logo
AppSignal expands OpenTelemetry support for Go, Java & PHP

AppSignal expands OpenTelemetry support for Go, Java & PHP

Techday NZ3 days ago
AppSignal has introduced expanded native support for OpenTelemetry, now allowing small and midsize businesses to monitor Go, Java, and PHP applications in addition to Ruby, Elixir, and Node.js.
With this update, AppSignal's application performance monitoring (APM) suite now provides automatic instrumentation, error tracking, and performance monitoring across six widely-used languages. The solution aims to offer engineering and development teams the flexibility to use the OpenTelemetry (OTel) standard, enabling complete monitoring and observability without the need for custom integration work or concern over vendor lock-in.
Expanded language support
AppSignal's new features include native support for the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP) covering traces, metrics, and logs. Customers can now benefit from automatic instrumentation and instant support for the Go (Gin, Echo), Java (Spring Boot), and PHP (Laravel, Symfony) frameworks. This is in addition to the existing support for Ruby, Elixir, and Node.js applications.
Key aspects of the expansion include zero-configuration OTel collector integration, unified monitoring for all six languages, dashboards optimised to display runtime-specific metrics, and migration paths from proprietary AppSignal agents to OpenTelemetry instrumentation.
Data portability and integration
OpenTelemetry as an industry standard ensures that telemetry data collected through AppSignal can be used with any compatible platform. The smart sampling features now capture 100 percent of errors, trigger anomaly detection, and manage data volume to balance comprehensiveness and efficiency. The company's platform also transforms OTel data into actionable insights and provides pre-built visualisation dashboards and intelligent alerts. Wes Oudshoorn, Chief Product Officer at AppSignal commented, "Current OpenTelemetry tools typically overwhelm developers by dumping raw metrics, logs, and traces with little context. We took a different approach by adopting OTel rather than building proprietary language integrations. AppSignal translates OTel data into clear insights, showing developers exactly what is broken or slow without requiring them to piece it together themselves." "Now offering first-class support for PHP, Java, and Go through our OTel implementation, AppSignal also accepts any OTel data, enabling full-stack observability for virtually any setup. To simplify onboarding, we provide a hosted collector, so developers do not need to run their own. We are excited to welcome new programming communities to AppSignal and deliver the experience they expect from a modern observability platform."
Simplicity and accessibility for SMBs
AppSignal's updated APM suite is designed with pricing and onboarding simplicity in mind, targeting the requirements of SMB engineering teams. The implementation of a hosted OpenTelemetry collector means developers are not required to maintain their own, further reducing overhead and simplifying adoption.
With native OTel integration, AppSignal customers can access full-stack observability for diverse software environments without needing to commit exclusively to one solution provider. This approach has been designed to support developers across a range of environments, languages, and frameworks.
The company supports development teams in over 2,000 organisations across more than 60 countries. Its monitoring and logging solutions enable teams to automate monitoring workflows, address performance issues proactively, and improve the experience for end users.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AppSignal expands OpenTelemetry support for Go, Java & PHP
AppSignal expands OpenTelemetry support for Go, Java & PHP

