What to monitor

we are moving monitoring software vendor and want to make sure we are covering what we need to monitor.
I've checked ML and these forums but not found a list to work with. We have something a consultant gave us a while back but would like to double check it.
Do oracle put out a basic what to monitor type document?
Any tips and/or links appreciated
MN

Well, there's a whole lot that will need to monitor. But are you asking about Proactive Monitoring or Reactive Monitoring?
For Proactive & Real Time Monitoring the Enterprise Manager is the BEST you can get.
Regards,
Rizwan

Similar Messages

  • Can someone explain what Activity Monitor's 'Spindump' does?

    Can someone explain what Activity Monitor's 'Spindump' does?

    http://bit.ly/1b68kUF get me to:
    https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/documentation/Darwin/Reference/ManPages/ man8/spindump.8.html

  • What to monitor on testing phase

    We are planning to put in production one ApEx app (2.2.0.1) on Oracle 10gR2.1.
    We know that this monitoring phase will be very important.
    We are able to monitor db side (classic DBA task) but we are not sure what to monitor on ApEx and Apache-shortly all connect to pure WEB part.
    Could anyone give us some instructions what is most important to monitor according previously said.
    THX

    You could monitor Apache using the Apache log files. I believe Jes (John) has written some sort of utility (to JES to do this.<br><br>
    Basically, he turns the data into a database table which you can then query/monitor.<br><br>
    chet

  • ST04 what to monitor referance values

    Hello All,
    Does any one has document "what to monitor in ST04" SAP recommanded referance values, as you know there is so much information in ST04.
    Thanks
    Atul-

    Hi,
    In ST04 you can Monitor mainly these four parameters with below referenec value.
    Data Buffer Quality (%)     >= 94
    Reads / User calls     < 20
    SQL Area pinratio (%)     > 97
    Time/User call (ms)     < 20
    If value in your system better than these reference value it is an indication of good database performace. If not you need to look at database memory setting or SQL tuning.
    regards,
    rakesh

  • What size monitor is recommended?

    My consulting Client creates a new edition of a regional newspaper every two weeks. Color is used for the 16" x 11.75" Front Page
    He organizes or creates: articles, photos, ads, classified ads, the usual. He has a PC shop, and accepts stories and photos from one or more reporters.
    He is planning to migrate gradually from Ventura Publisher (with Corel Draw & Photo) to the CS5 suite of products (InDesign, Photoshop, whatever else is useful) as he learns more. For this aspect I'm considering recommending a dual boot environment, as he currently runs XP in 32-bit mode. I prefer Windows 7 in 64-bit mode.
    He sends the color separated final version with regisration marks to his print vendor as a PDF.
    When open, the physical paper measures 23 wide x 16 tall.
    I feel like a 30" display will give him the space he needs for his publication, photos, ads, text, tool palettes, and the other applications windows needed such as Word. He doesn't want to waste his restricted money, and feels that his workflow now fits in 21" or so.
    If anyone out there is under regular deadline pressure and can make a recommendation (vendor, model, size), we would greatly appreciate some advice here. A memory recommendation would also be gratefully accepted. I'm thinking 8-12GB, though we have 3GB now.
    Thanks and Aloha!

    Thank you very much, Eric for your knowledgeable reply.
    Now I have another question, this time about the 1920 x 1222 screen size. Will this wide screen form distort typefaces in my docs created on a 1280 x 1024 monitor?
    Any comments on the Nvidia 460 or 480 card with the monitor you recommend?
    Thanks
    Bill Hill
    Date: Thu, 26 Aug 2010 08:57:22 -0600
    From: [email protected]
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: What size monitor is recommended?
    For a limited budget, you get a fairly versatile and decent quality monitor with the Dell UltraSharp U2410. At 1920x1200 pixels, there is ample room for document windows and palettes, plus it has an IPS panel which is highly desirable for serious photo editing and other colour-critical  work (such as soft-proofing – it's quite accurate once the monitor is properly calibrated and profiled with a hardware tool such as the X-Rite Eye-One Monitor 2 ).
    To take into account when considering a 30" TFT is the need for a graphic card equipped with a dual-link DVI port (single-link DVI does not provide enough bandwidth for 2560x1600 px resolution at 60 Hz) which can add to the already considerable total cost. Personally, I would prefer a better but smaller monitor over a bigger but mediocre one. Do stay clear of anything equipped with a TN type panel by all means; these are the cheapest and boast very fast response times (something totally irrelevant for print design) but a are IMHO a real nuisance to look at over longer periods of time (or at all if you are accustomed to an IPS-TFT).
    Eric
    >

