Modern telemetry is as much about design as it is about data. This book explains how to build observability systems that stay portable, consistent, and easy to operate across metrics, logs, and traces. It connects the theory of telemetry models with the practical realities of instrumentation, transport, collection, enrichment, and backend validation.
Written around OpenTelemetry, semantic conventions, OTLP, and Collector pipelines, the book gives a structured path from application code to vendor neutral observability infrastructure. It shows how distributed context, resource identity, and signal correlation work together so teams can investigate incidents, compare services, and keep telemetry meaningful as systems grow.
Rather than treating observability as a stack of disconnected tools, it presents a full operational picture. The chapters move from fundamentals to implementation, then to deployment patterns and runbooks. That makes it useful for developers, platform engineers, SREs, and architects who need telemetry that is both portable and production ready.
By the end, readers will have a clear reference for building telemetry systems that reduce vendor lock in, improve signal quality, and support reliable analysis at scale.
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Seller: California Books, Miami, FL, U.S.A.
Condition: New. Print on Demand. Seller Inventory # I-9798199208963