| Measurement |
Description |
Measurement Unit |
Interpretation |
| Rpc_req_per |
Indicates the percent of MAPI RPCs that are currently in progress in this database as compared to the maximum allowed. |
Percent |
If the value of this measure keeps growing close to 100% at a rapid pace, it could indicate increased RPC load or a bottleneck in one or more resources. If the value touches 100%, then the mailbox database will deny new connections.
To resolve this problem, determine the resources that are creating a bottleneck, and then try to mitigate the problem. Possible bottlenecks are disk reads or writes, processor time, available memory, and network configuration. |
| Act_mailbox |
Indicates the number of active mailboxes in this database. |
Number |
Use the detailed diagnosis of this measure to know the names of the active mailboxes and the number of items in each mailbox. |
| Db_lev_man_sec |
Indicates the rate at which database level maintenances are processed by this database. |
Maintenances/Sec |
A high value is desired for this measure. Compare the value of this measure across databases to know which database is processing database-level maintenance tasks slowly. |
| Li_ful_ref_sec |
Indicates the number of lazy indexes being full refreshed per second by this database. |
Refresh/Sec |
|
| Li_inc_ref_sec |
Indicates the number of lazy indexes being incrementally refreshed per second by this database. |
Refresh/Sec |
|
| Li_inv_sec |
Indicates the rate at which lazy indexes are being invalidated by this database due to the version incompatibility. |
Invalidation/Sec |
A low value is desired for this measure. |
| Li_cre_sec |
Indicates the rate at which this database creates lazy indexes. |
Created/Sec |
|
| Li_del_sec |
Indicates the rate at which this database deletes lazy indexes. |
Deleted/Sec |
|
| Ml_main_item |
Indicates the number of mailbox maintenance items in this database. |
Number |
|
| Ml_Main_sec |
Indicates the rate at which this database processes mailbox level maintenances. |
Maintenances/Sec |
A high value is desired for this measure. Compare the value of this measure across databases to know which database is processing mailbox-level maintenance tasks slowly. |
| Mw_main_item |
Indicates the number of mailboxes with maintenance items. |
Number |
|
| Msg_deliver_sec |
Indicates the number of messages delivered to this database per second. |
Msgs/Sec |
|
| Mag_submit_sec |
Indicates the rate at which messages were submitted by this database for delivery. |
Msgs/Sec |
Ideally, the value of this measure should be high. Compare the value of this measure across databases to in which database mail delivery is bottlenecked. |
| No_bac_task |
Indicates the number of background tasks currently executing in this database. |
Number |
|
| No_wlm_tab_main |
Indicates the number of active WLM LogicalIndex maintenance tables under maintenance in this database. |
Number |
|
| No_mb_wlm_main |
Indicates the number of mailboxes in this database that are marked for WLM LogicalIndex maintenance table maintenance. |
Number |
|
| No_pro_main_task |
Indicates the number of maintenance tasks that are currently processed by this database. |
Number |
This is a good indicator of the maintenance workload on the database. |
| No_sch_main_task |
Indicates the number of LogicalIndex maintenance tasks scheduled for this database. |
Number |
This is a good indicator of the potential maintenance workload on the database. |
| Prop_msg_sec |
Indicates the rate at which properties were promoted for messages in this database. |
Msgs/Sec |
Property promotion refers to the process of extracting values from properties of a message and writing those values to corresponding columns on the database where the document is stored. When the message property changes, the changes can be automatically written back to the database. |
| Prop_task |
Indicates the rate at which properties were promoted for messages in this database. |
Msgs/Sec |
Property promotion refers to the process of extracting values from properties of a message and writing those values to corresponding columns on the database where the document is stored. When the message property changes, the changes can be automatically written back to the database. |
| Prop_pro_sec |
Indicates the rate at which properties were promoted for messages in this database. |
Promotions/Sec |
Ideally, the value of this measure should be high. A low value is indicative of a bottleneck when performing property promotions. |
| Quar_mail_cnt |
Indicates the number of mailboxes in this database that are quarantined. |
Number |
Ideally, the value of this measure should be 0. A non-zero value is indicative of a quarantined mailbox in the database.
Quarantining is designed to detect clients that are taking up too much of the Store's attention because something is going wrong. MAPI clients like Outlook use multiple threads within the Store process when they connect to mailboxes. If one or more of these threads “freeze” for some reason, they can cause the Store to consume more CPU than it should in an attempt to service the thread. The problem might be caused by corrupt mailbox data or a software bug in either the client or Store process or some other reason such as network failure. In any case, the freezing of threads or their abnormal termination is bad news!
Quarantining is performed by a background thread that runs every two hours within the Store to check the number of crashes experienced by mailboxes. If a mailbox exceeds the crash threshold it is deemed to be a threat to the overall stability of the Store and is therefore put into quarantine.
Compare the value of this measure across databases to know which database has the maximum number of quarantined mailboxes. If this value is very high, it could be because a very small crash threshold has been set for that database. If so, you may want to change this crash threshold, so that fewer mailboxes are quarantined. |
| Rpc_avg_lat |
Indicates the amount of time spent by this database in RPC request processing. |
Secs |
This value should be below 0.05 seconds at all times. A slowdown in RPC packet processing can adversely impact the user experience. |
| Rpc_oper_sec |
Indicates the rate at which this database processes RPC operations. |
Operations/Sec |
Generally, spikes in RPC requests that do not increase Rpc_oper_sec indicate that there are bottlenecks preventing the store from fulfilling the requests in a timely manner. It is relatively simple to identify where the bottlenecks are occurring with regards to Rpc_req and Rpc_oper_sec. If the client experiences delays, but the Rpc_req are zero and the Rpc_oper_sec is low, the performance problem is happening before Exchange processes the requests (that is, before the Microsoft Exchange Information Store service actually gets the incoming requests). All other combinations point to a problem either while Exchange processes the requests or after Exchange processes those requests. |
| Rpc_pack_sec |
Indicates the rate at which RPC packets are processed by this database. |
Packets/Sec |
A consistent drop in this value could indicate a slowdown in RPC request processing. |
| Rpc_call |
Indicates the total number of async notification calls pending in all RPC context handle pools of this database. |
Number |
Async MAPI Notifications use Asynchronous RPC to receive notifications from the Exchange Server. This allows MAPI to park a request with the Exchange Server and not have to wait for the next remote operation to get notifications. |
| Rpc_pool |
Indicates the number of active RPC context handle pools of this database. |
Number |
|
| Rpc_req |
Indicates the number of MAPI RPC requests currently in progress in this database. |
Number |
This is a good indicator of the current RPC workload of the database. |