What I Learned From Building an eBPF-Based Traffic Capture Application
From the article
Building a targeted eBPF network traffic capture tool reveals why a general-purpose eBPF observability agent is exponentially harder.
Continue reading on SpeedscaleYou might also wanna read
Heron: A passive eBPF-based network analyzer for AI agent observability
Heron is a passive network analyzer for AI agents that uses eBPF to capture and reconstruct LLM traffic from the network layer. It requires
Implementing Fast TCP Fingerprinting in a Golang Webserver Using eBPF
The article documents the author's journey implementing fast TCP fingerprinting in a golang webserver using eBPF for anti-bot solutions. It
The Fundamental Flaws in Traditional Logging and the Case for Wide Events in Observability
The article critiques traditional logging practices in software development, arguing that conventional logs are fundamentally flawed and ins

From Drowning in Logs to Conversing with Your Data: Introducing Maxmallow
maxim-blog.ghost.io·3mo ago
Building a Linux Filesystem Watcher: Comparing fanotify and eBPF Solutions
A technical deep dive into building a Linux filesystem watcher, comparing fanotify and eBPF-based solutions for in-kernel monitoring. The ar
Netdata: Bridging the Observability Gap in AI-Assisted Coding
The article discusses the growing ecosystem of AI coding agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Copilot, Codex, Gemini CLI, Windsurf, etc.) and highli

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.