+1 This looks awesome! Looks like grafana is apache licensed, so that
shouldn't be a problem with integrating this.

-Dan

On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 3:42 AM, Christian Tzolov <ctzo...@pivotal.io> wrote:
> I've been experimenting with Geode-to-Grafana integration options. The
> geode-dashboard (https://github.com/tzolov/geode-dashboard) project uses
> Grafana dashboards for querying, visualizing and analysing Apache Geode
> (GemFire) historical and real-time metrics and statistics.
>
> An important goal was to provides an unified stack that can analyze BOTH the
> real-time (JMX metrics) and the historical (archive files) Geode
> distributed-system statistics.
>
> The github documentation and the blogs below should explain the approach:
> https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/visualize-analyse-apache-geode-gemfire-real-time-metrics-tzolov
> http://blog.tzolov.net/2017/01/visualize-and-analyse-apache-geode.html?view=sidebar
>
> At the moment the tool uses InfluxDB as a time-series DB.But i've been
> considering adding support for Ambari Metrics Collector System as an
> alternative time-series DB. Later is supported by Grafana
> (https://grafana.net/plugins/praj-ams-datasource) and Ambari in-turn
> integrates with Grafana (http://bit.ly/2j34aIX). So if we add to the mix the
> Geode Ambari service (http://bit.ly/2jd0MbS) It will make a decent Hadoop
> friendly stack for Geode/Gemfire.
>
> Another even more interesting angle is to make Geode itself a Grafana
> compliant datasource (http://docs.grafana.org/plugins/datasources,
> https://grafana.net/plugins). So
>
> Do you think it would be worth bringing part of this work under Geode
> project umbrella?
>
> Cheers,
> Christian
>
> P.S. Note that this project focus on Geode metrics only but similar approach
> can be used to explore business time-series.
>

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