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VMware Performance and Capacity Management, Second Edition

You're reading from   VMware Performance and Capacity Management, Second Edition Master SDDC Operations with proven best practices

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785880315
Length 546 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Sunny Dua Sunny Dua
Author Profile Icon Sunny Dua
Sunny Dua
Iwan 'e1' Rahabok Iwan 'e1' Rahabok
Author Profile Icon Iwan 'e1' Rahabok
Iwan 'e1' Rahabok
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface Part 1 FREE CHAPTER
1. VM – It Is Not What You Think! 2. Software-Defined Data Centers 3. SDDC Management 4. Performance Monitoring 5. Capacity Monitoring Part 2
6. Performance-Monitoring Dashboards 7. Capacity-Monitoring Dashboards 8. Specific-Purpose Dashboards 9. Infrastructure Monitoring Using Blue Medora 10. Application Monitoring Using Blue Medora Part 3
11. SDDC Key Counters 12. CPU Counters 13. Memory Counters 14. Storage Counters 15. Network Counters Index

Memory counters at the VM level

vCenter 6.0 Update 1 provides 28 counters for RAM in order to track the various features of VM memory management. Compared to physical servers, where you normally just monitor the memory utilization and swapping, these are a lot counters. All the counters are shown in the next screenshot. With 28 counters per VM, a vSphere environment with 1,000 VMs will have 28,000 counters just for VM RAM!

It is certainly too many to be monitored as part of overall management. The latter part of this chapter will share the three key counters you need to track to manage performance and capacity.

Memory counters at the VM level

VM – RAM counters

At the ESXi level, vCenter provides 33 counters. As you can expect, some of the counters at the ESXi level are essentially the sum of associated counters of all VMs running in the host, plus vmkernel's own memory counters (since it also consumes memory). This aggregation is useful as VMs do move around within the cluster. Since there are a lot of counters...

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