# Collect application metrics with Netdata Netdata instantly collects per-second metrics from many different types of applications running on your systems, such as web servers, databases, message brokers, email servers, search platforms, and much more. Metrics collectors are pre-installed with every Netdata Agent and usually require zero configuration. Netdata also collects and visualizes resource utilization per application on Linux systems using `apps.plugin`. [**apps.plugin**](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/collectors/apps.plugin/README.md) looks at the Linux process tree every second, much like `top` or `ps fax`, and collects resource utilization information on every running process. By reading the process tree, Netdata shows CPU, disk, networking, processes, and eBPF for every application or Linux user. Unlike `top` or `ps fax`, Netdata adds a layer of meaningful visualization on top of the process tree metrics, such as grouping applications into useful dimensions, and then creates per-application charts under the **Applications** section of a Netdata dashboard, per-user charts under **Users**, and per-user group charts under **User Groups**. Our most popular application collectors: - [Prometheus endpoints](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/prometheus/README.md): Gathers metrics from one or more Prometheus endpoints that use the OpenMetrics exposition format. Auto-detects more than 600 endpoints. - [Web server logs (Apache, NGINX)](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/weblog/README.md): Tail access logs and provide very detailed web server performance statistics. This module is able to parse 200k+ rows in less than half a second. - [MySQL](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/mysql/README.md): Collect database global, replication, and per-user statistics. - [Redis](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/redis/README.md): Monitor database status by reading the server's response to the `INFO` command. - [Apache](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/apache/README.md): Collect Apache web server performance metrics via the `server-status?auto` endpoint. - [Nginx](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/nginx/README.md): Monitor web server status information by gathering metrics via `ngx_http_stub_status_module`. - [Postgres](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/postgres/README.md): Collect database health and performance metrics. - [ElasticSearch](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/elasticsearch/README.md): Collect search engine performance and health statistics. Optionally collects per-index metrics. - [PHP-FPM](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/phpfpm/README.md): Collect application summary and processes health metrics by scraping the status page (`/status?full`). Our [supported collectors list](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/collectors/COLLECTORS.md#service-and-application-collectors) shows all Netdata's application metrics collectors, including those for containers/k8s clusters. ## Collect metrics from applications running on Windows Netdata is fully capable of collecting and visualizing metrics from applications running on Windows systems. The only caveat is that you must [install Netdata](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/get-started.mdx) on a separate system or a compatible VM because there is no native Windows version of the Netdata Agent. Once you have Netdata running on that separate system, you can follow the [enable and configure doc](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/collect/enable-configure.md) to tell the collector to look for exposed metrics on the Windows system's IP address or hostname, plus the applicable port. For example, you have a MySQL database with a root password of `my-secret-pw` running on a Windows system with the IP address 203.0.113.0. you can configure the [MySQL collector](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/mysql/README.md) to look at `203.0.113.0:3306`: ```yml jobs: - name: local dsn: root:my-secret-pw@tcp(203.0.113.0:3306)/ ``` This same logic applies to any application in our [supported collectors list](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/collectors/COLLECTORS.md#service-and-application-collectors) that can run on Windows. ## What's next? If you haven't yet seen the [supported collectors list](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/collectors/COLLECTORS.md) give it a once-over for any additional applications you may want to monitor using Netdata's native collectors, or the [generic Prometheus collector](https://github.com/netdata/go.d.plugin/blob/master/modules/prometheus/README.md). Collecting all the available metrics on your nodes, and across your entire infrastructure, is just one piece of the puzzle. Next, learn more about Netdata's famous real-time visualizations by [seeing an overview of your infrastructure](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/visualize/overview-infrastructure.md) using Netdata Cloud.