Debug Logs and Analyze Trends with Log Data Restoration

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    Everyone in your organization needs logs to perform critical functions of their job. Developers need them to debug their applications, security engineers need them to respond to incidents, and support engineers need them to help customers troubleshoot issues. These various use cases create general requirements for enriched log data and often include the need to access insights from outside typical retention windows. 

    Having so many use cases creates complexity that makes everyone's jobs more difficult across many teams.

    At Mezmo, we introduced Log Data Restoration to enable use cases involving data access beyond typical retention times without adversely affecting costs. Log Data Restoration allows users to store their older log data in cold storage, away from Mezmo, and then recall the data later if or when they need it. If you'd like a deeper refresher on Log Data Restoration, check out this blog, where we introduced the then-new feature. 

    In this blog, I'd like to look at some real-life cases where one might need Log Data Restoration. 

    Debugging Logs for Extra Credit

    I've got news for you; your system's got bugs. Nobody makes a perfect build; you're a human, and humans are beautifully imperfect. If you're one of the lucky humans, you may find yourself with some extra time on your hands to fix some of the tiny (or maybe more significant) imperfections in your systems. As we've stated before, you're ultimately required to use log data to debug any system. Still, if the last incident occurred outside your retention window, you'd ordinarily have difficulty fixing your issue. Without some restoration functionality, you'd probably have to increase your retention window to a time that may not be cost-effective to store your logs in hot storage. Even then, if you were to increase your retention window after your bug occurred, there's probably no guarantee that you're getting the log data you need to fix your issue specifically. You could also manually comb through files of old and raw log data that you may have stored on a hard drive somewhere, but that would be tedious, time-consuming, and may not get you the analytics you're hoping to find. 

    Suppose you utilize Mezmo Log Data Restoration. In that case, you could recall that older log data containing the bug you're trying to fix back into Mezmo's UI to perform an analysis and then ultimately fix your bug. Recalling old log data back into the Mezmo UI doesn't just make it simpler and easier to digest for human consumption. It allows you to perform analysis on those logs to unlock the power of your data.

    Root-Cause Analysis

    Suppose now that all has been relatively copacetic lately, but you've noticed an interesting trend in your log data, and you'd like to figure out the root of your new trend to prevent things from getting out of hand. To perform a Root-Cause Analysis, you could utilize Log Data Restoration from Mezmo by storing your older log data inside an S3 bucket and then recalling that data back into Mezmo as you see a need. All you would need to do is define a time and date range inside the Mezmo UI under the "Manage Restoration" page. Once you restore your log data into the Mezmo UI, your logs will appear as they were when they were new, and you can perform any analysis that you would typically be able to inside Mezmo. 

    It is essential to mention that doing this doesn't require any specialized knowledge of AWS; as long as you can stand up an S3 bucket and establish a connection to Mezmo, you can recall your log data back into the Mezmo platform from directly inside the UI. The same applies to other types of object storage as well.

    Conclusion 

    There’s a myriad of other use cases that Mezmo enables with Log Data Restoration. Chances are, there are even some that we're not considering. 

    How do you use Mezmo Log Data Restoration?

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