MySQL 5.7 now includes the Sys Schema by default, which builds upon the awesome instrumentation framework laid by Performance Schema.
Performance Schema has had 23 worklogs completed in 5.7 alone, such as memory instrumentation, tying in transactions and stored programs in to the current statement/stage/wait instruments and wait graph, prepared statement instruments, metadata lock information, improved session status and variable reporting, the new structured replication tables, and more.
The Sys schema builds upon this strong foundation with easy reporting views and functions, as well as procedures to help both set up and manage the configuration of Performance Schema, and help diagnose performance issues with your database instances on the whole.
Come along and hear from the original developer of the Sys schema about all of these exciting improvements in MySQL instrumentation for the upcoming MySQL 5.7 release!
Understanding MySQL Performance through BenchmarkingLaine Campbell
The document discusses using benchmarks to measure database performance. It explains that benchmarks help identify bottlenecks, understand system behavior, and plan for growth. The mysqlslap tool is introduced for performing database benchmarks. Mysqlslap can run tests to measure throughput, latency, and stability under different conditions like load, concurrency, and spikes. Examples are provided for how to use mysqlslap to benchmark different engines, schemas, and workloads.
This is the presentation on ASH that I did with Graham Wood at RMOUG 2014 and that represents the final best effort to capture essential and advanced ASH content as started in a presentation Uri Shaft and I gave at a small conference in Denmark sometime in 2012 perhaps. The presentation is also available publicly through the RMOUG website, so I felt at liberty to post it myself here. If it disappears it would likely be because I have been asked to remove it by Oracle.
This version of "Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) 19c & Later – Best Practices" was first presented in Oracle Open World (OOW) London 2020 and includes content from the OOW 2019 version of the deck. The deck has been updated with the latest information regarding ORAchk as well as upgrade tips & tricks.
Oratop is a tool that provides dynamic, near real-time monitoring of an Oracle database. It displays information on the database, instances, wait events, sessions/processes, and SQL. It can be run against RAC or non-RAC databases and provides both command line and interactive modes. In interactive mode, various options can be toggled using keyboard keys to customize the displayed information.
Stop the Chaos! Get Real Oracle Performance by Query Tuning Part 1SolarWinds
The document provides an overview and agenda for a presentation on optimizing Oracle database performance through query tuning. It discusses identifying performance issues, collecting wait event information, reviewing execution plans, and understanding how the Oracle optimizer works using features like adaptive plans and statistics gathering. The goal is to show attendees how to quickly find and focus on the queries most in need of tuning.
The document discusses MySQL Group Replication, which is a plugin that provides multi-master replication capability for MySQL. It allows data to be replicated between multiple MySQL servers so that they can stay in sync. The replication works by having each server send transaction writesets to other servers through a group communication system, and then each server certifies and applies the changes locally in an asynchronous manner.
Get answers to the real time Oracle Golden gate interview questions!
Here is the link for full article: https://www.support.dbagenesis.com/post/oracle-golden-gate-interview-questions
Fine Tuning and Enhancing Performance of Apache Spark JobsDatabricks
Apache Spark defaults provide decent performance for large data sets but leave room for significant performance gains if able to tune parameters based on resources and job.
Webinar slides: How to Migrate from Oracle DB to MariaDBSeveralnines
This document provides an overview and agenda for a webinar on migrating from Oracle DB to MariaDB. The webinar will cover why organizations are moving to open source databases, the benefits of migrating to MariaDB from Oracle, how to plan and execute the migration process, and post-migration management topics like monitoring, backups, high availability, and scaling in MariaDB. The presentation will include discussions of data type mapping, enabling PL/SQL syntax in MariaDB, available migration tools, and testing approaches.
Operations, Consistency, Failover for Multi-DC Clusters (Alexander Dejanovski...DataStax
This document discusses operations, consistency, and failover for multi-datacenter Apache Cassandra clusters. It describes how to configure replication strategies to distribute data across DCs, maintain consistency levels, and handle reads and writes between DCs. It also covers adding a new DC, removing a DC, running repairs across DCs, and designing for failover between DCs in the event of network partitions or DC outages.
