This guide is intended to help users who are experiencing problems trying to configure their errors and logs to be sent to Stackify. If you haven’t already, check out our documentation on installing Stackify for your appropriate logging framework. This guide will provide you with a checklist of items that will help troubleshoot what is going on. If you are still not successful in sending logs
https://docs.stackify.com/troubleshoot-errors-and-logs-net-configurations
In the past, managing IT infrastructure was a hard job. System administrators had to manually manage and configure all of the hardware and software that was needed for the applications to run. However, in recent years, things have changed dramatically. Trends like cloud computing revolutionized—and improved—the way organizations design, develop, and maintain their IT infrastructure. One
https://stackify.com/what-is-infrastructure-as-code-how-it-works-best-practices-tutorials/
Microservices are increasingly used in the development world as developers work to create larger, more complex applications that are better developed and managed as a combination of smaller services that work cohesively together for more extensive, application-wide functionality. Tools such as Service Fabric are rising to meet the need to think about and build apps using a piece-by-piece
https://stackify.com/what-are-microservices/
At Stackify, we battle our fair share of code performance problems too, including issues surrounding Java garbage collection. In this post, we'll take a look at Java garbage collection, how it works, and why it matters. A Definition of Java Garbage Collection Java garbage collection is the process by which Java programs perform automatic memory management. Java programs compile to bytec
https://stackify.com/what-is-java-garbage-collection/
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