Techday NZ

time3 days ago

  • Techday NZ

AppSignal expands OpenTelemetry support for Go, Java & PHP

AppSignal has introduced expanded native support for OpenTelemetry, now allowing small and midsize businesses to monitor Go, Java, and PHP applications in addition to Ruby, Elixir, and With this update, AppSignal's application performance monitoring (APM) suite now provides automatic instrumentation, error tracking, and performance monitoring across six widely-used languages. The solution aims to offer engineering and development teams the flexibility to use the OpenTelemetry (OTel) standard, enabling complete monitoring and observability without the need for custom integration work or concern over vendor lock-in. Expanded language support AppSignal's new features include native support for the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP) covering traces, metrics, and logs. Customers can now benefit from automatic instrumentation and instant support for the Go (Gin, Echo), Java (Spring Boot), and PHP (Laravel, Symfony) frameworks. This is in addition to the existing support for Ruby, Elixir, and applications. Key aspects of the expansion include zero-configuration OTel collector integration, unified monitoring for all six languages, dashboards optimised to display runtime-specific metrics, and migration paths from proprietary AppSignal agents to OpenTelemetry instrumentation. Data portability and integration OpenTelemetry as an industry standard ensures that telemetry data collected through AppSignal can be used with any compatible platform. The smart sampling features now capture 100 percent of errors, trigger anomaly detection, and manage data volume to balance comprehensiveness and efficiency. The company's platform also transforms OTel data into actionable insights and provides pre-built visualisation dashboards and intelligent alerts. Wes Oudshoorn, Chief Product Officer at AppSignal commented, "Current OpenTelemetry tools typically overwhelm developers by dumping raw metrics, logs, and traces with little context. We took a different approach by adopting OTel rather than building proprietary language integrations. AppSignal translates OTel data into clear insights, showing developers exactly what is broken or slow without requiring them to piece it together themselves." "Now offering first-class support for PHP, Java, and Go through our OTel implementation, AppSignal also accepts any OTel data, enabling full-stack observability for virtually any setup. To simplify onboarding, we provide a hosted collector, so developers do not need to run their own. We are excited to welcome new programming communities to AppSignal and deliver the experience they expect from a modern observability platform." Simplicity and accessibility for SMBs AppSignal's updated APM suite is designed with pricing and onboarding simplicity in mind, targeting the requirements of SMB engineering teams. The implementation of a hosted OpenTelemetry collector means developers are not required to maintain their own, further reducing overhead and simplifying adoption. With native OTel integration, AppSignal customers can access full-stack observability for diverse software environments without needing to commit exclusively to one solution provider. This approach has been designed to support developers across a range of environments, languages, and frameworks. The company supports development teams in over 2,000 organisations across more than 60 countries. Its monitoring and logging solutions enable teams to automate monitoring workflows, address performance issues proactively, and improve the experience for end users.

Azul launches Managed Services Programme for Java insights
Azul launches Managed Services Programme for Java insights

Techday NZ

time30-07-2025

  • Techday NZ

Azul launches Managed Services Programme for Java insights

Azul has introduced a Managed Services Provider Programme for its Azul Intelligence Cloud, enabling managed service providers to integrate Java software asset management, vulnerability detection and code inventory capabilities into their service offerings. The new programme allows partners to utilise sublicensing and white-label rights for Azul Intelligence Cloud's Software-as-a-Service tools - JVM Inventory, Azul Vulnerability Detection, and Code Inventory. Through these tools, MSPs can offer detailed analytics and insights on their customers' Java environments, including active Java Virtual Machines from Oracle, Azul, and any OpenJDK distribution. Partners will be equipped to deliver reports and analyses that provide customers with greater visibility into Oracle Java license management, application security vulnerabilities and opportunities to streamline code maintenance. The solution is designed to help organisations reduce non-compliant licensing risks and improve their security posture without needing to deploy or manage new tools themselves. Features of the programme The Managed Services Provider Programme permits channel and services partners to deliver Java license, security and efficiency insights as part of their broader managed service packages. Under the agreement, MSPs create a secure, tenant-specific Intelligence Cloud environment for each end customer. Partners can then manage onboarding, deploy agents, oversee data collection, configure alerts and generate scheduled reports - all under their own brand, with results presented as "Powered by Azul." Through the service, partners can bundle Java license compliance advisories, application modernisation initiatives and managed DevOps services, adapting to varying service delivery and revenue models. The aim is to provide end customers with ongoing assurance of compliance and security with minimal operational involvement on the customer's part. Evan Boyd, Managing Director of Software Licensing Consultants, highlighted the visibility and operational benefits provided by the solution: "Azul Intelligence Cloud lets us see every JVM our customers use and depend on - whether it's Oracle, Azul, or any other OpenJDK distribution - and immediately understand compliance or security gaps. Embedding Intelligence Cloud into our managed service portfolio, particularly the annual Java advisory services we provide, means we can deliver faster, more accurate license reconciliation and real-time compliance for our customers while removing the operational burden." Reducing risk and false positives Azul has outlined a range of capabilities available through the Intelligence Cloud, including continuous runtime detection of all JVMs - covering vendor, version, installation and application details - which helps pinpoint Oracle JVMs subject to commercial licensing. This data can be attributed to the responsible teams and applications to ensure license compliance. Azul Vulnerability Detection makes use of class-level runtime data to reduce security vulnerability false positives by up to 99%, enabling MSPs to focus on actionable security risks. The Code Inventory feature helps identify unused and redundant Java code, allowing partners to offer advice on code base modernisation and maintenance. The detection of obsolete code can result in efficiency improvements and cost savings, and according to Azul, advisory services delivered through the programme could enable developers to reallocate as much as 40% of their time to other business priorities due to reduced code maintenance burdens. Because MSPs manage deployment, data gathering and insight delivery, clients are spared the complexity of operating additional software consoles, and are instead provided with actionable reporting about their Java estate health and risks. Partners and benefits The managed delivery approach is intended to simplify how customers access continuous insights into Java usage, compliance, security incidents and code efficiency - potentially supporting organisations in lowering audit exposure and licensing costs, bolstering security and reclaiming developer productivity. Simon Taylor, Vice President of Global Channel and Alliances at Azul, described the company's intent behind the programme: "Java estates continue to expand across a myriad of deployment environments, and the cost, time and resources required to get the right licensing and security insights for compliance-oriented decision making can be enormous. By giving partners full, managed access to Azul Intelligence Cloud, we're equipping them to deliver turnkey services where they can put clear, actionable reporting and insights into the hands of their customers' decision makers. Ultimately, this mitigates license audit risk and cost, surfaces critical vulnerabilities proactively and reclaims developer capacity for their customers."

