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vSphere Virtual Machine Management

You're reading from   vSphere Virtual Machine Management This tutorial will help VMware administrators fine-tune and expand their expertise with vSphere. From creating and configuring virtual machines to optimizing performance, it's all here in a crystal clear series of chapters.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782172185
Length 326 pages
Edition Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Rebecca Fitzhugh Rebecca Fitzhugh
Author Profile Icon Rebecca Fitzhugh
Rebecca Fitzhugh
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

vSphere Virtual Machine Management
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Virtual Machine Concepts FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating a Virtual Machine Using the Wizard 3. Other Ways to Provision a Virtual Machine 4. Advanced Virtual Machine Settings 5. Managing Multitiered Applications with vApps 6. Virtual Machine Performance and Resource Allocation 7. Monitoring Virtual Machines 8. Migrating Virtual Machines 9. Balancing Resource Utilization and Availability 10. Virtual Machine Design Index

Using alarms


An alarm is a notification in response to a selected condition or event for an object in the vCenter Server inventory. There are many predefined alarms for most objects within the vCenter Server inventory. The predefined alarms are configurable to an extent, but if the alarm doesn't address a specific event or condition that you want to monitor, then a custom alarm can be defined.

Custom alarms can be created as either condition-based or event-based. Condition-based alarms monitor the current condition or state of an object whereas event-based alarms monitor events that occur within vCenter.

Some examples of condition-based alarms include:

  • An ESXi host gets disconnected from vCenter

  • A virtual machine is using 90 percent of its total memory

  • A datastore's total space is 85 percent provisioned

Some examples of event-based alarms include:

  • A vSphere license has expired

  • SSH was enabled on an ESXi host

  • A virtual machine was migrated

What you are trying to monitor will dictate which type of alarm...

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