What's Popular

Meh, Whatever is Featured

Linking Active Directory to Palo Alto

 ###First you need to create a server profile under the LDAP section. DEVICE>Server Profiles>LDAP then click on the Add down at the bo...

Monday, March 11, 2019

Edit Alarms in vSphere

1.    First log into your vSphere.
2.    Next, click on the “Home” icon in the top left of your vSphere screen.


3.    Next, click on “Global Inventory Lists” on the dropdown.


4.    Then click on vCenter Servers.


5.    Click on the vCenter server you wish to edit alarms on.


6.    Next, click on the “Monitor” tab.


7.    In the monitor tab, you have three options:
a.    All Issues: This will list all the issues in your vCenter.
b.    Triggered Alarms: This will show any currently triggered alarms in your current vCenter.
c.    Alarm Definitions: This is the tab you want to click on. This tab is all of the definitions of the alarms in vCenter. Definitions are just the configurations/descriptions of your alarms.
8.    Click on the alarm you wish to edit. You will see a menu in the right of your alarm definition screen displaying your selected alarm.
9.    Next, you want to click on the “Edit” button in the top right of the menu showing your alarm definition attributes.


10.    Finally this is the popup you can configure/re-configure your alarms:
a.    General: just allows you to select what will trigger the alarm, virtual machines, clusters, hosts, etc. Items in your vCenter you wish to know about.
b.    Triggers: This will allow you to set the specific alert you wish to trigger. You can have VM Memory usage, CPU usage, power, etc.
c.    Actions: This is where you will put in what actions you wish the system to automatically perform.
11.    You will fill out the appropriate sections to monitor what you wish to keep track of and then click Next to go through the menus and Finish to finalize your edit.


Reference:
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.monitoring.doc/GUID-79AC1262-D701-4BC8-8F8D-F046AE0578CF.html

No comments:

Post a Comment