed to acquire Era Software as part of an effort to add support for log data to the Lightstep observability platform the company acquired last year.
Ben Sigelman, general manager for the Lightstep business unit at ServiceNow, said rather than reinventing the same log management capability that Era Software already has, it makes more sense to integrate that capability with the Lightstep platform that collects metrics and traces.
The integration of those two platforms will then make it possible to unify observability rather than requiring DevOps teams to navigate two separate silos, he added.
As observability continues to evolve and mature, the most immediate goal is to make it simpler to navigate the alert storm that inevitably ensues any time there is a disruption, said Sigelman. The alert storms generally occur after there has been a change made, but unraveling how exactly that change impacted an IT environment is challenging, he noted.
An observability platform reduces the time and effort necessary to achieve that goal by surfacing a set of statistics that guide DevOps teams through that process, added Sigelman. The challenge, of course, has always been finding an efficient means of storing all the telemetry data that’s generated. In fact, as organizations start to deploy microservices-based cloud-native applications, many of them are starting to see the amount of telemetry data increase exponentially.
Era Software uses an object storage system to index and analyze log data collected from cloud applications, Kubernetes and IT infrastructure platforms. The company has also made available in beta an Era Streams tool that reduces the volume of observability data collected without sacrificing fidelity by dynamically reconfiguring data pipelines in real-time.
Once the acquisition is completed, log data analytics will then be shared with the IT service management (ITSM) tools that ServiceNow provides alongside the Lightstep observability platform. The goal is to make it easier to correlate those IT events with their potential impact on the business, said Sigelman.
Era Software CEO Todd Persen said the long-term 10-year goal is to get to the point where issues are both automatically detected and remediated. In the meantime, the amount of context switching that IT teams encounter can be sharply reduced via a unified observability platform.
There is, of course, no shortage of unified observability platforms these days. DevOps teams have also been relying on legacy monitoring tools that track specific metrics for years. The issue is that those legacy monitoring tools only track a narrow range of pre-determined metrics. As IT environments become more complex, the need to launch more open-ended queries to determine the root cause of IT disruption has become more pronounced.
It may be some time before observability platforms are widely adopted, but the need for them is generally apparent to anyone managing a modern IT environment. Less clear is the degree to which observability platforms will remove the need for legacy monitoring tools; however, right now the focus should be on gaining as much visibility and transparency as possible into what are still opaque IT environments.