  • What larger monitors work with the 15" vga G4 iMac

    What larger monitors work with the 15" vga G4 iMac?

    It is not so much how large but rather a question of resolution and how it would look on a larger monitor than the original.
    All iMac G4 15-inchers supported: 640x480; 800x600; and 1024x768 at a fixed 4:3 ratio--no provision for widescreen. The old rule of thumb for decent clarity for 4:3 ratio CRT monitors was:
    15-inch monitor supports 640x480
    17-inch supports 800-x600
    19 to 20 inch supports 1024x768
    I believe you would find the same issues with an older 4:3 flat-panel monitor.
    Also the iMacs can only mirror the resolution set on the built-in monitor so you can't have the external one set differently nor use it for extended desktop. If you set the built-in to 640x480 (would look nice at 15 inches) you are going to get 640x480 on the external regardless of how big it is. On a 19-20 incher, 640x480 could start to look pixelated.

  • What comp. monitor is considered latest/best? and what cables do I use?

    Hi there, I´ve read quite some posts but am still not sure about what to do. I hope there is someone who really knows how and what to help me a hand. My questions relates to setting up the new MM with dual displays, 1 for HDTV to watch movies and num. 2 as a desktop computer with mouse and keyboard for whatever ...
    My questions are:
    1. What are considered the latest/best/affordable monitors that have a builtin camera&mic that are compatibel with the MM & MaxOSX?
    2. What cables and outputs do I use to a) connect to the HDTV with HDMI and sound together and b) to the monitor mentioned in 1.
    Will this work together?
    Many thanks

    Welcome to the Apple community.
    The HDMI cable goes from the Apple TV to the TV.

  • What new monitors are compatible with my Mac Pro 2008

    My monitor Samsung Sync Master didn't turn on the next day after simple putting the computer to sleep at night. Now I am searching for a new monitor and want o make sure I find on that is compatible with my Mac Pro 2008. What do I need to pay attention to while searching?

    Does the monitor work now from a reboot?
    IOf yes then:
    OS X: When your Mac doesn't sleep or wake - Apple Support
    Apple computers: Black screen or unresponsive Mini DisplayPort display after sleep - Apple Support
    Just about any modern monitor will work with your Mac

  • What to monitor on ERP EBS

    hello,
    I would like to know what is the Best Practices for monitoring ERP EBS?
    Thank you
    Ofer

    Hi;
    I would like to know what is the Best Practices for monitoring ERP EBS?It depends you want to monitor what? You can use
    1. OAM screen
    2. Oracle GRID for database
    3.AMP (Getting Started with Oracle Application Management Pack and Oracle Application Change Management Pack for Oracle E-Business Suite, Release 3.1 [ID 982302.1])
    Please see:
    Monitoring EBS R12 in grid control
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/53611247/63/Oracle-EBS-Monitor
    Monitor schema in EBS 11i ?
    Monitoring tool for performance focused for Ebusiness.
    Regard
    Helios

  • What external monitor is recommended for photoshop on HP dv6-1361sb?

     Product Name and number:  HP Pavillion Dv6-1361sb
    Operating System : Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
    Program : Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 (upgrading to 10) and possible future lightroom
    What does HP recommend as a high quality (HP of course) external monitor for photo work with combination and are there any restrictions such as resolution restraints to be wary of?

    Hi,
    Depending on your requirement and how much you are willing to pay. The one which can calibrate colors for photoshop normally more expensive than others.  Your machine should be able to handle all normal monitors in the market today.
    You can find out more from this:
      http://forums.adobe.com/message/2214728
    Regards,
    BH
    **Click the KUDOS thumb up on the left to say 'Thanks'**
    Make it easier for other people to find solutions by marking a Reply 'Accept as Solution' if it solves your problem.

