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Web API Development with ASP.NET Core 8

You're reading from  Web API Development with ASP.NET Core 8

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610954
Pages 804 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Xiaodi Yan Xiaodi Yan
Profile icon Xiaodi Yan

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Web APIs 2. Chapter 2: Getting Started with ASP.NET Core Web APIs 3. Chapter 3: ASP.NET Core Fundamentals (Part 1) 4. Chapter 4: ASP.NET Core Fundamentals (Part 2) 5. Chapter 5: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 1: Entity Framework Core Fundamentals) 6. Chapter 6: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 2 – Entity Relationships) 7. Chapter 7: Data Access in ASP.NET Core (Part 3: Tips) 8. Chapter 8: Security and Identity in ASP.NET Core 9. Chapter 9: Testing in ASP.NET Core (Part 1 – Unit Testing) 10. Chapter 10: Testing in ASP.NET Core (Part 2 – Integration Testing) 11. Chapter 11: Getting Started with gRPC 12. Chapter 12: Getting Started with GraphQL 13. Chapter 13: Getting Started with SignalR 14. Chapter 14: CI/CD for ASP.NET Core Using Azure Pipelines and GitHub Actions 15. Chapter 15: ASP.NET Core Web API Common Practices 16. Chapter 16: Error Handling, Monitoring, and Observability 17. Chapter 17: Cloud-Native Patterns 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Monitoring and observability

In the real world, building an application is just the first step. We also need to monitor and observe how the application is performing. This is where the concept of observability comes in. In this section, we will discuss observability and how to use OpenTelemetry to monitor and observe applications.

What is observability?

In Chapter 4, we introduced logging in ASP.NET Core web API applications. We learned how to use the built-in logging framework to log messages to different logging providers. Observability is a more comprehensive concept than logging. Besides logging, observability allows us to gain a deeper understanding of how the application is performing. For instance, we can determine how many requests are processed in a given hour, what the request latency is, and how requests are handled by multiple services in a microservice architecture. All of these are part of observability.

In general, observability has three pillars:

  • Logs...
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