Part 3 of the SQL Tuning workshop examines the different aspects of an execution plan, from cardinality estimates to parallel execution and explains what information you should be gleaming from the plan and how it affects the execution. It offers insight into what caused the Optimizer to make the decision it did as well as a set of corrective measures that can be used to improve each aspect of the plan.
- The document discusses using various Oracle diagnostic tools like AWR, ASH, and SQL Monitoring for SQL tuning. It focuses on scenarios where multiple data sources are needed to fully understand performance issues.
- Historical ASH and AWR data can provide different perspectives on SQL executions over time that help identify problems like long-running queries or concurrent executions. However, ASH only samples a subset of data so it may miss short queries.
- GV$SQL and AWR reports aggregate performance metrics over all executions of a SQL, so they do not show the full user experience if a query runs intermittently. ASH sampled data can help determine how database time relates to clock time in such cases.
-
Open Source 101 2022 - MySQL Indexes and HistogramsFrederic Descamps
Nobody complains that the database is too fast. But when things slow down, the complaints come quickly. The two most popular approaches to speeding up queries are indexes and histograms. But there are so many options and types on indexes that it can get confusing. Histograms are fairly new to MySQL but they do not work for all types of data. This talk covers how indexes and histograms work and show you how to test just how effective they are so you can measure the performance of your queries.
Presentation of some of the new features of MySQL 8.0.16 released on April 25, 2019
Agenda:
➢ mysql_upgrade is no longer necessary
➢ CHECK Constraints
➢ Constant-Folding Optimization
➢ SYSTEM_USER & partial_revokes
➢ Chinese collation for utf8mb4
➢ Performance Schema keyring_keys table
➢ MySQL Shell Enhancements
➢ MySQL Router Enhancements
➢ InnoDB Cluster Enhancements
➢ Group Replication Enhancements
➢ Size of the binary tarball for Linux
➢ Server quick settings validation
This document discusses Oracle Multitenant 19c and pluggable databases. It begins with an introduction to the speaker and overview of pluggable databases. It then describes the traditional Oracle database architecture and the multitenant architecture in Oracle 19c. It discusses the different components of a container database including the root, seed PDB, and application containers. It also covers how to create pluggable databases from scratch, through cloning locally and remotely, relocating PDBs, and plugging in unplugged PDBs.
SSL certificates in the Oracle Database without surprisesNelson Calero
Presentation delivered on UKOUG conference in December 2019.
Abstract: Nowadays database installations are required to use secure connections to communicate with clients, from connecting to the database listener to interact with external services (for example to send emails from the database).
Also since a couple of years ago, it has been required to use stronger protocols like TLS 1.2 (SHA2 algorithm), which requires extra configuration in older database releases.
This presentation shows how SSL certificates work from a DBA perspective, which tools are available and examples of configuring and troubleshooting their usage from the Oracle database. It also explores the implications and how to implement TLS 1.2 and common errors found in real life usage.
The MySQL sys schema was integrated fully into MySQL Server from version 5.7.7 and has been improved in MySQL 8.0. Whether you are a DBA trying to determine where the resources are being used on your database instance and by whom, or a developer trying to figure out why your MySQL statements are running too slowly, the MySQL sys schema can help. Join this session to learn how to better use the MySQL sys schema to answer your day-to-day questions—from the original developer of the MySQL sys schema.
This document provides an overview of MySQL for Oracle DBAs, covering topics such as MySQL architecture, backup and recovery strategies, managing space and tables, and connecting MySQL to Oracle. The key points discussed include MySQL's product architecture and internal memory structures, filesystem layout for binaries, data and log files, InnoDB and MyISAM storage engines for managing space, and using tools like mysqldump, mysqlhotcopy, and mysqlbinlog for backups and point-in-time recovery.
