| eG Monitoring |
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Measures reported by VmgUptimeTest In most virtualized environments, it is essential to monitor the uptime of VMs/physical machines hosting critical server applications in the infrastructure. By tracking the uptime of each of the VMs/physical machines, administrators can determine what percentage of time a VM/physical machines has been up. Comparing this value with service level targets, administrators can determine the most trouble-prone areas of the virtualized infrastructure. In some environments, administrators may schedule periodic reboots of their VM/physical machines. By knowing that a specific VM/physical machines has been up for an unusually long time, an administrator may come to know that the scheduled reboot task is not working on a VM/physical machines. The VmgUptimeTest included in the eG agent monitors the uptime of each VM on a XenServer host/physical machines. Outputs of the test:One set of results for every user_on_poweredonphysicaldesktop/virtualdesktop
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Note: If a value less than a minute is configured as the TEST PERIOD of this test, then, the Uptime measure will report the value 0 for Unix VMs (only) until the minute boundary is crossed. For instance, if you configure the Uptime - Guest test to run every 10 seconds, then, for the first 5 test execution cycles (i.e., 10 x 5 = 50 seconds), the Uptime measure will report the value 0 for Unix VMs; however, the sixth time the test executes (i.e, when test execution touches the 1 minute boundary), this measure will report the value 60 seconds for the same VMs. Thereafter, every sixth measurement period will report 60 seconds as the uptime of the Unix VMs. This is because, Unix-based operating systems report uptime only in minutes and not in seconds. |