  • SCOM 2012 - Deciding what to monitor

    I'm new to SCOM and I'm having trouble determing what is being monitored and what is not.
    I have been following the Technet Library, but it gets a little fuzzy after the install is completed. I have:
    Added computers using the discovery wizard
    Imported appropriate Management Packs (SQL, AD)
    Now I want to know what is being monitored and what is not, and how can I customise what is being monitored.
    Wayne Hoggett (MCITP, MCSE, MCSA, MCTS, MCP)

    Personally I prefer a live test environment where I can really play with it to the structured virtual labs which are mostly just walkthroughs but that is personal choice. And the virtual labs will give a grounding in the functionality. There are also some
    good guides available:
    http://blogs.technet.com/b/kevinholman/archive/2010/09/02/operations-manager-101-download.aspx
    http://technet.microsoft.com/library/hh769766.aspx
    For overrides, never save them to the default management pack:
    http://blogs.technet.com/b/kevinholman/archive/2008/11/11/cleaning-up-the-default-mp.aspx
    Just be careful with deploying too many management packs and agents too quickly. It is easy to deploy a few hundred agents and a dozen management packs in a couple of days and then spend months managing operations manager alerts rather than having operations
    manager manage your environment. Here is what I generally recommend for about 100 - 150 servers. It is personal but it works for me! And the basis of this is do one thing at a time and get it right before moving on to the next.
    1) Have an alert management process in place before you start. You'll have to fine tune it as the deployment progresses. But if 
    you install Windows, AD, SQL, Exhange, IIS, Cluster, Hardware MPs 
    then the next thing is you'll have a console full of alerts and no process for managing them. A sure recipe for disaster.
    2) Deploy slowly - get core components, agents and windows management pack deployed. This means that you are not fire fighting on multiple fronts (e.g. with AD, Exchange etc alerts). Just get the agents in and sorted. Get the windows MP in and sorted. The
    Windows Management Pack is ideal for this as the alerts it generates are usually actionable, relevant and relatively straight forward to resolve so administrators can get familiar with OpsMgr in a fairly controlled environment that is still providing real
    benefit to the organisation
    3) Proitise other MPs - I like to get SQL in next as it is a relatively stable MP with less noise than AD, Exchange .. but still gives good business benefit. But deploy the MP and spend time fine tuning it. Make sure you are happy that the alerts you get
    are actionable. Then move on.
    4) Repeat slowly .. MP by MP ... the AD alerts you get might be relevant, they might not be. Even the relevant ones might take time to resolve. Same with Exchange.
    Expect it to take a few weeks to a couple months to deploy fully rather than days depending on the size of your environment and how much fine tuning of management packs is required (plus how long it takes to fix any problems identified).
    Cheers
    Graham
    New SCOM 2012 Blog! - http://www.systemcentersolutions.com/blog/
    View OpsMgr tips and tricks at
    http://systemcentersolutions.wordpress.com/

  • What Temperature Monitor Programs to use? (K8N Neo4-F V1.0)

    What program do you recommend to monitor temperatures.
    I have a K8N Neo4-F V1.0
    I have been using CoreTemp, but when I use MSI's Core utility or SPeed fan, or MBM, they all read lower the Coretemp.
    Which do you recommend.?
    I would think MSI's Would read the more accurate would it not? Or should I go with CoreTemps temps?
    There is quite a difference in temp readings.
    I am OC'ed to 2.5 Ghz, on a 3700+ (Stock 2.2)
    When running SP2004 on Blend Tests I get a difference around 10 Celcius between Programs:
    Under Full Load in SP2004:
    MSI Core, Speedfan, MBM: 35-37 Celcius
    Core Temp: 45-48 Celcius
    IDLE:
    MSI Core, Speedfan, MBM: 28-30 Celcius
    CoreTemp: 36-37 Celcius
    This is all on Stock Cooling. I am just trying to decide what temps to go with as I OC.
    I would think MSI CORE would be reading Accuratley no?
    I

    Quote from: Grayone on 16-February-07, 13:27:27
    I use speedfan to monitor my temps.  Its reading are very close to what is shown in the bios.
    I've read that coretemp reads the actual temps in the die, not just using a sensor on the board, which provides a more accurate temperature apparantly.

