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It’s that time again Sysdig fans! Join us for our third sysdig (http://www.sysdig.org/) meetup, hosted by PagerDuty (http://www.pagerduty.com/) at their San Francisco HQ. Come network with other sysdig users, meet the Sysdig team, and learn about what’s new with best open source system troubleshooting tool out there!

This meetup will be a special one: we’re devoting the session to a sneak peek of our upcoming sysdig release which includes a ridiculously awesome new curses UI we’re calling csysdig. We’re leveraging the same powerful sysdig technology and layering an easy to use UI on top of it (think of it as htop on steroids). It’s now even easier to dig into your containerized environments, inspect system activity, and understand performance bottlenecks in real time. And we’d love to get your feedback on it before we release it to the masses.

As for presentations, we’ll be providing an overview of csysdig, walking through some interesting container troubleshooting use cases, and providing a tutorial on how you can create and contribute your own csysdig views to the project.

No matter your skill level or familiarity with sysdig, all are welcome to attend. We’ll have food, drinks, and plenty of sysdig giveaways.

Space is limited, so be sure to reserve your spot today. We look forward to meeting you in person!

Schedule

6:00 - Registration & happy hour

6:45 - Container troubleshooting with csysdig

7:05 - csysdig architecture overview

7:20 - How to write your own csysdig view tutorial

7:40 - Q&A

*About sysdig

Sysdig is open source, system-level exploration: capture system state and activity from a running Linux instance, then save, filter and analyze. Think of it as strace + tcpdump + lsof + htop + awesome sauce. With a little Lua cherry on top. Sysdig was born from our own team's constant frustration. System level troubleshooting is just way more of a pain than it should be — especially in distributed, virtualized, and cloud-based environments. So we took the lessons we learned while building network monitoring tools like WinPCap and Wireshark and created a new kind of system troubleshooting tool for Linux. Learn more. (http://www.sysdig.org/)

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