

dbsnoop
dbsnOOp is a database monitoring and management platform based on artificial intelligence to determine patterns and analyze trends to help our customers to manage their databases and step ahead for problems and outages.
Cost / License
- Subscription
- Proprietary
Platforms
- Online
Features
- Database Management Tool
- Performance Monitoring
- Server Monitoring
- Dark Mode
- Ad-free
- Real time collaboration
dbsnoop News & Activities
Recent activities
What is dbsnoop?
Some things that can be observed include:
- Transactions
- Locks
- Deadlocks
- Slow queries and poor queries
- User behavior
- Data replication
- Buffering, and caching
- Parameterization
- Database, index, and table use
- Index fragmentation
- Corrupted metadata
- CPU
- I/O wait
- Network bandwidth utilization
- Disk use
- Memory
The virtual DBA can help with the following:
- Suggestion for Parameterization
- Disk overflow forecast
- Health examination
- Performance Report
- Patches, hotfixes, and updates
- Capacity Plan
To understand the behavior of an analytical database, use graphs and reports.
All queries that run in a database may be verified, cataloged, and you can use Query Catalog to get notified when a new query goes live.
With RTM (Real Monitoring), we have a set of trends and insights into what is happening in real-time in your real-time database.
We will travel into the past using Flashback to examine what happened and how the bank operated in the past.
Obtain notifications via telegram or email.
Utilize our TMS (Ticket Management System) to handle calls from other departments as well as incidents that need to be handled (automatically). For more significant problems, keep logbooks.
Your own business rules and personalized warnings, such as Low Stock, High Traffic, Wrong Prices, etc.








Comments and Reviews
Outstanding telemetry and integration of IBM DB2 and MySQL. Initially, I'm monitoring my IBM DB2 and MySQL instances with dbsnoop. The configuration advisors, the modern integrated TMS, and the threshold comparisons were all fantastic.
Due to its interaction with PostgreSQL and MySQL telemetry, I switched to dbsnoop. The auto-increment alert, user audit, query catalog, performance monitor, and configuration comparison capabilities make it a useful database server monitoring tool.
I'm testing out dbsnoop and finding it to be fun. Not so great for networks, but amazing for databases. PostgreSQL has performed way above expectations in my case.