The document describes the MySQL SYS schema, which provides views, procedures, and functions to help database administrators, developers, and operations teams perform common debugging and tuning tasks. It includes summary views that breakdown user activity by I/O usage, stages, and statement details. The SYS schema also includes views and functions for analyzing I/O performance and retrieving the latest file I/O events. It can be installed on MySQL servers to provide a standardized way of accessing performance data.
The document discusses developing plugins for the MySQL INFORMATION_SCHEMA by creating custom tables. It provides steps to create a simple "Hello World" plugin that defines a table with two columns and fills it with sample data. The document also describes how to build and install the plugin so it can be queried from INFORMATION_SCHEMA like a regular table.
Instrumenting plugins for Performance SchemaMark Leith
This document discusses how to instrument plugins for the MySQL Performance Schema to provide visibility into plugin operations and avoid "black holes" in performance data. It covers the main interfaces for instrumenting threads, file/memory/network operations. An example audit plugin is provided that instruments mutexes, files, stages. The Performance Schema output shows the staged, waited events for a query.
This document discusses the Performance Schema in MySQL, which records instrumentation data to help profile and monitor database activity. It provides an overview of the Performance Schema's components and tables, how it has evolved between MySQL versions to include more metrics and functionality, and examples of how to query the tables to analyze wait events, statements, stages and other performance data.
The document discusses NoSQL APIs in MySQL. It provides an overview of the memcached caching system and the history of the HandlerSocket protocol. It then describes the NoSQL interface introduced in MySQL 5.6, which allows for memcached-style operations on MySQL data. It notes that MySQL 5.7 further improved the performance and scalability of this interface.
This document provides an overview of MySQL server performance tuning. It discusses laying the foundation for performance tuning by examining the server, OS, network and filesystem. It also covers examining current server settings and status variables, and tuning various aspects of MySQL like InnoDB, MyISAM, queries and session settings. The document aims to provide guidance on areas to optimize to improve MySQL server performance.
MySQL 5.7: Performance Schema ImprovementsMark Leith
This document discusses improvements to the Performance Schema instrumentation in MySQL 5.7. It provides an overview of what Performance Schema is, how it has evolved from versions 5.5 to 5.6, and key improvements in 5.7, including better memory instrumentation, metadata locking instrumentation, and replication monitoring capabilities.
MySQL Troubleshooting with the Performance SchemaSveta Smirnova
This document discusses using the Performance Schema in MySQL to troubleshoot performance issues. It provides an overview of the Performance Schema and what information it collects. It then discusses how to use specific Performance Schema tables like events_statements_history_long, events_stages_history_long, and others to identify statements that examine too many rows, issues with index usage, and which internal operations are taking a long time. The document provides examples of queries to run and what to look for in the Performance Schema output to help troubleshoot and optimize SQL statements.
This document provides an overview of the MySQL sys schema. It discusses how sys schema provides views and functions on top of the Performance Schema to implement common DBA and developer use cases. It covers installing sys schema, the various formatting and helper functions it includes, and the summary views it provides for analyzing user activity, I/O, schema objects and more.
This document discusses various MySQL performance metrics that are important to measure from within the database, operating system, and application. It outlines key InnoDB internal structures like the buffer pool and log system. Specific metrics that provide insight into buffer pool usage, page churn, and log writes are highlighted. Optimizing the working set size and ensuring sufficient free space in the log files are important factors for performance.
This document summarizes new features in MySQL replication introduced in versions 5.6 and 5.7. Key features discussed include binary log group commit for improved performance, optimized row-based replication with partial binary logging, multi-threaded slave replication, global transaction identifiers for topologies with multiple masters, transactional metadata storage, and binary log event checksums. The document provides examples and explanations of how these features improve high availability, scalability and reliability of MySQL replication deployments.
The document provides an overview of MySQL Group Replication, which is a multi-master update anywhere replication plugin for MySQL that provides built-in automatic distributed recovery, conflict detection, and group membership. It allows for active/active update anywhere setups, automates group reconfiguration, and provides a highly available distributed database service. The document discusses the theory behind MySQL Group Replication, provides examples of how to use it, and concludes by discussing its benefits and future releases.
