User Scenario: You See
Problems as You Monitor the State of Your Objects
As you investigate your objects in the
context of this scenario,
VMware Aria Operations
provides details to help you resolve the problems. You analyze the
state of your environment, examine current problems, investigate solutions, and act to
resolve the problems. Verify that you are monitoring one or more
vCenter Server
instances. Verify that you are monitoring one or more .
vCenter Server
instances. See the VMware Aria Operations
Configuration GuideAs a virtual infrastructure administrator, you
regularly browse through
VMware Aria Operations
at various levels so that you know the general
state of the objects in your managed environment. Although no one has called or
emailed, and you do not see any new alerts, you are starting to see that your
cluster is running out of capacity. This scenario refers to objects that are associated
with the VMware vSphere Solution, which connects
VMware Aria Operations
to one or more vCenter Server
instances. The objects in your environment include multiple vCenter Server
instances, data centers, clusters (cluster compute
resources), host systems, resource pools, and virtual machines. As you perform the steps in this scenario, and progress
through the stages of troubleshooting, you learn how to use
VMware Aria Operations
to help you resolve problems. You analyze the
state of the objects in your environment, examine current problems, investigate
solutions, and act to resolve the problems. This scenario shows you how to
evaluate the problems that occur on your objects, and how to resolve problems.
- Using the Events tab, you examine the symptoms that triggered on the objects, determine when the problems that triggered those symptoms occurred, identify the events associated with those problems, and examine the metric values involved.
- On the Details tab, you investigate the metric activity as a graph, list, or distribution chart, and view the heat maps to examine the criticality levels of your objects.
- With the Environment tab, you evaluate the health, risk, and efficiency of various objects as they relate to your overall object hierarchy. You view the object relationships to determine how an object that is in a critical state might be affecting other objects.
To support future
troubleshooting and ongoing maintenance, you can create an alert definition,
and create a dashboard and one or more views. To enforce the rules used to
monitor your objects, you can create and customize operational policies.