Jump to content

Service level indicator

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Service level indicators)

In information technology, a service level indicator (SLI) is a measure of the service level provided by a service provider to a customer. SLIs form the basis of service level objectives (SLOs), which in turn form the basis of service level agreements (SLAs);[1] an SLI can be called an SLA metric (also customer service metric, or simply service metric).

Though every system is different in the services provided, often common SLIs are used. Common SLIs include latency, throughput, availability, and error rate; others include durability (in storage systems), end-to-end latency (for complex data processing systems, especially pipelines), and correctness.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Niall Richard Murphy; Betsy Beyer; Jennifer Petoff; Chris Jones. "Service Level Terminology". Site Reliability Engineering: How Google Runs Production Systems. pp. 37–40.