The document outlines changes and new features in MySQL versions 5.7 through upcoming releases. Key points include:
- MySQL 5.7 development follows a milestone release process to stabilize new features before general availability. Four development milestone releases have been completed so far.
- Notable 5.7 features include statement timeouts, change replication without stopping SQL threads, and performance improvements like optimized UNION ALL queries.
- Some existing functionality will change in 5.7, like making replication more durable by default and producing errors for queries with only partial GROUP BY clauses.
- Ongoing efforts include refactoring and improving InnoDB, the optimizer, and other components for better performance and scalability. New features in development
The document discusses managing and tuning MySQL. It covers tuning considerations for go-live, planning for outages, upgrading MySQL, using the MySQL Performance Schema to identify bottlenecks and problematic queries, and monitoring metrics to tune performance.
These are the slides I used to present "MySQL Performance Schema" at FOSSASIA, 2015 Singapore. It gives an overview of Performance Schema and also explains how it could be used to diagnose issues using few use cases.
The State of the Dolphin, MySQL Keynote at Percona Live Europe 2019, Amsterda...Geir Høydalsvik
This document provides an overview of the state of MySQL 8.0 including new features like hash joins, EXPLAIN ANALYZE, CLONE, and InnoDB Cluster. It discusses how CLONE enables fast instance provisioning and how InnoDB Cluster automates this process. The document demonstrates using MySQL Shell to configure, create, and manage an InnoDB Cluster deployment.
This document summarizes a presentation about new features and changes coming in MySQL 5.7. Key points include: MySQL 5.7 will include performance improvements, more robust transaction handling and memory instrumentation. However, some backwards incompatible changes will be needed to improve the architecture. The presentation outlines several proposed changes, such as making replication more durable by default and changing the default SQL mode to STRICT. It also discusses new features for InnoDB and the optimizer.
Mysql User Camp : 20th June - Mysql New FeaturesTarique Saleem
This document discusses new features in MySQL 5.7 and NoSQL support in MySQL. Some key points:
- MySQL 5.7 includes improvements to InnoDB for better transactional performance and scalability, as well as enhancements to replication, security, and other areas.
- NoSQL support allows direct access to MySQL data via Memcached APIs for simpler and faster key-value access while maintaining ACID guarantees.
- Benchmarks show NoSQL inserts into MySQL can be up to 9x faster than SQL inserts, and MySQL 5.7 can achieve over 1 million queries per second.
Mysql User Camp : 20-June-14 : Mysql New features and NoSQL SupportMysql User Camp
This slide was presented at Mysql User Camp Event on 20-June-14 at Oracle bangalore. This presentation gives a good insight about New Features in Mysql 5.7 DMR 4 and Nosql Support in Mysql.
The document discusses various considerations for managing and tuning MySQL performance, including:
- Performance testing to measure success and ensure key metrics are monitored.
- Having a suitable backup strategy that supports requirements for backups, restores, and regulatory compliance.
- Ensuring high availability designs match actual uptime needs and failover policies and procedures are in place.
- Planning for data and throughput growth over time.
- Tuning at the hardware, configuration, schema, and query levels to optimize performance.
Netherlands Tech Tour - 06 MySQL Enterprise MonitorMark Swarbrick
This document provides an overview of MySQL Enterprise Monitor, a tool for monitoring and managing MySQL database performance. It discusses key features like real-time monitoring of MySQL performance and availability, query analysis capabilities to identify poorly performing queries, and disk monitoring for capacity planning. The document also highlights new features in version 3.0 such as auto-scheduling of monitoring policies and zero configuration query analysis using MySQL Performance Schema.
The document discusses ways to improve the performance of Oracle SOA Suite 11g. Some key points include:
1. Upgrading to Oracle SOA Suite 11g Patch Set 3 and switching from Sun JDK to JRockit JDK can provide significant performance boosts of up to 32%.
2. Optimizing logging levels and audit settings, such as changing the audit level from Development to Production, can improve performance by 46-92%.
