You’re an operations engineer relying on a network of SNMP-enabled devices. Your team already uses New Relic’s features for monitoring software and infrastructure, but it’s time to monitor your network devices as well.
In this track, you use Kentik’s ktranslate library to automatically discover your network devices, gather data, and send that data to New Relic to correlate network performance with infrastructure, applications, and digital experiences. Then you use New Relic to monitor the health of your network.
Objectives
- Poll SNMP data from network devices and send it to New Relic
- Sample network flow data and send it to New Relic
- Create a New Relic dashboard for monitoring your network devices
- Create a New Relic workload to logically group your devices and set up anomaly detection
- Use your new data to understand behaviors within your network
Requirements
- A free New Relic account
- A full platform user or a core user with the Nerdpack modify user privilege
Important
This track utilizes an ephemeral virtual machine. As a result, you need to finish the entire track in one sitting or you'll lose your progress when time expires.
Lab
Homework
Well done! Now that you've gotten your feet wet using ktranslate and New Relic to monitor your network devices, here are some things you can do on your own as you prepare to monitor your real-life network:
- Read "Get started with network monitoring" to learn how to get the most of New Relic's network monitoring
- Visit the ktranslate GitHub repository to learn how ktranslate works
- Read "What is an entity?" to learn more about New Relic entities and how to synthesize your own. This will help you get more mileage from your Kentik default entities.