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For example, google Analytics would require me to insert a script in my layout. However, my app has no views and is only serving an API, without an interface. Are there any services to track traffic of a JSON API ? I intend to host on heroku.
Most analytics services offer some sort of server-to-server rather than client reporting of events. You should get some more consistency in data reported (e.g. you're not blocked by ad blockers or slow connections failing to load client side libraries) but also lose visibility into some events (user tracking depends on your authentication/cookie policy, time on page may be impossible to measure).
For a Rails app I'd look at https://segment.com/docs/sources/server/ruby/ which in my experience has done a good job of making it easy to report events and allows you to then forward them to whatever analytics service works best for your product.
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I'm looking for a flexible monitoring tool, which should be able to:
Monitor public web endpoint and:
Validate REST API response body.
Validate response codes.
Monitor Azure resources: Cloud Services, Web Apps, SQL servers, VMs etc (Optional)
Support of custom monitoring scripts. For example, there is a PowerShell script which performs some checks and returns response if
service healthy or not.
Provide availability/performance metrics based on monitoring statistics.
Raise alerts and send notifications
Tool should have a modern UI and support of multiple monitoring projects, each project should have own isolated settings.
Currently we are using MS application SCOM (System Center Operations Manager), but it's a very old tool and has a poor documentation and UI. But a very flexible and can monitor a lot of thing out of the box.
Basically, is there something better and modern than SCOM?
We are using HP-BSM, though expensive, it's very flexible and with many capabilities. It has every functionality that you wrote in your question.
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I made an expensive mistake of building an Rails application using the Pusher service, because we wanted to work around the complexities of HTTP push. We are sending less than 500 events per day (without contents), but as we have to make the complete site HTTPS-only, we would have to go with a 50USD per month plan.
Are there any alternatives to Pusher with a more reasonable, pay-as-you go pricing model?
There's a whole host of self hosted realtime web technologies available including Slanger and poxa that allow Pusher's client and server libraries to be used. Slanger and Poxa are open source server implementations of the Pusher protocol. Slanger is written in Ruby and Poxa in Elixir.
Of course, Pusher removes the hassle of installation and maintenance, has a whole host of server and client libraries, massively reduces resource usage (since you're outsourcing the realtime communications layer), has a great community of users, and of course handles scaling problems
PieSocket works great and provides more free quota than Pusher.
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I know this is not a technical question but I don't know where to ask elsewhere.
I use the very cool toolkit called trigger.io to develop apps for both android and ios. Now I would like to use something like a database to display data in my app.
Firstly I found a realtime backend called firebase: http://www.firebase.com/
Nice but it takes a while until one gets access to it since it is still in beta.
Then I found a cloud service called Kinvey: http://www.kinvey.com/ Also interesting, but it is free as long as only 200 users download the app.
So do you know any alternatives to store data and use it for my app?
That would be very helpful,
thanks enne
Sure. Parse is an easy option. Basic plan to get start is $0 a month.
Also, there is nothing stopping you from bundling (or download and saving and caching) a json file for use in your trigger.io app.
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As I understand, Store Kit API will handle storage and retrieval of history related to "Non-Consumables" products, while for "Consumables" and "Subscriptions" you have to have your own server/backend. What are the best hosted existing solutions for that kind of server (backend)? Inexpensive (or free? :-) and reliable?
Thanks!
There is not any service (that I know of) that includes the needed functionality by default. There is more here than just hosting the files. You need to use the included functionality to verify the receipt that is sent from the StoreKit API to your server (to ensure that it is a valid receipt):
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/NetworkingInternet/Conceptual/StoreKitGuide/VerifyingStoreReceipts/VerifyingStoreReceipts.html
So you would need to have a web application that managed this process as well as hosting the actual consumable content (in a way that made it inaccessible from the outside). You might want to look at a Java application hosted on a solution like Elastic Beanstalk with a connection to a protected Amazon S3 account.
If this is too complex, you could also create a simple PHP application that could be run from most any web server that could also do this functionality and manage access to the S3 account's files.
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There has been some talk of Website performance monitoring tools and services on stackoverflow, however, they seem fairly expensive for what they actually do. Are there any good opensource libraries for automating checking/monitoring the availability of a website?
If you just want to know if your server is serving out content or not, take a look at Montastic. I use it, and am pleased. Plus its free!
It will ping your site periodically, and if it doesn't get a 200 status, it lets you know.
Intelligent website monitoring by simulating a human user is done with Sahi + OMD.
http://www.nagios-wiki.de/_media/workshop/2012/sahi2omd_simon_meggle_monitoring_workshop_2012.pdf
I have always used Zabbix especially for critical web sites. It uses MySql for the database and it has a PHP frontend. Of course it is open source and it is very flexible. It uses servers to stick data in the database and agents collect the data and send it to the servers. It is very scalable with this respect. I cannot recommend this software enough. I have all kinds of monitoring going on, not just web servers.
Check out mon.itor.us as well.