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Introduction to alerts

New Relic is a flexible system that allows you to get informed about issues for any entity or stream of telemetry data. You define the data to watch, the thresholds that if exceeded mean an issue, who is notified, and how. Alerts empower your team with dynamic tools to proactively detect and address potential problems. By pinpointing unusual activity, linking related issues, and aiding in root cause analysis, alerts enable swift action to keep your systems running smoothly.

New Relic's alerts help you to know what's critical, manage the suppressed noise, and mitigate alert fatigue.

With alerts, you can:

  • Configure any signal to be evaluated against a threshold, or if it exhibits abnormal behavior.
  • Organize alerts through tagging.
  • Identify anomalies before they become broader issues.
  • Route issues to the correct system or team using notifications.

New Relic alerts allows you to:

Alerts main page

To open view your alerts, go to one.newrelic.com > Alerts .

There are some steps you need to take in order to set up an alert condition and receive notifications. Check out our tutorial series for all steps you need to get started.

Want to get started making your first alert? See how to create your first alert.

Alerting concepts and terms

An incident is generated when an active alert condition's threshold has been met. You can correlate similar or related incidents to an issue and group alert conditions together to create an alert policy.

You can configure notifications through Workflows to inform you about the triggering of alert conditions. These notifications include the option of sending them to various channels to reach the right group of people and help them triage the issue.

To get the most of alerting, it's essential to understand some basic terms and concepts.

This diagram shows how alerts work: you create an alert policy that includes an alert condition or several alert conditions. Alert conditions include a defined threshold and when that threshold is breached, an incident triggers. If you've configured a workflow, then you'll receive a notification. You can group incidents into issues and issues into decisions to have better management of your alerts.

A diagram showing some basic concepts and terms for New Relic alerting

Term

Explanation

Condition

Configuration of one or more thresholds applied to a signal. An incident is created when the thresholds are breached.

Decision

Logical operation that group incidents into larger issues. There are built-in decisions and you can also create your own custom decisions.

Destination

Service by which you get notified. It's a unique identifier for a third-party system that you use.

Event

Indicate a state change or trigger defined by your New Relic alerts conditions or external monitoring systems. An event contains information about the affected entity.

Incident

Event generated when a condition threshold is breached. It's an individual event that details a symptom of a problem.

Issue

Collection of one or more incidents that requires attention and investigation and causes a notification.

Notification

Message that you receive when an incident opens, is acknowledged, or closes.

Policy

Group of alert conditions that you configure to get notified when an incident occurs.

Threshold

Value that a data source must pass to trigger an incident and the time-related settings that define an incident.

Workflow

Definition of when and where you want to receive notifications about issues. You can enrich your notifications with additional and related New Relic data.

Note about EU/US data centers

New Relic's alerts service is performed in the United States. By using New Relic alerts, you agree that New Relic may move your data to, and process your data in, the US region. This applies whether you store your data in New Relic's US region data center or in our EU region data center.

Ready to try New Relic for yourself? Sign up for your free New Relic account and follow our quick launch guide so you can start maximizing your data today! If you need any help, check out our tutorial series on creating alerts to get started.

Tip

Do you use Datadog to monitor your logs but want to try out New Relic observability features for free? See our guide for migrating from Datadog.

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