Virtual Machines Sample Clauses

Virtual Machines. Displays the Virtual Machines dwell, showing the names and states of the virtual machines that are running on the selected server.
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Virtual Machines. The number of the virtual machines associated with the selected SCVMM, followed by the counts of all alarms associated with those virtual machines, broken down by the alarm state (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal). • Storage. The number of the disk volumes associated with the selected SCVMM, followed by the counts of all alarms associated with those volumes, broken down by the alarm state (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal).
Virtual Machines. The number of virtual machines that are associated with the selected volume, followed by the related alarm counts. • Volume. Represents the selected volume. Shows the counts of the alarms generated against the volume. Where to go next Drill down on: • Clusters. Displays the Clusters dwell, showing the names and states of all clusters that are associated with the selected volume. Figure 125. Clusters dwell associated with the selected volume. Figure 126. Servers dwell
Virtual Machines. The number of virtual machines that are associated with the selected virtual switch, followed by the related alarm counts. • Virtual Switch. Represents the selected virtual switch. Shows the counts of alarm generated against the switch. Where to go next Drill down on: • Clusters. Displays the Clusters dwell, showing the names and states of all clusters that are associated with the selected virtual switch. Figure 134. Clusters dwell • Servers. Displays the Servers dwell, showing the names and state of the servers associated with the selected virtual switch.
Virtual Machines a. The Lead Researcher may request the Institute to modify, add or delete the Virtual Machines and issue Credentials relating to those Virtual Machines. The Lead Researcher must complete the form specified by the Institute and comply with any procedures listed in the form for modifications, additions or deletions relating to the Virtual Machines and pay any applicable Fees in relation to them.
Virtual Machines. If you plan to run the Software in multiple virtual computers or virtual servers, a license is required for each instance of the virtual computer or server where the Software will be installed. If you plan to install the Software in the host operating system of the computer where the virtual machines are running, a license will also be required for the host operating system.
Virtual Machines. For the purposes of this Agreement, a virtual machine is considered the same as a Server.
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Virtual Machines. A virtual machine resides on a Hyper-V server. Virtual machines share many of the characteristics of physical systems (like storage and network interaction), but they do not have direct access to the hardware that is used to process. Each virtual machine runs on a guest operating system, for example, Microsoft Windows XP, and is allocated access to a specific set of the server’s resources, that includes the number of processors and the amount of memory it can leverage. • Virtual Switches. A Hyper-V virtual switch is a software-based layer-2 Ethernet network switch. The switch connects virtual machines to virtual and physical networks. • SOFS Servers. A Scale-Out File Server (SOFS) allows the same folder or file to be shared from multiple cluster nodes. Prerequisites: Foglight for Hyper-V roles‌ Foglight™ Management Server relies on roles to control user access. Each user can have one or more roles. The roles granted to a user determine the set of actions that the user can perform. The Management Server includes a set of built-in roles that control access to dashboards and reports included with the Management Server. The following roles are included with Foglight for Hyper-V to control access to the Hyper-V dashboards and reports. Your Foglight for Hyper-V users must have the appropriate roles granted to them in order to access related browser interface components:
Virtual Machines. Description Shows the number of virtual machines in your environment and a list of virtual machines with worst performance score. Data displayed • VM Count by Xxxxx Xxxxxxxx. The total counts of alarms associated with the virtual machines, broken down by alarm types (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal). in the Virtual Machines view, appearing in the Quick-View. • VM Count by Status. Displays virtual machines views in the Quick-View. • VM Count by Top 5 Alarms. Displays the alarms in the Alarms view, appearing in the Quick-View. • VM Performance Score - Worst 16 VMs. Displays the Hyper-V Explorer Summary. Table 7. Storage Description Shows the number of virtual volumes in your environment and total alarm counts associated with them. Data displayed • Alarm counts. The total counts of alarms associated with the virtual volumes, broken down by alarm types (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal). • Server count. The number of virtual volumes in your environment. Where to go next Drill down on: • Alarm counts. Lists the virtual volumes associated with the alarms in the Storage view, appearing in the Quick-View. • Virtual Machines. Displays virtual volume views in the Quick-View. Table 8. Virtual Switches Description Shows the number of virtual switches in your environment and total alarm counts associated with them. Data displayed • Alarm counts. The total counts of alarms associated with the virtual switch, broken down by alarm types (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal). • Server count. The number of virtual switches in your environment. Where to go next Drill down on: • Alarm counts. Lists the virtual switches associated with the alarms in the Virtual Switches view, appearing in the Quick-View. • Virtual Machines. Displays virtual switch views in the Quick-View. Table 9. SOFS Servers Description Shows the number of Scale-Out File Server (SOFS) in your environment and total alarm counts associated with them. Data displayed • Alarm counts. The total counts of alarms associated with the SOFS servers, broken down by alarm types (Normal, Warning, Critical, Fatal). • Server count. The number of SOFS servers in your environment. Where to go next Drill down on: • Alarm counts. Lists the SOFS servers associated with the alarms in the SOFS Servers view, appearing in the Quick-View. • Servers. Displays servers-related combination of views in the Quick-View. Alarms view‌‌‌ This view displays a list of alarms generated against the objects or group of objects selected in the Quick-V...
Virtual Machines. Displays the Virtual Machines dwell, showing the names and states of the virtual machines that are running on the physical servers that belong to the selected cluster. Description Shows the resource consumption for the selected cluster, broken down into four simple views. • CPU Load. The current percentage of the CPU load, used by the servers that belong Data displayed to the selected cluster to execute system code and user programs, based on the combined CPU capacity. • CPU Utilization, % Used. The percentage of the CPU utilization used by the servers that belong to the selected cluster to execute system code and user programs, during the selected time period. • Disk I/O. The current disk I/O rate for all servers that belong to the selected cluster. • Disk Utilization, Read Rate. The rate at which all servers that belong to the cluster read data from the disk, during the selected time period. • Disk Utilization, Write Rate. The rate at which data is written to the disks of all servers that belong to the cluster, during the selected time period.
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