The Red Hat Ecosystem Catalog is the official source for discovering and learning more about the Red Hat Ecosystem of both Red Hat and certified third-party products and services.
We’re the world’s leading provider of enterprise open source solutions—including Linux, cloud, container, and Kubernetes. We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.
Elastic APM is an application performance monitoring system built on the Elastic Stack. It allows you to monitor software services and applications in real-time, by collecting detailed performance information on response time for incoming requests, database queries, calls to caches, external HTTP requests, and more. This makes it easy to pinpoint and fix performance problems quickly.
Elastic APM also automatically collects unhandled errors and exceptions. Errors are grouped based primarily on the stacktrace, so you can identify new errors as they appear and keep an eye on how many times specific errors happen.
Metrics are another vital source of information when debugging production systems. Elastic APM agents automatically pick up basic host-level metrics and agent-specific metrics, like JVM metrics in the Java Agent, and Go runtime metrics in the Go Agent.
Learn more about our [APM solution](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/apm/get-started/current/overview.html)
The following information was extracted from the dockerfile and other sources.
| Canonical image ID | APM |
| Summary | apm-server |
| Description | Elastic APM Server |
| Provider | Elastic |
| Maintainer | infra@elastic.co |
| Repository name | apm-server |
| Image version | 9.3.1 |
| Architecture | amd64 |
The following evidence verifies the image's security and build process compliance with mandated internal standards.
| Security audit date | 2/24/2026, 12:51:43 PM |
| Container certification |
Use a registry service account token to authenticate your container client. This allows you to pull images without using your personal Red Hat credentials, which is recommended for CI/CD pipelines and automated deployments.
Run the following command, then enter your registry token credentials when prompted by the terminal.
Pull the image
Use the following instructions to get images from a Red Hat container registry using your Red Hat login.
Run the following command, then enter your login credentials when prompted by the terminal.
Pull the image