Monitor for memory bottleneck on Windows?
Tore Lønøy
tore.lonoy at gmail.com
Fri Sep 4 08:01:41 CEST 2009
Have i missed your response, Michael? Cant seem to find your respond
in the archive.
On Wednesday, August 5, 2009, Tore Lønøy <tore.lonoy at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hey again Michael,
>
> Yeah I think av avg value of Pages Output/sec for the last X min would
> be the best, much like the CPU check in current build.
>
> Been away on vacation for a while, hence the latency:-)
>
> On Thursday, July 9, 2009, Michael Medin <michael at medin.name> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> The CPU is measured as averages for the last X <time> I could do
>> something similar for this.
>>
>> Which is what I think you want?
>>
>> Stacking more of them in one go would be possible I guess, I shall look
>> into it and see what I can come up with.
>>
>> // Michael Medin
>>
>>
>> On 2009-07-09 09:44, Tore Lønøy wrote:
>> Number 2 seems to be the best choice for me. But I think
>> it has to be an average value for the last e.g. 15 min, or something
>> similar.
>>
>>
>> The best would be if you could combine a
>> check which measured swap usage, free physical memory, committed bytes,
>> and pages out/sec, in which an warning / critical error is returned if
>> all of them is in a warning or critical state. But that can we done in
>> nagios, the only thing i miss now is an average value for pages out/sec.
>>
>>
>> My 2 cents
>>
>> 2009/7/6 Michael Medin <michael at medin.name>
>>
>> Hello
>>
>> humm, if anyone is interested I could add either:
>> 1, option to do average value checks for arbitrary counters (ie. like
>> CheckCPU)
>> 2, add an option to check Memory\Pages Output/Sec to CheckMem ?
>>
>> // Michael Medin
>>
>>
>>
>> On 2009-07-06 12:55, Tore Lønøy wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Hello naguis usergroup!
>>
>> I have for some time now tried to find a way to monitor performance
>> bottlenecks related to shortage of memory on Windows, with no luck. As
>> far my knowlegde of memory bottlenecks concern, using NSClient++
>> command CheckMem and argument physical, is far from enough. Also,
>> monitoring windows performance counters, like Memory \ Pages Out/sec is
>> no good either since it doesn't support average results.
>>
>> There is alot of documentation on how to determine that memory is a
>> bottleneck, like e.g.: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555223
>>
>> But, for what I understand, using nagios to determine this is hard.
>>
>> So how do you guys locate memory bottlenecks on windows machines, with
>> or without the help of nagios?
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Tore
>>
>>
>>
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>
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