30 Jun 2022
04:27 AM
- last edited on
30 Aug 2022
12:19 AM
by
MaciejNeumann
are there any metrics which can provide us the page specific load time, page views of each application in dynatrace ?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Yes i checked this page but i could not find the metrics that can give the page load time & page views for each application in it.. can you please point me to exact one if you find something ?
no! that where we can be clear its not present, can you try raising an idea for this, also raise a RFE request through support.
do we need to raise a RFE ? is it the only solution to get page specific metrics of each application ?
One interesting part which is not clear here is : how Dynatrace is showing these data in the UI..?
can someone share your suggestions and ideas on it ?
I believe lets wait to here from support, try raising a ticket and get the needful reference. The data you seek is available with Dynatrace already if populated in UI. Add the UI screenshot in your ticket while seeking metric names.
yes i have added screenshot in the bottom..
Can you please let us know on How Dynatrace is showing these metrics when we drill down into each individual pages from main application ?
do we need to raise a RFE ? is it the only solution to get page specific metrics of each application ?
One interesting part which is not clear here is : how Dynatrace is showing these data in the UI..?
can someone share your suggestions and ideas on it ?
The data is already populated in dynatrace UI but we are not able to get this page level metric details using API's, can someone help here if there is way to get this data using API's ?
Hi @chaithu ,
Dynatrace provides you with ways to solve problems by providing relevant data. In the case you brought, we believe that page load time is not what you need to understand the performance of your problem. You need to know how long it took your users to have a visually completed page and can interact with it.
Visually complete is a point-in-time metric that measures when the visual area of a page has finished loading. Visually complete metrics are typically shorter in duration than comparable metrics (for example, page load time and DOM interactive measures) because users perceive complete page load before 100% of background page elements have loaded. Optimizing visually complete timing is more valuable than optimizing other page load timings in terms of user experience as it reflects the amount of time that your real users spend waiting for above-the-fold content to load completely. Results are sortable based on location, device, operating system, and browser type.
Read more here: https://www.dynatrace.com/support/help/shortlink/visually-complete-speed-index-calculations