We use Datadog right now at work. https://www.datadoghq.com/ Works really
well. We pump logs from applications into the windows event log. Datadog
will scrape that and aggregate into central location along with information
like CPU, Memory etc etc. Can take integrations from heaps of different
applications. We use it to instrument all our services, web applications,
rabbit queues, redis, sqlserver etc... Can fully reccomend.

At previous job we used graylog in-house and it was also fantastic. But it
did mean you needed to maintain your own infrastructure. I know another
team at current work used a local ELK (elastic search, logstash, kibana)
kitout and it's working great for them.

On 11 May 2017 at 12:14, William Luu <will....@gmail.com> wrote:

> Another one I've seen (but not used) is Exceptionless for log viewing.
> https://exceptionless.com/
>
>
>
>
> On 11 May 2017 at 09:56, Rob Andrew <rand...@voyageconnect.com> wrote:
>
>> I have been looking into using NLog + Logentries as a means to expose and
>> view what is occurring within our systems. Open to what other people are
>> using.
>>
>>
>>
>> Rob
>>
>>
>>
>> *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-bounces@ozdot
>> net.com] *On Behalf Of *William Luu
>> *Sent:* Thursday, 11 May 2017 9:50 AM
>> *To:* ozDotNet <ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>
>> *Subject:* Re: log server [OT]
>>
>>
>>
>> Have you considered Serilog and Seq?
>>
>>
>>
>> Serilog - https://serilog.net/
>>
>> Seq - https://getseq.net/
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> You can use Serilog for logging to all the places you need to (so log
>> files, event log, etc and directly to Seq) and then view them directly in
>> Seq.
>>
>> See: https://docs.getseq.net/v3/docs/using-serilog
>>
>> And https://nblumhardt.com/2014/06/durable-log-shipping-from
>> -serilog-to-seq/
>>
>> https://nblumhardt.com/2016/02/remote-level-control-in-serilog-using-seq/
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 11 May 2017 at 09:16, Greg Keogh <gfke...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> can anyone recommend a log server they know and love? (theres a myriad of
>> options out there!)
>>
>>
>>
>> I use Azure Tables as a logging destination. Last year I wrote a log4net
>> appender which buffers and delivers rows in efficient batches, and I think
>> there are similar public addons for other popular log frameworks. No
>> infrastructure or config needed, very fast, vast capacity, dirt cheap -- 
>> *Greg
>> K*
>>
>>
>>
>
>

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