eG Innovations
eG Monitor for VMware Infrastructures

Monitoring Solutions for VMware Server Farms

VMware virtual server technologies provide companies with the ability to do more with less resources. However, for a technology that is supposed to make computing easier, virtualization is becoming quite complicated to monitor and manage. Effective monitoring and management is critical for these environments to be adequate replacements for traditional hardware-based infrastructures.

The eG Monitor for VMware infrastructures (the eG VM MonitorTM), part of the eG Enterprise Suite, is a comprehensive solution for monitoring and managing all aspects of virtual hosts and guests, whether the infrastructure is used to support server or desktop applications. Coupled with the ability of the eG Enterprise Suite to monitor over 80 applications, including Citrix, Microsoft, Oracle, IBM, SAP, and others, the eG VM Monitor – with its patent-pending In-N-Out MonitoringTM technology -- provides a comprehensive end-to-end solution for monitoring and managing the performance of virtual IT infrastructures

 

Server-based Computing Environments

Challenges in Monitoring VMware Infrastructures

Since a single VMware® ESX Server is used to host multiple virtual guests, a single malfunctioning application on a guest can degrade the performance seen by applications hosted on the other virtual machines. Besides resource contention among virtual guests, applications executing on the VM console can also affect the performance of the virtual infrastructure. Performance degradations could also occur if a virtual guest is not configured with sufficient resources to handle its workload. Furthermore, VMware® Virtual Center and other SNMP-based monitoring solutions measure the resource usage levels of the virtual machines but do not look in-depth into each guest operating system to detect abnormalities. Deploying agents on each guest machine to track its operation is a time-consuming task, has a higher resource overhead, and involves additional cost.

 

 

Monitoring VMware Guests: eG agents track the performance of each guest relative to shared infrastructure resources (outside view) as well as the workload and application mix of the individual guest themselves (inside view).

In-N-Out VMware Server Monitoring and Root-Cause Diagnosis using eG Enterprise

The eG VM Monitor extends the unique eG single agent technology to virtual environments. Using a patent-pending In-N-Out MonitoringTM approach, the eG VM Monitor provides a comprehensive view of the ESX Server, including the performance of the VM kernel, the console operating system and all of its virtual guests. eG agents only have to be installed on the ESX Servers -- not on individual guests. Using ESX server APIs, the agents provide an “outside view” of a guest’s performance. The relative resource usage levels of the guests show where the performance hogs may lie. To complement the outside view, the eG agent obtains an “inside view” that details the user activity, resource allocation and the application mix running inside the guest operating system. All of the metrics collected by the agents are baselined automatically by the eG VM Monitor, so that IT administrators can be informed proactively of any deviations from the norm. No other virtualization monitoring or management solution offers this combination of features.

 

Monitoring and Reporting of ESX servers: Using a custom ESX Server model, the eG VM Monitor correlates performance across the host and guest VMs. Extensive pre-built reports enable rapid identification of bottlenecks and streamline capacity planning.

From a monitoring and management standpoint, the eG monitor for VMware infrastructures goes well beyond managing virtualized servers as discrete entities. End-to-end business service views show the applications and network devices that support each business service, and the inter-dependencies among them. Applications are associated with the virtual machines they run on, and each virtual machine is mapped to the physical machine upon which it is hosted.

The dependency of the virtual machines to physical machines is determined dynamically, so as to support the VMware VMotion® Live Migration technology. A patented root-cause diagnosis engine analyzes the service topology graphs and the virtual-to-physical machine mappings to pin-point where the problems areas in the infrastructure lie.

 

 

 
What the eG Monitor for VMware Infrastructures Reveals?

ESX Host Monitoring

  • What is the CPU load on the ESX kernel, on the console, and each of the virtual guests?
  • What is the free memory in the ESX kernel and the console?
  • Which network interfaces are seeing the most traffic?
  • Which storage devices are seeing high activity?
  • How much free space is available on each of the disk partitions?
  • Are there processes on the console VM that are taking up excessive resources?

Virtual Guests Monitoring

  • What are their IP addresses/host names and operating systems?
  • What portion of the ESX Server’s CPU is used by each guest?
  • Are there times when a guest is not getting CPU cycles; i.e., is the ready time too high?
  • How much of the memory allocated is a guest actively using?
  • Is the balloon driver enabled for a guest, and how much memory has it freed for each guest?
  • Which processes on a guest are taking up high disk, CPU or memory resources?
  • Is there excessive paging or memory thrashing in a guest?
  • Do all the disk partitions inside the guest operating system have adequate space?
  • Is there excessive queuing for disk access on any guest operating system?
  • Which applications could be causing these accesses?

 

Virtual Desktop Monitoring

  • How many desktops are powered on simultaneously on the ESX Server?
  • Which users are logged on and when did each user login?
  • How much CPU, memory, disk and network resources is each desktop taking?
  • What is the typical duration of a user session?
  • Who has the peak usage times?
  • What applications are running on each desktop?

 

VMotion Monitoring

  • Which ESX Server is a virtual guest running on?
  • When was a guest moved from an ESX Server?
  • Which ESX Server was the guest moved to?
  • Why was the guest migrated?
  • What activities on the ESX host caused the migration?

 

 

 
Capabilities of eG for VMWare

Combined external and an internal views of VMware ESX servers
Real-time performance views of what the VMware host sees about the guests and what the guests see internally.

Deep diagnostics for VMware servers
With a few clicks, drill down to the exact processes causing a problem.

Automatic correlation of performance
Analyze performance across layers of the VMware infrastructure - the VM host, between the host and the guests, and across VM guests.

In-depth VMware VDI monitoring
Know which users logged in, when, what applications they accessed, what resources they used, etc.

Monitor virtual environments with service views - not as silos
Correlate the performance across applications hosted in the VMware environments, discover VM dependencies, and identify performance bottlenecks.

Single agent licensing for VMware servers
One agent monitors the VM kernel, console, and all the VM guests.

Compatible with VMware Live Migration
Detect live migration of servers across ESX guests, determine the efficiency of live migration.

Extensive Reporting
Customizable executive and operations reports on every aspect of your ESX servers. Identify bottlenecks in real-time, plan the capacity of your VMware server farm.

 
Product Related Information

White Paper - The eG suite, Enabling Proactive Infrastructure TriageTM

White Paper - Monitoring and Managing Citrix Server Farms

Feature Summary - learn more

Supported Applications - learn more

eG Manager - learn more about the central component between all agents

Terminal Server Monitor - learn more

The eG Monitor for VMware Infrastructures - learn more

The eG Monitor for VMware Infrastructures - learn more

Microsoft Windows Monitor - learn more

SQL Monitor - learn more

Monitor for Microsoft Exchange - learn more

Client Emulator - emulate real user interaction

SAP Monitor - learn more

Web Server Monitor - lear more

 


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