Cluster Compute
Resource Alert Definitions
The vCenter
adapter provides alert definitions that generate alerts on the Cluster Compute
Resource objects in your environment.
Health/Symptom-Based
These alert definitions have
the following impact and criticality information.
- Impact
- Health
- Criticality
- Symptom-based
Alert Definition
| Symptoms
| Recommendations
|
---|---|---|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
CPU contention caused by less than half of the virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
CPU contention caused by more than half of the virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
CPU contention caused by overpopulation of virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has high CPU workload. | Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
memory contention caused by less than half of the virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
memory contention caused by more than half of the virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has
memory contention caused by overpopulation of virtual machines.
| Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
More than 5% of virtual machines in the
cluster have memory contention due to memory compression, ballooning or
swapping.
|
|
|
Fully-automated DRS-enabled cluster has high memory workload and
contention. | Symptoms include all of the following:
|
|
vSphere High Availability (HA) failover resources are
insufficient | vSphere High Availability (HA) failover resources are
insufficient | To resolve this problem, use similar CPU and memory reservations for all
virtual machines in the cluster. If this solution is not possible,
consider using a different vSphere HA admission control policy, such
as reserving a percentage of cluster resource for failover.
Alternatively, you can use advanced options to specify a cap for the
slot size. For more information, see the vSphere Availability Guide.
Hosts that have vSphere HA agent errors are not good candidates for
providing failover capacity in the cluster and their resources are
not considered for vSphere HA admission control purposes. If many
hosts have a vSphere HA agent error, vCenter Server generates this
event leading to the fault. To resolve vSphere HA agent errors,
check the event logs for the hosts to determine the cause of the
errors. After you resolve any configuration problems, reconfigure
vSphere HA on the affected hosts or on the cluster. |
vSphere
HA
master missing.
| vCenter Server is unable to find a master
vSphere HA agent (fault symptom)
| |
Proactive HA provider has reported health
degradation on the underlying hosts.
| Proactive HA provider reported host health
degradation.
| Contact your hardware vendor support.
|