3. Increasing the number of Mediator worker threads for asynchronous services results in a 30% performance improvement.
Similar to Performance Schema and Sys Schema in MySQL 5.7 (20)
The MySQL sys schema was integrated fully into MySQL Server from version 5.7.7. Whether you are a DBA trying to determine where the resources are being used on your database instance and by whom, or a developer trying to figure out why your MySQL statements are running too slowly, the MySQL sys schema can help. Join this session to learn how to better use the MySQL sys schema to answer your day-to-day questions—from the original developer of the MySQL sys schema. The MySQL sys schema was integrated fully into MySQL Server from version 5.7.7. Whether you are a DBA trying to determine where the resources are being used on your database instance and by whom, or a developer trying to figure out why your MySQL statements are running too slowly, the MySQL sys schema can help. Join this session to learn how to better use the MySQL sys schema to answer your day-to-day questions—from the original developer of the MySQL sys schema.
Introduction to MySQL Enterprise MonitorMark Leith
The document is a presentation on MySQL Enterprise Monitor (MEM) by Mark Leith of Oracle. It introduces MEM as a distributed monitoring system for MySQL with a central Service Manager and agents installed on monitored hosts. The presentation includes sections on MEM architecture showing its core components, and a demo of features in the MEM UI like viewing instances, advisors, events, graphs, and query analysis.
This presentation discusses MySQL administration and monitoring. It covers basic command line tools for MySQL, internal schemas like mysql and information_schema, backup and recovery options like mysqldump and replication. GUI tools like MySQL Workbench are presented for administration. MySQL Enterprise Monitor is discussed for distributed monitoring of MySQL environments.
The document describes Performance Schema and ps_helper. Performance Schema is a feature in MySQL that collects runtime performance data and ps_helper is a tool that makes Performance Schema data easier to understand. It provides views, functions and stored procedures to summarize Performance Schema data for common use cases like analyzing user activity and statements.
This document summarizes MySQL's monitoring mechanisms and how they have evolved over time. It discusses tools like SHOW statements, INFORMATION_SCHEMA, slow/general query logs, and EXPLAIN that provided limited visibility in past versions. MySQL 5.5 introduced the Performance Schema framework for detailed instrumentation. Subsequent versions have expanded instrumentation to provide more developer-focused statistics on statements, stages, I/O, locks and more. New INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables in 5.6 provide additional InnoDB statistics on data dictionary, buffer pool, transactions and compression. The optimizer trace exposes query transformations. Enhanced EXPLAIN now supports more statement types and future improvements will provide a structured EXPLAIN output.
Getting to Know MySQL Enterprise MonitorMark Leith
MySQL Enterprise Monitor is the monitoring and management solution for DBAs and developers delivered as part of MySQL Enterprise Edition. It provides background monitoring, alerting, trending, and analysis of the MySQL database and the statement traffic that is running within it.
View this session to learn how to install/configure, customize, and use MySQL Enterprise Monitor to suit your environment. Whether you use a single server or have hundreds of instances, MySQL Enterprise Monitor can provide great insights into how your environment is performing.
The 5.5 and 5.6 releases of MySQL introduce several new mechanisms that provide improved monitoring and performance tuning functionality. Examples are performance schemas, InnoDB metrics tables, optimizer trace, and extended explain functionality. This session outlines the vision for monitoring-related functionality in MySQL and presents an overview of the new mechanisms. It shows how these are integrated with MySQL management tools. Furthermore, it discusses how these mechanisms can be utilized by application developers, DBAs, and production engineers for tracking down performance issues and monitoring production systems.
How RPA Help in the Transportation and Logistics Industry.pptxSynapseIndia
Revolutionize your transportation processes with our cutting-edge RPA software. Automate repetitive tasks, reduce costs, and enhance efficiency in the logistics sector with our advanced solutions.
