Help us improve your experience.

Let us know what you think.

Do you have time for a two-minute survey?

 
 

Using Monitor Mode for Virtual Devices

The Monitor mode for virtual devices in your network enables you to view details about your virtual network using the following tabs:

  • Summary—Displays the status of the virtual network, virtual machine, or virtual switch, active alarms, and the number of hosts and the version of VMware ESXi that is running on each host.

  • vMotion History—vSphere vMotion is a feature that enables live migration of running virtual machines from one host to another with zero downtime and continuous network availability. You can view the status of the history of all the vMotions for your virtual network in the vMotion History tab. For more details, see Viewing vMotion History in Network Director.

Your current scope—that is, your view and node selection in the View pane—affects which Monitor widgets are available. For example, if you select a virtual switch, Network Director displays the status and the active alarms for the selected virtual switch.

This topic describes:

Current Active Alarms Monitor

The Current Active Alarms monitor shows any active alarm that has not yet been cleared. It is one of the four standard monitors available in Alarm mode. Current Active Alarms is a table that has four fields and appear by default. However, nine fields are available for selection. See Table 1 for a description of the table.

Table 1: Current Active Alarms Monitor

Table Column

Description

Shown in Summary by Default

Shown in Detailed View by Default

Name

The alarm name.

Yes

Yes

ID

A system and sequentially generated identification number.

No

No

Assigned To

If assigned to an individual, it shows the name of the person assigned; otherwise, it shows System to mark that the alarm is still unassigned.

No

Yes

Severity

The severity of the alarm. Severity levels are:

  • Critical—A critical condition exists; immediate action is necessary.

  • Major—A major error has occurred; escalate or notify as necessary.

  • Minor—A minor error has occurred; notify or monitor the condition.

  • Info—An informational message; no action is necessary.

Yes

Yes

Entity ID

The identification of the entity responsible for causing this alarm. The Entity ID is the key for correlation of events into an alarm. The Entity ID can be the IP address of the device.

Yes

Yes

Reporting Device IP

The IP address of the device or network element that generated the alarm. The SNMP agent is located at the source IP. In most cases, the source IP is the IP address of the switch.

Yes

Yes

Reporting Device

The hostname or IP address of the reporting device.

Yes

Yes

Creation Date

The date and time the alarm was first reported.

No

No

Last Updated

The date and time that the information for the alarm was last modified.

Yes

Yes

Updated By

Either the system or the last user who modified the alarm.

No

No

Clicking the Details icon opens Alarm Details where you can sort and disposition alarms by state (Acknowledged, Clear, or Active).