Welcome to sysdig - an open source system-level exploration and troubleshooting tool.
If this is your first time hearing about sysdig, we recommend you [start with the website] (http://www.sysdig.org).
Sysdig captures system calls and other system level events using a linux kernel facility called tracepoints, providing a rich set of real-time, system-level information.
Sysdig "packetizes" this information, so that you can do things like save it into trace files and easily filter it, a bit like you would do with tcpdump. This makes it very flexible to explore what processes are doing.
Sysdig is also packed with a set of scripts called Chisels that make it easier to extract useful information and do troubleshooting.
Sysdig is designed from the ground up for minimal overhead and is production ready.
[Visit the wiki] (https://github.com/draios/sysdig/wiki) for full documentation on sysdig and its APIs.
For support using sysdig, please contact [the official mailing list] (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/sysdig).
- Contact the [official mailing list] (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/sysdig) for support and to talk with other users
- Follow us on [Twitter] (https://twitter.com/sysdig) for the Chisel of the Week
- This is our [blog] (http://sysdigcloud.com/blog/). There are many like it, but this one is ours.
Sysdig is proudly supported by [Sysdig Cloud] (http://sysdigcloud.com/).
Like working on sysdig? [Sysdig Cloud is hiring] (http://sysdigcloud.com/jobs/).