What Not to Document and Why_ (North Bay Python 2024)Margaret Fero
We’re hopefully all on board with writing documentation for our projects. However, especially with the rise of supply-chain attacks, there are some aspects of our projects that we really shouldn’t document, and should instead remediate as vulnerabilities. If we do document these aspects of a project, it may help someone compromise the project itself or our users. In this talk, you will learn why some aspects of documentation may help attackers more than users, how to recognize those aspects in your own projects, and what to do when you encounter such an issue.
These are slides as presented at North Bay Python 2024, with one minor modification to add the URL of a tweet screenshotted in the presentation.
Sustainability requires ingenuity and stewardship. Did you know Pigging Solutions pigging systems help you achieve your sustainable manufacturing goals AND provide rapid return on investment.
How? Our systems recover over 99% of product in transfer piping. Recovering trapped product from transfer lines that would otherwise become flush-waste, means you can increase batch yields and eliminate flush waste. From raw materials to finished product, if you can pump it, we can pig it.
INDIAN AIR FORCE FIGHTER PLANES LIST.pdfjackson110191
These fighter aircraft have uses outside of traditional combat situations. They are essential in defending India's territorial integrity, averting dangers, and delivering aid to those in need during natural calamities. Additionally, the IAF improves its interoperability and fortifies international military alliances by working together and conducting joint exercises with other air forces.
Paradigm Shifts in User Modeling: A Journey from Historical Foundations to Em...Erasmo Purificato
Slide of the tutorial entitled "Paradigm Shifts in User Modeling: A Journey from Historical Foundations to Emerging Trends" held at UMAP'24: 32nd ACM Conference on User Modeling, Adaptation and Personalization (July 1, 2024 | Cagliari, Italy)
this resume for sadika shaikh bca studentSadikaShaikh7
I am a dedicated BCA student with a strong foundation in web technologies, including PHP and MySQL. I have hands-on experience in Java and Python, and a solid understanding of data structures. My technical skills are complemented by my ability to learn quickly and adapt to new challenges in the ever-evolving field of computer science.
Quality Patents: Patents That Stand the Test of TimeAurora Consulting
Is your patent a vanity piece of paper for your office wall? Or is it a reliable, defendable, assertable, property right? The difference is often quality.
Is your patent simply a transactional cost and a large pile of legal bills for your startup? Or is it a leverageable asset worthy of attracting precious investment dollars, worth its cost in multiples of valuation? The difference is often quality.
Is your patent application only good enough to get through the examination process? Or has it been crafted to stand the tests of time and varied audiences if you later need to assert that document against an infringer, find yourself litigating with it in an Article 3 Court at the hands of a judge and jury, God forbid, end up having to defend its validity at the PTAB, or even needing to use it to block pirated imports at the International Trade Commission? The difference is often quality.
Quality will be our focus for a good chunk of the remainder of this season. What goes into a quality patent, and where possible, how do you get it without breaking the bank?
** Episode Overview **
In this first episode of our quality series, Kristen Hansen and the panel discuss:
⦿ What do we mean when we say patent quality?
⦿ Why is patent quality important?
⦿ How to balance quality and budget
⦿ The importance of searching, continuations, and draftsperson domain expertise
⦿ Very practical tips, tricks, examples, and Kristen’s Musts for drafting quality applications
https://www.aurorapatents.com/patently-strategic-podcast.html
The Rise of Supernetwork Data Intensive ComputingLarry Smarr
Invited Remote Lecture to SC21
The International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis
St. Louis, Missouri
November 18, 2021
How Netflix Builds High Performance Applications at Global ScaleScyllaDB
We all want to build applications that are blazingly fast. We also want to scale them to users all over the world. Can the two happen together? Can users in the slowest of environments also get a fast experience? Learn how we do this at Netflix: how we understand every user's needs and preferences and build high performance applications that work for every user, every time.
GDG Cloud Southlake #34: Neatsun Ziv: Automating AppsecJames Anderson
The lecture titled "Automating AppSec" delves into the critical challenges associated with manual application security (AppSec) processes and outlines strategic approaches for incorporating automation to enhance efficiency, accuracy, and scalability. The lecture is structured to highlight the inherent difficulties in traditional AppSec practices, emphasizing the labor-intensive triage of issues, the complexity of identifying responsible owners for security flaws, and the challenges of implementing security checks within CI/CD pipelines. Furthermore, it provides actionable insights on automating these processes to not only mitigate these pains but also to enable a more proactive and scalable security posture within development cycles.
