Mock sample for your project: Azure Log Analytics - Operations Management API

Integrate with "Azure Log Analytics - Operations Management API" from azure.com in no time with Mockoon's ready to use mock sample

Azure Log Analytics - Operations Management

azure.com

Version: 2015-11-01-preview


Use this API in your project

Speed up your application development by using "Azure Log Analytics - Operations Management API" ready-to-use mock sample. Mocking this API will help you accelerate your development lifecycles and allow you to stop relying on an external API to get the job done. No more API keys to provision, accesses to configure or unplanned downtime, just work.
Enhance your development infrastructure by mocking third party APIs during integrating testing.

Description

Azure Log Analytics API reference for Solution.

Other APIs by azure.com

AuthorizationManagementClient

azure.com
Role based access control provides you a way to apply granular level policy administration down to individual resources or resource groups. These operations enable you to manage role definitions and role assignments. A role definition describes the set of actions that can be performed on resources. A role assignment grants access to Azure Active Directory users.

LogicAppsManagementClient

azure.com

Azure Machine Learning Workspaces

azure.com
These APIs allow end users to operate on Azure Machine Learning Workspace resources.

DiskResourceProviderClient

azure.com
The Disk Resource Provider Client.

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations on Cache entity in your Azure API Management deployment. Azure API Management also allows for caching responses in an external Azure Cache for Redis. For more information refer to External Redis Cache in ApiManagement.

Customer Lockbox

azure.com
Azure Customer Lockbox API Reference

CostManagementClient

azure.com

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations on logger entity Azure API Management deployment.The Logger entity in API Management represents an event sink that you can use to log API Management events. Currently the Logger entity supports logging API Management events to Azure EventHub.

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations on API entity and their Operations associated with your Azure API Management deployment.

ApiManagementClient

azure.com
Use these REST APIs for performing operations on Property entity associated with your Azure API Management deployment. API Management policies are a powerful capability of the system that allow the publisher to change the behavior of the API through configuration. Policies are a collection of statements that are executed sequentially on the request or response of an API. Policy statements can be constructed using literal text values, policy expressions, and properties. Each API Management service instance has a properties collection of key/value pairs that are global to the service instance. These properties can be used to manage constant string values across all API configuration and policies.

Ink Recognizer Client

azure.com
The service is used to perform ink layout and recognition of written words and shapes. Ink strokes passed to the service are recognized and organized into recognition results in the response

Cosmos DB

azure.com
Azure Cosmos DB Database Service Resource Provider REST API

Other APIs in the same category

NetworkManagementClient

azure.com
The Microsoft Azure Network management API provides a RESTful set of web services that interact with Microsoft Azure Networks service to manage your network resources. The API has entities that capture the relationship between an end user and the Microsoft Azure Networks service.

Amazon Kinesis

Amazon Kinesis Data Streams Service API Reference Amazon Kinesis Data Streams is a managed service that scales elastically for real-time processing of streaming big data.

Amazon CloudWatch

Amazon CloudWatch monitors your Amazon Web Services (Amazon Web Services) resources and the applications you run on Amazon Web Services in real time. You can use CloudWatch to collect and track metrics, which are the variables you want to measure for your resources and applications. CloudWatch alarms send notifications or automatically change the resources you are monitoring based on rules that you define. For example, you can monitor the CPU usage and disk reads and writes of your Amazon EC2 instances. Then, use this data to determine whether you should launch additional instances to handle increased load. You can also use this data to stop under-used instances to save money. In addition to monitoring the built-in metrics that come with Amazon Web Services, you can monitor your own custom metrics. With CloudWatch, you gain system-wide visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and operational health.

Amazon SageMaker Runtime

The Amazon SageMaker runtime API.
Amazon MQ is a managed message broker service for Apache ActiveMQ and RabbitMQ that makes it easy to set up and operate message brokers in the cloud. A message broker allows software applications and components to communicate using various programming languages, operating systems, and formal messaging protocols.

FabricAdminClient

azure.com
Storage operation results.

AWS Resource Access Manager

This is the Resource Access Manager API Reference. This documentation provides descriptions and syntax for each of the actions and data types in RAM. RAM is a service that helps you securely share your Amazon Web Services resources across Amazon Web Services accounts and within your organization or organizational units (OUs) in Organizations. For supported resource types, you can also share resources with IAM roles and IAM users. If you have multiple Amazon Web Services accounts, you can use RAM to share those resources with other accounts. To learn more about RAM, see the following resources: Resource Access Manager product page Resource Access Manager User Guide

AWSServerlessApplicationRepository

The AWS Serverless Application Repository makes it easy for developers and enterprises to quickly find
and deploy serverless applications in the AWS Cloud. For more information about serverless applications,
see Serverless Computing and Applications on the AWS website. The AWS Serverless Application Repository is deeply integrated with the AWS Lambda console, so that developers of
all levels can get started with serverless computing without needing to learn anything new. You can use category
keywords to browse for applications such as web and mobile backends, data processing applications, or chatbots.
You can also search for applications by name, publisher, or event source. To use an application, you simply choose it,
configure any required fields, and deploy it with a few clicks. You can also easily publish applications, sharing them publicly with the community at large, or privately
within your team or across your organization. To publish a serverless application (or app), you can use the
AWS Management Console, AWS Command Line Interface (AWS CLI), or AWS SDKs to upload the code. Along with the
code, you upload a simple manifest file, also known as the AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM) template.
For more information about AWS SAM, see AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM) on the AWS Labs
GitHub repository. The AWS Serverless Application Repository Developer Guide contains more information about the two developer
experiences available:
Consuming Applications – Browse for applications and view information about them, including
source code and readme files. Also install, configure, and deploy applications of your choosing.
Publishing Applications – Configure and upload applications to make them available to other
developers, and publish new versions of applications.

AWS Cloud Map

Cloud Map With Cloud Map, you can configure public DNS, private DNS, or HTTP namespaces that your microservice applications run in. When an instance becomes available, you can call the Cloud Map API to register the instance with Cloud Map. For public or private DNS namespaces, Cloud Map automatically creates DNS records and an optional health check. Clients that submit public or private DNS queries, or HTTP requests, for the service receive an answer that contains up to eight healthy records.

Amazon SimpleDB

Amazon SimpleDB is a web service providing the core database functions of data indexing and querying in the cloud. By offloading the time and effort associated with building and operating a web-scale database, SimpleDB provides developers the freedom to focus on application development. A traditional, clustered relational database requires a sizable upfront capital outlay, is complex to design, and often requires extensive and repetitive database administration. Amazon SimpleDB is dramatically simpler, requiring no schema, automatically indexing your data and providing a simple API for storage and access. This approach eliminates the administrative burden of data modeling, index maintenance, and performance tuning. Developers gain access to this functionality within Amazon's proven computing environment, are able to scale instantly, and pay only for what they use. Visit http://aws.amazon.com/simpledb/ for more information.

AWS RDS DataService

Amazon RDS Data Service Amazon RDS provides an HTTP endpoint to run SQL statements on an Amazon Aurora Serverless DB cluster. To run these statements, you work with the Data Service API. For more information about the Data Service API, see Using the Data API for Aurora Serverless in the Amazon Aurora User Guide.

AWS Server Migration Service

AWS Server Migration Service AWS Server Migration Service (AWS SMS) makes it easier and faster for you to migrate your on-premises workloads to AWS. To learn more about AWS SMS, see the following resources: AWS Server Migration Service product page AWS Server Migration Service User Guide