Suppressing noise to maximize Seq performance
Log data is noisy! Sometimes a rock band playing at the foot of your bed kind of noisy. This isn't always a bad thing - a »
Log data is noisy! Sometimes a rock band playing at the foot of your bed kind of noisy. This isn't always a bad thing - a »
Nearly a year in the making, Seq 2023.1 is faster, plays better with container hosts, and scales up like no Seq version before. Get the »
TL;DR: Seq's new query engine uses CPU cores and memory more intelligently. It's ready to try in non-mission-critical environments, and we're eager for your feedback! »
It's not always possible to ship logs directly from an application to a centralized log server like Seq. Many interesting systems, new and old, write text »
A behind-the-scenes look at the next version of Seq Thanks to a round of Covid, and a very busy month, this second instalment in our series »
Another (possibly final!) Seq 2022.1 maintenance release is now available from Docker Hub, AWS ECR, and at datalust.co/download [https://datalust.co/download]. What's »
The concept of log event "levels" is ubiquitous, appearing in practically every application logging library and language. We have an intuitive sense of what familiar levels »
We've just published a new patch for Seq 2022.1, including a number of bug fixes, and support for the ECR Public Gallery. Seq on the »
> A journal entry from the Seq Engineering Team Back in 2018 we wrote a new storage engine for Seq, optimized for the data types and access »
Seq uses a roles-and-permissions based scheme for managing user privileges. Users are assigned to roles, and roles carry one or more of a handful of permissions »