- Kibana Guide: other versions:
- What is Kibana?
- What’s new in 7.10
- Quick start
- Set up
- Discover
- Dashboard
- Edit dashboards
- Explore dashboard data
- Create custom dashboard actions
- Share dashboards
- Tutorials
- Compare sales over time with Lens
- Create your first visualization with Vega-Lite
- Update Kibana filters from Vega
- Create time series visualizations with Timelion
- Timelion tutorial: Create visualizations with mathematical functions
- Create visualizations with conditional logic and tracking trends using Timelion
- Aggregation reference
- Vega reference
- Canvas
- Maps
- Machine learning
- Graph
- Observability
- APM
- Elastic Security
- Dev Tools
- Stack Monitoring
- Stack Management
- Fleet
- Reporting
- Alerting and Actions
- REST API
- Kibana plugins
- Accessibility
- Breaking Changes
- Release Notes
- Kibana 7.10.2
- Kibana 7.10.1
- Kibana 7.10.0
- Kibana 7.9.3
- Kibana 7.9.2
- Kibana 7.9.1
- Kibana 7.9.0
- Kibana 7.8.1
- Kibana 7.8.0
- Kibana 7.7.1
- Kibana 7.7.0
- Kibana 7.6.2
- Kibana 7.6.1
- Kibana 7.6.0
- Kibana 7.5.2
- Kibana 7.5.1
- Kibana 7.5.0
- Kibana 7.4.2
- Kibana 7.4.1
- Kibana 7.4.0
- Kibana 7.3.2
- Kibana 7.3.1
- Kibana 7.3.0
- Kibana 7.2.1
- Kibana 7.2.0
- Kibana 7.1.1
- Kibana 7.1.0
- Kibana 7.0.1
- Kibana 7.0.0
- Kibana 7.0.0-rc2
- Kibana 7.0.0-rc1
- Kibana 7.0.0-beta1
- Kibana 7.0.0-alpha2
- Kibana 7.0.0-alpha1
- Developer guide
IMPORTANT: No additional bug fixes or documentation updates
will be released for this version. For the latest information, see the
current release documentation.
Get started with the APM app
edit
IMPORTANT: This documentation is no longer updated. Refer to Elastic's version policy and the latest documentation.
Get started with the APM app
editElastic APM captures different types of information from within instrumented applications:
- Spans contain information about the execution of a specific code path. They measure from the start to end of an activity, and they can have a parent/child relationship with other spans.
- Transactions are a special kind of span; they are the first span for a particular service and have extra metadata associated with them. As an example, a transaction could be a request to your server, a batch job, or a custom transaction type.
- Traces link together related transactions to show an end-to-end performance of how a request was served and which services were part of it.
- Errors contain information about the original exception that occurred or about a log created when the exception occurred.
Curated charts and tables display the different types of APM data, which allows you to compare and debug your applications easily.
Want to learn more about the Elastic APM ecosystem? See the APM Overview.
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