| eG Monitoring |
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Measures reported by NutAHVVmStatusTest Live migration is supported on an Acropolis Hypervisor (AHV) cluster. Live migration is the ability to move a running VM from one host (node) to another in the same cluster, without any downtime or loss of connectivity. Live migration can be initiated manually or automatically. While manual migration can be initiated via the Prism interface, automatic VM migration is triggered by the Acropolis Dynamic Resource Scheduler or the VM High Availability (VMHA) capability of an Acropolis cluster. The scheduler monitors each individual node's CPU and memory utilization. In the event where a node's CPU allocation breaches its threshold (currently 85% of host CPU), the scheduler automatically migrates VMs off that host to re-balance the workload. VMHA, if enabled for a cluster, ensures that critical VMs are automatically restarted on another Acropolis Hypervisor (AHV) host in the cluster if a host fails. Where migration is automatic, administrators may want to keep close track of VM movement, so that they can accurately tell on which host a VM is operating at a given point in time. The NutAHVVmStatusTest test provides administrators with this insight. This test indicates whether any guests have migrated to or from the virtual server, and if so, which ones are those. In addition, the test also enables administrators to determine how many guests have registered with the Acropolis server, and how many of these are currently running. Additionally, for VDI environments, the test reports the number and names of VMs with users logged in and the ones without any users logged in; this way, unused VMs that are unnecessarily hogging resources. The measures made by this test are as follows:
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