Coralogix donates 19,000 lines of code to OpenTelemetry project
Coralogix donates 19,000 lines of code to OpenTelemetry project

Techday NZ

time24-07-2025

  • Techday NZ

Coralogix donates 19,000 lines of code to OpenTelemetry project

Coralogix has donated over 19,000 lines of production-tested code to the OpenTelemetry eBPF Instrumentation (OBI) project. This sizeable contribution is intended to enable full, automatically generated distributed traces for software systems, eliminating the requirement for developers to manually instrument their applications. The donated code allows for trace generation without any changes to application code through an eBPF-powered auto-instrumentation method, aiming to simplify observability for organisations deploying software at scale. Manual instrumentation has long been recognised as a barrier to widespread adoption of OpenTelemetry and distributed tracing. Typically, teams need to modify code, manage language-specific agents, and coordinate across various services, which can slow development, fragment data collection, and increase both cloud costs and engineering overhead. By providing automated tracing through OBI, Coralogix intends to reduce these obstacles, making it easier for organisations to embrace open and vendor-neutral observability solutions. The contributed code from Coralogix features automatic trace stitching and supports a zero-instrumentation deployment method, utilising Kubernetes DaemonSet or Helm. This enables teams to rapidly stream high-quality traces, logs, and metrics from both modern and legacy systems, with minimal performance overhead. Data is output in the OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) format, making it compatible with any OpenTelemetry-compliant backend. Collaboration and deployment This donation was carried out in collaboration with Grafana Labs and the wider OpenTelemetry community, reinforcing an upstream-first approach intended to support broad adoption. This collaborative effort underlines the emphasis on vendor-neutrality and ease of use, supporting fast onboarding for organisations of various sizes and across diverse technological environments. "Instrumentation shouldn't be a developer tax," said Yoni Farin, CTO and Co-founder at Coralogix. "By contributing OBI to the OpenTelemetry community, and building it in the open with Grafana Labs, we're making high-fidelity distributed tracing something that any team can turn on with a simple deployment. One DaemonSet, one Helm command, and your entire stack can light up. That's what open observability should feel like." With OBI now available as an open community project, users can deploy the OBI DaemonSet or Helm chart, integrate with the OpenTelemetry Collector, and route observability data to Coralogix, Grafana Tempo, Jaeger, or any OpenTelemetry-compatible destination. The project encourages active involvement from the community, inviting contributions, bug reports, and general feedback. Broader impact The OpenTelemetry eBPF Instrumentation project has been developed to address a consistent challenge for organisations seeking to implement observability tooling across complex, polyglot environments. The absence of manual instrumentation reduces friction, permitting faster, more scalable monitoring practices. This enables businesses to better manage performance, reliability, and cost, without the burden of additional developer workload. Coralogix's approach, in association with other OpenTelemetry stakeholders, highlights a trend toward standardisation and openness in the observability sector. Events such as this code donation are positioned to help organisations transition legacy and hybrid applications to modern monitoring architectures, supporting operational insight and resilience in production environments. The donated codebase, containing over 19,000 lines, is intended to reinforce open observability at global scale, supporting both immediate and long-term monitoring needs. The OpenTelemetry community has prioritised lowering the barriers to entry for distributed tracing, and contributions from vendors such as Coralogix are integral to those efforts. Organisations and individuals using OpenTelemetry now have another vendor-neutral tool for integrating distributed tracing and observability into their workflows, without manual intervention or proprietary lock-in. The project remains open for further enhancements as community feedback and usage continue to grow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store