The Pains of Manual AppSec:
This section will explore the time-consuming and error-prone nature of manually triaging security issues, including the difficulty of prioritizing vulnerabilities based on their actual risk to the organization. It will also discuss the challenges in determining ownership for remediation tasks, a process often complicated by cross-functional teams and microservices architectures. Additionally, the inefficiencies of manual checks within CI/CD gates will be examined, highlighting how they can delay deployments and introduce security risks.
Automating CI/CD Gates:
Here, the focus shifts to the automation of security within the CI/CD pipelines. The lecture will cover methods to seamlessly integrate security tools that automatically scan for vulnerabilities as part of the build process, thereby ensuring that security is a core component of the development lifecycle. Strategies for configuring automated gates that can block or flag builds based on the severity of detected issues will be discussed, ensuring that only secure code progresses through the pipeline.
Triaging Issues with Automation:
This segment addresses how automation can be leveraged to intelligently triage and prioritize security issues. It will cover technologies and methodologies for automatically assessing the context and potential impact of vulnerabilities, facilitating quicker and more accurate decision-making. The use of automated alerting and reporting mechanisms to ensure the right stakeholders are informed in a timely manner will also be discussed.
Identifying Ownership Automatically:
Automating the process of identifying who owns the responsibility for fixing specific security issues is critical for efficient remediation. This part of the lecture will explore tools and practices for mapping vulnerabilities to code owners, leveraging version control and project management tools.
Three Tips to Scale the Shift Left Program:
Finally, the lecture will offer three practical tips for organizations looking to scale their Shift Left security programs. These will include recommendations on fostering a security culture within development teams, employing DevSecOps principles to integrate security throughout the development
UiPath Community Day Kraków: Devs4Devs ConferenceUiPathCommunity
We are honored to launch and host this event for our UiPath Polish Community, with the help of our partners - Proservartner!
We certainly hope we have managed to spike your interest in the subjects to be presented and the incredible networking opportunities at hand, too!
Check out our proposed agenda below 👇👇
08:30 ☕ Welcome coffee (30')
09:00 Opening note/ Intro to UiPath Community (10')
Cristina Vidu, Global Manager, Marketing Community @UiPath
Dawid Kot, Digital Transformation Lead @Proservartner
09:10 Cloud migration - Proservartner & DOVISTA case study (30')
Marcin Drozdowski, Automation CoE Manager @DOVISTA
Pawel Kamiński, RPA developer @DOVISTA
Mikolaj Zielinski, UiPath MVP, Senior Solutions Engineer @Proservartner
09:40 From bottlenecks to breakthroughs: Citizen Development in action (25')
Pawel Poplawski, Director, Improvement and Automation @McCormick & Company
Michał Cieślak, Senior Manager, Automation Programs @McCormick & Company
10:05 Next-level bots: API integration in UiPath Studio (30')
Mikolaj Zielinski, UiPath MVP, Senior Solutions Engineer @Proservartner
10:35 ☕ Coffee Break (15')
10:50 Document Understanding with my RPA Companion (45')
Ewa Gruszka, Enterprise Sales Specialist, AI & ML @UiPath
11:35 Power up your Robots: GenAI and GPT in REFramework (45')
Krzysztof Karaszewski, Global RPA Product Manager
12:20 🍕 Lunch Break (1hr)
13:20 From Concept to Quality: UiPath Test Suite for AI-powered Knowledge Bots (30')
Kamil Miśko, UiPath MVP, Senior RPA Developer @Zurich Insurance
13:50 Communications Mining - focus on AI capabilities (30')
Thomasz Wierzbicki, Business Analyst @Office Samurai
14:20 Polish MVP panel: Insights on MVP award achievements and career profiling