

Clicking a link in the navigation tree causes the corresponding display to appear in the content pane. The navigation tree on the left side of the interface contains the server menu and a hierarchical listing of the available displays. The banner displays the name of the application and status information, such as the last time data was updated in the browser interface, the name and role of the user that is currently logged in, the name of the management station that is hosting the Oracle HSM Manager software, and the current number and type of unacknowledged faults. The Oracle HSM Manager browser interface pages are divided into three sections: Oracle HSM Manager is a browser-based graphical user interface that lets administrators monitor and control all aspects of file-system operations. Oracle HSM provides three monitoring interfaces:Įach has its strengths, depending on your working style and habits. A resource that is 80% used is fine if utilization grows 1% per year but a crisis if growth exceeds 1% every week. So recognizing trends and rates is crucial when you are monitoring utilization. Utilization levels that presage imminent trouble in one organization may be perfectly consistent with years of trouble-free operation in another.

When usage is excessive, lack of resources, such as storage media, can stop the archiving process as effectively as a component failure, even though the system is functioning normally.

Utilization issues are more subtle and require more judgment on your part. When key components such as a host system, network interface, file system, or storage subsystem become unavailable, core functionality is abruptly lost or degraded, and alerts are displayed in the administrative interfaces and logs. In general, you monitor two things: availability and utilization.Īvailability is conceptually straightforward and easy to monitor. You do, however, need to monitor each system for abnormalities. Correctly configured Oracle HSM file systems need little routine administrative intervention.
