
up.time’s extensive data collection and server reporting capabilities give you visibility into all aspects of your datacenter operations including deep application and server reports. Quickly identify root cause issues, view resource usage trends over time, and view system availability stats and metrics through up.time’s web-based interface. Application and server reports can be run ad-hoc at any time or scheduled for automatic generation and delivered to you or your team via email or posted to a website for review. Do you have an application or sever down? Download a free trial.
A powerful server report summarizing resource metrics for individual servers or groups of servers over any time frame. Isolate problem servers when performing root-cause analysis, or quickly identify long-term trends to facilitate your capacity planning process.
Quickly identify the "troublemakers" in your IT infrastructure with this application report and server report. Get a bird's-eye view of applications and systems that are causing lots of incidents and accumulating excessive downtime. Use this information to prioritize root-cause analysis, automation workflows, and other MTTR reduction activities. This report contains the following information:
In this application report, instantly get statistics showing you accurate availability metrics for all your mission-critical applications including:
Improve the availability of your IT services by getting fast, accurate updates about all your critical system services and then proactively taking the necessary steps to avoid unnecessary service outages. This report lists the percentage of time each service has been in OK, Warning, Critical, Maintenance, or Unknown states over any period of time you specify.
Once you identify service availability shortfalls, using the Service Monitor Availability Report (above), you can quickly drill deeper into any problems and get more specific information about the events leading to specific outages. Use this information to get up and running again, or zero in on potential problems and prevent them from causing an outage. The Service Outages report lists all warning or critical events for services that have occurred over a specified time period.
Need to get detailed graphs of all your application and enterprise service metrics for isolating availability problems or capacity planning for optimal resource usage? No problem. This report will instantly give you historical trends and graphs for all servers, application, database and IT service statistics that are retained by your application and service monitors. For example, see a graph on detailed metrics like number of SQL Server Transactions/sec over the last day or week, or countless other key enterprise metrics.
A very powerful server report that simplifies enterprise capacity planning. up.time scans all servers across your enterprise and then (based on the number of CPUs in each server and their specific CPU clock speeds) defines an enterprise CPU metric known as a Power Unit. Now you have the ability to report on total enterprise CPU capacity in Power Units and see what your total remaining CPU capacity is across your enterprise now and over time. A must-have tool for getting a quick snapshot across hundreds and thousands of servers, and making important decisions around spending and how to optimize CPU capacity across your enterprise for maximum performance. This is a must-have server report. Have a server down? Download a free trial to get this server report.
Compare mission-critical servers in a single view to determine which of your servers are busiest and decide if they need to be upgraded soon. Drill down and analyze graphs in-depth using ActiveX and to get all the information you need to make the right decisions. This is a must have server report.
Analyze tens or hundreds of servers at a glance for MAX, MIN and Average CPU and Memory consumption over any timeframe using the tabular style CPU Utilization Report. Makes isolating problem systems a snap with this server report.
Analyze all your servers at a glance in a tabular format to see what ratio of total CPU activity is related to user activity versus system activity. Makes load balancing easier, and can instantly help you re-allocate your mission-critical server resources more effectively.
Produce in-depth tabular server reports for all your servers that will give you exact growth statistics for all file systems on all servers that you wish to analyze, and show you just how fast they are growing over specific time periods.
Analyze all servers across your enterprise to see which servers are "thrashing" with high levels of WIO (Wait I/O) with this server report. In a tabular format you will instantly see AVG, MIN and MAX WIO for all servers over any timeframe that will point out which servers are I/O bound and need attention.
Do you have production servers that are not being used to their full capacity? Then use the Server Virtualization report to pinpoint the physical servers that can be consolidated in a virtual environment, for example, using VMware. This is an essential server reporting tool for companies that depend on server virtualization.
Quickly identify sprawl and on which physical ESX servers it is occurring. Get a quick bird's-eye view of VM density to better plan VM instance distribution. Help reduce VM contention. This is a must have virtual server report.
Do you use Virtual Infrastructure (VI or VirtualCenter) to manage multiple, physical VMware ESX servers? If so, then the VMware Workload server report can help you keep track of the workload of both the server on which VI is running and the ESX servers that VI manages. Use this virtual server report to help you to manage and monitor virtual servers, as well as allocate resources among virtual machines.
Gain insight into the health and performance of a WebLogic server with the WebLogic application and server report. Pinpoint problem areas on your WebLogic server and quickly determine how to fix those problems before they severely impact your users.
Get a historical perspective on the health and performance of a WebSphere Application Server and the applications running on it with the WebSphere application and server report. Using the information in this report, you can find the source of the problem and quickly find a solution.
If you're running IBM pSeries servers with logical partitions (LPARs) then the LPAR Workload server report will help take the guesswork out of setting CPU entitlements. Using the information in the report, you can gain insight into the overall workload on an IBM pSeries server. This enables you to accurately adjust the CPU entitlements of the LPARs and keep track of the overall workload over time. If you run IBM, you need up.time LPAR server reporting.
Find out which of your multi-CPU Solaris systems are experiencing a high number of mutex stalls (i.e., when two or more threads are waiting for the same resource) based on your defined threshold. Use this report to help you identify the heaviest network and disk I/O systems in your enterprise. This is a key Solaris server report.
Find out which of your monitored systems are experiencing the most network load by reporting on the amount of data that has moved in and out of each NIC. Overloaded systems can become bottlenecks for the entire network; pinpointing and increasing their resources ensures network I/O is balanced.
Identify systems that are experiencing excessive disk I/O activity. This report summarizes the total amount of data that has moved on and off hard disks, and provides data for the entire disk, or specified directories.
Assess whether systems are being overloaded by listing the number of jobs that were ready to run, but were waiting in a queue. Eliminate false positives by defining the minimum CPU usage level and queue length. Multiple CPUs are taken into account when thresholds are calculated.
This report complements the Disk I/O Bandwidth Report, indicating which system disks (and file systems) are taking an excessive amount of time to complete disk operations. This report helps you identify which systems may benefit from configuration changes (e.g., adding RAM, moving a file system to another hard disk, implementing a RAID). A good example of up.time's deep server reporting.
Get a thorough breakdown of service level agreement performance and find out which of the SLA's component objectives suffered outages during the reporting period. From there, you can pinpoint when outages occurred, and which service monitors were responsible for them.
Assess SLA targets from the "business side" and see, at a glance, how your SLAs performed over the last day, week, or month. Use trendline graphs to find out whether the current SLA performance is improving or getting worse, and in the latter case, take a proactive stance.