  • What external monitor??

    I need to come up with the specs for a few edit stations. Need to do both DV and HDV.....so...
    For HDV I am thinking a Powermac (be it intel or G5-not installing for a while) with two 23" screens (although perhaps one will be a dell 24" so that we can play back from the HDV camcorder direct)
    For DV I would have in the past specified a external monitor to chain to the DV cam or deck and my understanding was that one should use a CRT because they run a different colourspace. Does this still stand now that home televisions are becoming LCD? If we run from dv deck into the video input of the Dell will that do? Dont have the cash for a proper broadcast monitor (or the space really)
    I assume that there is no reall need for a HD output card if working HDV? Anything I should consider adding? The G5 would be pretty high spec for motion and things too.
    Cheers for all advice!

    hear are our findings, they are personal but represent comments from hundreds of clients watching the output from FCP
    We have a choice of a number of LCD computer displays from many manufacturers varying in size from 19" to 42" We colour manage the displays using a custom ICC profile.
    We do not use LCD displays for the following reasons:
    we can only watch the displays for a few minutes at a time due to the distracting effects from the displays
    the colour space of an LCD is extremely poor in relation to a CRT and does not produce natural looking colour
    pixelation on the image is very noticable and is unacceptable
    a cheap CRT TV is much more preferable than looking at a very expensive LCD of any size especially at close viewing
    A compromise would be using an LCD or plasma Television as a monitor, but close distance viewing is not recommended and the colour schemes they produce although pleasing are highly processeed by the electronics and can not be relied on.
    In the UK, all broadcasters and all the facility houses we deal with ban the use of LCD computer displays for monitoring output video for the above reasons.
    It would be interesting to hear other viepoints
    regards
    G

  • What size monitor is my computer capable of running?

    1ghz
    1.25 ddr sdram
    l2 cache 512k
    bus speed 133mhz
    geforce fx go5200 32mb
    i did a quick search without finding an answer. thanks in advance.
    dave

    As a rough gauge, here's the pixels from common size LCD monitors:
    19" non-widescreen 1280x1024
    19" widescreen 1440x900
    20"- 21" non-widescreen 1600x1200
    20" - 21" widescreen 1680x1050
    23" - 24" widescreen 1920x1200
    The widescreen monitors typically say widescreen in their description, and are, as you'd expect, wider than the more squarish regular-sized screens. Do your research on whatever you're honing in on. For example, the current Dell 20" - 24" widescreens have had issues recently. You can google that or read on Dells support site. There's some discussion on the Apple discussions in the Cinema displays group, too.
    I just picked up a 19" Samsung 940BW widescreen display, which works nicely with our mac mini.
    One thing to also keep in mind is where you buy the LCD monitor from. Some places like Sams, Costco, Best Buy, etc have easy returns. Some mail order places will only accept returns if there are a largeish number of dead pixels. That's the first thing you check on an LCD monitor, whether there are any dead pixels or not. Display a black background/picture and any dead pixels will show as white or non-black, it's pretty obvious. If there's only 1 in the corner, that may be OK, however, if there's a smattering of them where they'll bug you, then you want to be able to return it for another unit.
    Manufacturer warranties generally are 3 years, however, some are only 1 year.

  • What external monitor would you recomend

    I have a 15 inch Mac Book Pro 2011 series and it has a resolution of 1680x1040. I want a moniter over 27 inches. Does anyone have a moniter they recomend.
    Thanks

    <catching breath!>
    So true. Ah! The undeniable impact of excellence.
    I was going to mention the lower-cost option of a Dell--they are quite nice--until I relized that I've not heard any reports of their being connected to a Thunderbolt port via whatever adaptor is required.
    AJ

Maybe you are looking for