HP UX Matrix Operating EnvIronment manual Ssl

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regular

Application Discovery recognizes regular expressions constructed using Perl 5 or POSIX syntax

expressions

and semantics.

running

An application that is continually or intermittently active and able to consume resources.

application

 

 

server

1.

Physical server: Hardware that can run one or more operating systems, including a

 

 

partitionable complex. Also, hardware that can run an instance of the vPars monitor. Server

 

 

hardware includes one or more cabinets containing all the available processing cores,

 

 

memory, I/O, and power and cooling components. HP Integrity servers include two types

 

 

of server hardware: standalone servers and cell-based servers.

 

2.

Virtual server: A software-based virtual environment that can run an operating system.

 

 

A virtual server includes a subset of the server hardware resources, including cores,

 

 

memory, and I/O. Virtual servers may be virtual partitions under vPars or virtual machines

 

 

under Integrity VM .

 

3.

HP Systems Insight Manager software uses the term “server” for any standalone server,

 

 

nPartition, or virtual server that is running an instance of an operating system or an instance

 

 

of the vPars monitor.

 

See also system.

Serviceguard

A monitored workload associated with a Serviceguard cluster and a particular Serviceguard

workload

package within the cluster. The workload (and the utilization data reported) follows the package

 

it is associated with as it moves between the nodes of the cluster.

SSL

Secure Sockets Layer. Protocol for validating identity and for creating an encrypted connection

 

between a server and a Web browser.

system

1.

A server, nPartition, virtual partition, or virtual machine that is running an instance of an

 

 

operating system.

 

2.

Entities on the network that communicate through TCP/IP or IPX. To manage a system,

 

 

some type of management protocol (for example, SNMP, DMI, or WBEM) must be present

 

 

on the system. Examples of systems include servers, workstations, desktops, portables,

 

 

routers, switches, hubs, and gateways.

 

See also server.

template

An HP-supplied or user-defined set of rules, properties, or metadata that describe an object in

 

a computing network.

 

In Application Discovery, templates specify the data collection and matching rules to be

 

 

used to define and discover an application.

 

When referring to a logical server, a template is the collection of information that defines

 

 

the logical server and its attributes. A template logical server has no actual resources

 

 

associated with it.

unmatched

A process that Application Discovery can discover that does not match existing templates or

process

packages that Application Discovery is using for discovery and monitoring. Unmatched

 

processes might include custom and third-party applications.

virtual machine

A software entity provided by HP Integrity Virtual Machines, VMware ESX, or Microsoft Virtual

 

Server. This technology allows a single server or (with Integrity Virtual machines) nPartition to

 

act as a VM Host for multiple individual virtual machines, each running its own instance of an

 

operating system (referred to as a guest OS). Virtual machines are managed systems in HP

 

Insight Dynamics suite.

virtual partition

A software partition of a server, or of a single nPartition, where each virtual partition can run its

 

own instance of an operating system. A virtual partition cannot span an nPartition boundary.

 

See also nPartition, virtual machine.

visibility

Application Discovery makes it possible for you to control the amount of data appearing on

 

user interface screens by letting you determine what applications, packages, or hosts will be

 

visible in the user interface or not. Currently, visibility settings are global in nature, which

 

means they apply to all screens in Application Discovery and are not specific to a particular

 

user or job role.

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Contents Application Discovery 6.2 User Guide For managed nodes Table of Contents Support and other resources Configuring the Wbem provider password Glossary Index List of Figures Application visibility selector Sort indicatorPossible values for agent state List of TablesPage Introduction Features of Application DiscoveryPage Application Discovery components Components and conceptsDiscovery ratio Refining Application DiscoveryHow discovery works Understand your current discovery stateWarm-up ratio Refine discovery by checking agent stateRefine discovery by creating application templates Understanding application templatesHow memory usage is calculated Key to the graphic is as follows Understanding server resource consumptionPage Starting Application Discovery Procedures and examplesUsing HP SIM to start the agent Starting the agent from the command lineChecking agent state Reconfigure a running agent from the command lineUsing HP SIM to stop the AD agent Stopping the agent from the command lineSet screen data refresh interval Adjusting the user interfaceWorking with data views Explanation of agent statesSet number of table rows Set general visibilitySet color theme Filter data in view tables Change the data viewSort data in view tables Navigate between views Other controls available from right-clicking on a view tableSet visibility for matched applications Set visibility for hosts on Application Discovery screensModifying the maximum size of an event list Setting event attributesSetting data polling interval Introduction to event settings in Application DiscoverySetting alert location Setting event severityChange application template values Managing application templatesFind an application template Create a new template Key to application template values Constructing regular expressions Application identity Session Separation rule fields and their descriptionsCreate a process aggregation rule Create an application template ruleAggregation rule fields and their descriptions Managing application templates Example of a nested template aggregation rule Managing application templates Understanding the tables that show unmatched processes How to remove types from the aggregation ruleCheck unmatched processes to find application candidates Filling in the template separation rule fields Filling in the system scope fields using table dataFilling in the aggregation rule fields using table data Prerequisites Create an application workload in Virtualization ManagerCreate Monitored Workload Definition screen reopens Backing up Application Discovery filesPage Errors in installation TroubleshootingApplications not visible in Application Discovery screens Data missing in Application Discovery screensData missing in Application Discovery screens Host not visible in Application Discovery screens Check that SSH is configured correctly on the managed node# cd /.ssh /* rootuserhomedirectory/.ssh Packages not visible in Application Discovery screens Application Discovery may not be correctly configuredCheck that the host is known to Application Discovery Check that the Application Discovery agent is running UI Unable to connect to servermessages Errors in Application Discovery user interface operationJava UI exception message displays To list the AD agent package installed on the machine, then Page Application Discovery resources Support and other resourcesContacting HP Related informationPage Page Options Amgrd= Logtrace InstallationAuthors Agentconfig Check agent state Event types Key to event attributesEvent viewing locations Event severity typesAdditional event types specific to Application Discovery Table C-1 Error messages seen when trying to log Error messagesPage Introduction Using HP SIM to complete certificate exchangeCompleting certificate exchange from the command line Completing certificate exchangeCompleting certificate exchange Credentials Configuring the Wbem provider passwordPage Agent GlossaryManaged SSL Wbem Index Admin/Config tabClear filter menu pick Group option Defining an application template rule AD Agents, 13