Tidal to Ship Java EE and .NET Transaction Monitor

11/18/2008

Tidal Software has announced Intersperse 8.0, a component-level, business-transaction monitor for business-transaction performance, alerts, and automatic corrective action.



ebizQ received the following:

Tidal Software, a provider of application management, scheduling and IT process automation software, announced Intersperse 8.0, a product that monitors J2EE and .NET applications and their transaction component performance to produce meaningful metrics for managing applications and high-level business processes.

The product leverages a combination of lightweight Java Management Extensions (JMX) and byte-code injection to span the need for both lightweight and deep level analysis. This provides a basis for monitoring and trending the performance of components as well as business processes, the vendor said. It also allows Intersperse 8.0 to deliver proactive alerts if a process encounters an error, which allows rapid identification of problems. Intersperse 8.0 can also generate an automated responses to initiate a corrective action to keep a Web application running without human intervention, according to Tidal.

"Intersperse 8.0 provides a 'single view' of applications and their components," said Wayne Greene, Tidal vice president of product management. "At its highest level, the Server Health Dashboard shows the status of applications and components. It also shows the top-level availability status of all managed servers as well as all open alerts."

Intersperse 8.0 also monitors and detects memory leaks caused by the code or the application. "The user can set alerts against any component to allow appropriate action to be taken -- including the execution of complex corrective actions," Greene continued. "Processes which have stalled are also identified for fast resolution -- either through automated corrective action or alerting application support staff."

Intersperse 8.0 also maintains lists of the top 10 slowest components based on selected metrics such as memory usage or run time, thus rapidly creating a list of all the system's trouble areas that need to be addressed.

The visibility of Intersperse 8.0 extends into the components of J2EE and .NET applications through byte-code instrumentation. This can be triggered manually, or automatically when a certain condition is detected, or when a problem requires diagnosis. Intersperse 8.0 also provides deep health monitoring for the back end databases such as Oracle and Sybase.

Many enterprises are going through mergers and acquisitions, or are deploying web service and SOA components to achieve new business processing capabilities as fast as they are becoming available. This means that usually not all the components of the applications are known to the support staff. It's nearly impossible to know exactly which components are active in a given production application, or how they interact with each other. Intersperse 8.0 discovers and maps all distributed composite applications, which creates an end-to-end view of the application components and dynamic business processes.

This view is presented in an easy-to-understand graphical display of the deployed application environment. This display is invaluable when conducting impact analysis and root cause analysis. The application mapping function also allows the end user to augment the application map to represent additional data sources and to aggregate the entire application ecosystem into complete, detailed, end-to-end view within a single tool.

Monitoring applications as a total business process in composite web application environments is exceedingly complex. The business process must be traced across service layers, through the full process sequence and across heterogeneous infrastructures. Intersperse 8.0 provides the platform and runtime coverage that allows tracking of the most complex business processes. It can follow the process flow from portal to back-end application server and over a message bus. It can do this without relying on vendor specific tracing or being limited to a single application server type.

Intersperse 8.0 provides immediate information on the end-to-end performance of a specific user transaction, an overall user session, or a complex automated business process. Its visual dashboards, tracing views and filtering tools allow quick identification of problems anywhere within the process. Intersperse 8.0 addresses real-world J2EE, .NET, Web Services and SOA deployments that have leveraged existing assets, and made time-to-market a priority.

In addition to monitoring capabilities, Intersperse 8.0 also provides capabilities for automating routine tasks by configuring them to run based on monitoring results, Tidal Software said. Intersperse 8.0 supports the ability to orchestrate actions into a business process. These actions could automatically resolve problems that are well known, or they could provide stop-gap or self-healing actions for the process. Within the application server, Intersperse 8.0 can initiate corrective actions through JMX interfaces. Outside the application server it can do it through command executions or web service operations. It can also make configuration changes to the server itself.

