New Relic, Inc. announced a series of product innovations and enhancements at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2022 to help millions of engineers take a daily, data-driven approach to Kubernetes observability. New Relic re-architected its Kubernetes integration to reduce the overhead associated with monitoring Kubernetes environments with an improved memory footprint, flexible scraping intervals, and more. In addition, New Relic announced plugin support for Pixie, an open source observability tool for Kubernetes, to give New Relic users unlimited access to the latest Pixie innovation directly inside the New Relic platform.

These innovations are included as an essential part of the all-in-one New Relic observability platform that allows engineers to get 3X+ more value than the competition. Kubernetes integration updates: Reduced memory footprint: Avoid data duplication while scraping kube-state-metrics (KSM) and control plane components to reduce memory consumption by 80% in big clusters; Support for control planes: Ensure clusters are maintained in accordance with security, compliance or governance policies by supporting external control planes like Rancher Kubernetes Engine; Flexible scraping intervals: Dial up or dial down data ingest to find the right balance between data granularity and managing data ingest costs; Improved troubleshooting: Triage bugs and fix issues quicker with enhanced logs and process cycles; Easier configuration: Three individually-configurable components are now available, including support for config files that provide more granular settings. Pixie plugin framework: By supporting the Pixie plugin framework, New Relic is unlocking access to Pixie's capabilities directly inside of the New Relic UI.

With this release, the New Relic Pixie integration is optimized to bring a subset of Pixie data off-cluster into New Relic for long term storage and retention, and as new capabilities are deployed they will be available to engineers using New Relic. New Relic is also providing users access to longer data retention and enterprise-grade alerting directly inside Pixie, so users can be alerted immediately when system performance suffers, and they'll be able to go beyond real-time debugging to analyze performance over longer time horizons. With these releases, New Relic is activating its commitment to make observability a daily, data-driven habit for every engineer by continuing to invest heavily in the global open source and cloud-native communities.

Since 2020, New Relic open sourced more than ten years of agents R&D, acquired Pixie Labs and contributed Pixie as an open source project to the CNCF, and launched New Relic Instant Observability, the industry's largest open source ecosystem of quickstarts and integrations. Today's news is the continuation of this strategy to dramatically reduce the barrier for engineers to adopt Kubernetes observability. New Relic's Kubernetes integration is generally available now, and New Relic'sPixie Plugin will be generally available in early June, as part of the New Relic platform — the only all-in-one observability platform for all telemetry data with a secure telemetry cloud, powerful full-stack analysis tools and predictable consumption pricing instead of disjointed SKU bundles.

Check out the Pixie blog for more information about the plugin system. For more information about instant Kubernetes observability with Pixie, visit https://newrelic.com/platform/kubernetes-pixie.