To integrate Access Point Hardware and Arista Networks with your monitoring system, please reach out to MetricFire. Book a demo with the MetricFire team to discuss integrating Access Point Hardware and Arista Networks and how that can support your monitoring system.
An Access Point (AP) can involve either a wired or wireless connection, which is why it is commonly referred to as a Wireless Access Point (WAP). It is a networking hardware device that allows other devices to connect to a wired network via Wi-Fi or wired connection.
One option for an AP is as a standalone device. In this case, the AP may have a wired connection to a router which then forwards data packets between computer networks.
In a wireless router, the AP can be an integral component of the router itself. It can be common for an AP that also acts as a switch, DHCP server, router and firewall. This is because it may also provide ports which are used to increase the network’s size, firewall capabilities and a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) service.
Arista Networks is an American computer networking company. Founded in 2004, they are now based in California, US. Arista provides a range of network hardware products, for example, multilayer network switches to deliver software-defined networking (SDN) solutions.
These are designed for large datacenter, high-performance computing, cloud computing, and high-frequency trading environments. They also provide a linux-based operating system for all their products named Extensible Operating System (EOS). Being a major competitor in the networking industry, Arista is considered among the best in this market.
To integrate Access Point Hardware and Arista Networks with your monitoring system, sign up for a free trial with MetricFire. Talk with the MetricFire team about how to integrate Access Point Hardware and Arista Networks and get Access Point Hardware and Arista Networks interacting with your MetricFire dashboards directly.
MetricFire is a full-scale platform that provides infrastructure, system, and application monitoring using a suite of open-source monitoring tools. We enable you to use Hosted Graphite and aesthetic custom dashboards to visualize your metrics so you can understand what is happening.
MetricFire offers users a complete ecosystem of end-to-end infrastructure monitoring, comprised of popular open-source monitoring software services: Graphite and popular dashboards. Plugins for many other open-source projects are preconfigured, such as StatsD, collectd, and Kubernetes. You get all these within a hosted environment as a single product. Not only does MetricFire fit well into the infrastructure monitoring use-case, such as network monitoring and server monitoring, but we also do application monitoring and business intelligence.
Through this hosted environment, MetricFire boosts the unique features of open-source projects to give you more functionality than the original products. Below are some of the MetricFire features at a glance:
Cloud Monitoring
Hosted Graphite
Dashboards
The key thing to remember is that Hosted Graphite by MetricFire is more than just Graphite. Our Hosted Graphite product actually adds data dimensionality and better data storage.
The benefits of MetricFire are:
Simple, low-cost pricing
A structured pricing model based on unique time series metrics allows you to work within your budget. The predictability and transparent pricing allow you to keep your costs in check and plan for the future. 1 metric is 1 metric.
Easy-to-use dashboards
Easily share your dashboards with clients for free.
Responsive alerting
Alert notification integrations PagerDuty, Slack, email, and webhooks.
Freedom of customization
Custom metrics through your code.
Fantastic customer support
Highly available support is provided by engineers for engineers to get you set up quickly.
Enterprise-ready
Dedicated clusters for users that need their own environment.
This article discusses how one can use Osquery to detect anomalies in infrastructure. Continue Reading
This article discusses how one can use Osquery to detect anomalies in infrastructure. Continue Reading