Dynatrace recognizes more than 1,000 third-party content providers, including Google, Amazon, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Typical third-party content includes Facebook and Twitter widgets, gravatars, and similar resources. It's crucial to see how third-party content providers affect your applications and understand if such content is the root cause of any slowdowns.
Content delivery networks (CDNs) are usually under your control. Your application might use a CDN to store and serve frequently accessed static and dynamic content, which is required to speed up load times in certain geographic regions.
The difference between third-party content providers and CDNs lies in the control you have over the data.
You can view your application's top providers and access the detailed information on each provider from your application overview page. For details, see Analyze web requests > Top providers.
Dynatrace detects lots of third-party content providers. When Dynatrace cannot find a host name in the list of known third-party providers, it marks the resource as CDN. Also, Dynatrace can find out which domains your organization hosts and categorize those domains as first-party.
To see the full list of providers detected for your environment, go to Settings > Web and mobile monitoring > Provider breakdown.
If you can't find your provider in the list of auto-detected providers or want to override auto-detection rules, you can add a provider manually.
To manually add a provider
Starting with Dynatrace version 1.240, auto-detection of first-party providers is enabled by default and cannot be deactivated. If you need to override the auto-detected first-party providers, add a provider manually.
The list of manually added providers is processed in the order of their appearance in the list. For this reason, a provider with a more specific domain pattern should come first. For example, api.example.com
should come before example.com
.
To change the order of manually added providers