Chapter 1 Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Overview
Running the Dashboard Continuously
Changing the Displayed Activity Statistics
Changing the Activity Thresholds
Chapter 3 Initial Configuration
Chapter 4 Network Configuration
Chapter 5 Storage Configuration
Chapter 6 Storage Area Network Configuration
Chapter 8 Setting ZFSSA Preferences
Chapter 10 Cluster Configuration
Chapter 12 Shares, Projects, and Schema
The Status Dashboard provides links to all the main screens of the browser user interface (BUI). Over 100 visible items on the Dashboard link to associated BUI screens indicated by a border or highlighted text that appears on mouse-over. The sections that follow describe the areas of the Dashboard in detail.
The Usage area of the Dashboard provides a summary of your storage pool and main memory usage. The name of the pool appears at the top right of the Usage area. If multiple pools are configured, use the pull-down list to select the desired pool to display.
Figure 2-1 Status Dashboard Usage
The total pool capacity is displayed at the top of this area. The Storage pie-chart details the used, available, and free space. To go to the Shares screen for the pool, click the Storage pie-chart.
The total system physical memory is displayed at the top of this area. To the left is a pie-chart showing memory usage by component. To go to the Analytics worksheet for dynamic memory usage broken down by application name, click the Memory pie-chart.
|
|
Note that users need the analytics/component create+read authorization to view the memory usage. Without this authorization, the memory details do not appear on the Dashboard.
This area of the Dashboard shows the status of services on the appliance, with a light icon to show the state of each service.
Figure 2-2 Services Dashboard
Most services are green to indicate that the service is online, or grey to indicate that the service is disabled. See the General Usage section for a reference of all possible states and icon colors.
To go to the associated configuration screen, click on a service name. The Properties screen appears with configurable fields, restart, enable, and disable icons, and a link to the associated Logs screen for the service.
This area of the Dashboard shows an overview of hardware on the appliance.
Figure 2-3 Hardware Dashboard
If there is a known fault, the amber fault icon appears.
To go to the Hardware in Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Customer Service Manual screen for a detailed look at hardware state, click the name of a hardware component.
The activity area of the Dashboard shows graphs of eight performance statistics by default. The example in this section shows Disk operations/sec. The statistical average is plotted in blue and the maximum appears in light grey.
Figure 2-4 Disk Activity Dashboard
To go to the Analytics in Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Analytics Guide worksheet for an activity, click one of the four graphs (day, hour, minute, second) for the statistic you want to evaluate.
To view the average for each graph, mouse-over a graph and the average appears in the tooltip. The weather icon in the upper-left provides a report of activity according to thresholds you can customize for each statistic on the Status Settings screen.
|
The average for the selected plot is shown numerically above the graph. To change the average that appears, select the average you want, either 7d, 24h, or 60m.
The vertical scale of all graphs is printed on the top right, and all graphs are scaled to this same height. The height is calculated from the selected graph (plus a margin). The height will rescale based on activity in the selected graph, with the exception of utilization graphs which have a fixed height of 100 percent.
Since the height can rescale, 60 minutes of idle activity may look similar to 60 minutes of busy activity. Always check the height of the graphs before trying to interpret what they mean.
Understanding some statistics may not be obvious - you might wonder, for a particular appliance in your environment, whether 1000 NFSv3 ops/sec is considered busy or idle. This is where the 24-hour and 7-day plots can help, to provide historic data next to the current activity for comparison.
The plot height is calculated from the selected plot. By default, the 60-minute plot is selected. So, the height is the maximum activity during that 60-minute interval (plus a margin). To rescale all plots to span the highest activity during the previous 7 days, select 7d. This makes it easy to see how current activity compares to the last day or week.
The weather icon is intended to grab your attention when something is unusually busy or idle. To go to the weather threshold configuration page, click the weather icon. There is no good or bad threshold, rather the BUI provides a gradient of levels for each activity statistic. The statistics on which weather icons are based provide an approximate understanding for appliance performance that you should customize to your workload, as follows:
Different environments have different acceptable levels for performance (latency), and so there is no one-size-fits-all threshold.
The statistics on the Dashboard are based on operations/sec and bytes/sec, so you should use Analytics in Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Analytics Guide worksheets for an accurate understanding of system performance.
Figure 2-5 Recent Alerts
This section shows the last four appliance alerts. Click the box to go to the Logs in Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Customer Service Manual screen to examine all recent alerts in detail.