ICNGC 2025 The 11th International Conference on Next Generation Computing 2025 (2025.12)바로가기
페이지
pp.152-156
저자
Omar Bin Kasim Bhuian, Sang-Hoon Choi, Young-Soo Kim, Hongri Liu, Ki-Woong Park
언어
영어(ENG)
URL
https://www.earticle.net/Article/A478483
원문정보
초록
영어
Modern cloud applications often operate as unmodified third-party services or legacy code, where direct instrumentation for observability is infeasible. This paper investigates whether a minimal black-box observability pipeline can still provide actionable insights in such contexts. We compose a standard stack—Envoy proxy, OpenTelemetry Collector, Prometheus, Jaeger, and Grafana—to collect metrics and traces without modifying application code, and we apply it to two representative workloads: a lightweight demo service and the OWASP Juice Shop. Our evaluation shows that proxy-only instrumentation captures meaningful demand and latency signals, that exported spans faithfully reflect traffic bursts visible in proxy metrics, and that distributed traces reveal endto- end error paths (e.g., 404 failures). These findings indicate that a carefully orchestrated open-source stack can approximate the diagnostic value of white-box instrumentation. The contributions of this work are a reproducible pipeline design and an empirical assessment demonstrating how such a configuration can reduce mean-time-to-detect (MTTD) failures and support service-level objective monitoring under synthetic load scenarios.
목차
Abstract I. INTRODUCTION II. BACKGROUND AND RELATED WORK A. Background B. Related Work III. DESIGN OF THE PROXY-CENTRIC OBSERVABILITY PIPELINE A. Component Roles and Interactions IV. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP AND METHODOLOGY A. Deployment Environment B. Workloads and Traffic C. Reproducibility D. Design Choices E. Metrics and Queries F. Overhead Measurement Methodology V. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND EVALUATION A. Latency and Resource Overhead B. Metric–Trace Correlation Analysis VI. DISCUSSION AND IMPACT VII. CONCLUSION AND FUTURE WORK ACKNOWLEDGMENT REFERENCES