  • Subscribe Newsletter
  • Contribute
Subscribe to ebizQ:

Enter your email address:

 Subscribe Blog Updates via RSS

 Subscribe News via RSS

ebizQ is very interested in what you have to say. To contribute an article, an opinion, or to become a blogger, please contact Peter Schooff.

  • Virtual Conferences
  • Webinars
  • Roundtables

SOA Cloud Qcamp

June 3, 2009

One of the most compelling trends in the enterprise business technology space over the past year has been the emergence of cloud computing. In ebizQ’s upcoming Qcamp virtual un-conference, leading industry experts and practitioners will explore the role of service-oriented architecture (SOA) and business process management (BPM) in supporting cloud-computing initiatives. Additionally, the new skills that developers and IT managers need for successful cloud development will be discussed.Register

View All Virtual Conferences

Best Practices in Moving Processes to the Clouds

Date:Apr 07, 2010
Time:13:00 PM ET- (17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!

How Can the Cloud Fit Into Your Applications Strategy?

Date:Apr 07, 2010
Time:12:00 PM ET- (16:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
View All Roundtables
  • White Papers
  • Podcasts
  • Blogs

Joe McKendrick: Part II of II: Designing Evolve-ability into SOA and IT Systems

In part two of Joe McKendrick's recent podcast with Miko Matsumura, chief strategist for Software AG, they talk about how SOA and IT systems need to change and grow and adapt with the organization around it.

Listen Now

Phil Wainewright: Helping Brands Engage with Social Media

Phil Wainewright interviews David Vap, VP of products at RightNow Technologies, and finds out how sharing best practices can help businesses understand how best to engage with online communities.

Listen Now

Peter Schooff: Making Every IT Dollar Result in a Desired Business Outcome: Scott Hebner of IBM Rati

Scott Hebner, Vice President of Marketing and Strategy for IBM Rational, discusses a topic on the top of every company's mind today: getting the most from IT investments.

Listen Now

Jessica Ann Mola: Where Will BI Fit In? Lyndsay Wise Explains

In BI, this tough economy and the increasing role of Web 2.0 and MDM are certainly topics on people's minds today. WiseAnalytics' Lyndsay Wise addresses each of them in this informative podcast.

Listen Now

Dennis Byron: Talking with...Deepak Singh of BPM Provider Adeptia

Deepak Singh, President and CTO of Adeptia, joins ebizQ's Dennis Byron in a podcast that gets its hand around the trend of industry-specific BPM.

Listen Now
More Podcasts
  • Most Read
  • Quick Guide
  • Most Discussed

Quick Guide: What is BPM?

Learn More

Quick Guide: What is Event Processing?

Smart event processing can help your company run smarter and faster. This comprehensive guide helps you research the basics of complex event processing (CEP) and learn how to get started on the right foot with your CEP project using EDA, RFID, SOA, SCADA and other relevant technologies. Learn More

Quick Guide: What is Enterprise 2.0?

A lot of people are talking about Enterprise 2.0 as being the business application of Web 2.0 technology. However, there's still some debate on exactly what this technology entails, how it applies to today's business models, and which components bring true value. Some use the term Enterprise 2.0 exclusively to describe the use of social networking technologies in the enterprise, while others use it to describe a web economy platform, or the technological framework behind such a platform. Still others say that Enterprise 2.0 is all of these things. Learn More


E-Zine: BPM Quarterly

This new publication from our sister site SearchSOA.com explores workflow, business activity monitoring (BAM) and complex event processing (CEP) issues.

Featured Bloggers

Scott Cleveland's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Scott Cleveland's Blog
Peter Schooff's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Peter Schooff's Blog
Michael Poulin's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Michael Poulin's Blog
Tim Huenemann 's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Tim Huenemann 's Blog
Adrian Grigoriu's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Adrian Grigoriu's Blog
Steven Minsky's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Steven Minsky's Blog
Andre Yee's Latest Blog Posts:

Read Andre Yee's Blog

View All ebizQ Bloggers