If you want to monitor the VMs using the agent you need to install it to them all. We are packaging it up for silent install and automated deployments using SCCM to 14000 VMs. If you are looking to monitor a lot of vms the you need to make sure you have designed you vrops environment to cope with it. Monitoring using the vcenter adapter and the eops adapter as well added a lot of overhead.
Have you installed the End Point agent on the VM you want to monitor?
I have too many VMs to monitor. Is the agent installable on vrops Nodes direclty ? Is there any other way?
Thank you for your reply.
Once you install the End Point Operations agent into vms it will populate that list. It will then allow you to monitor some applications. The agent can also be installed on physical servers as well as long as you have enough licences
It is my understanding that the Windows or Linux End Point agent is a push to vROPs. Not that vROPs will pull it from your VMs. You'll need to push the Agent out using something like SCCM.
If you want to monitor the VMs using the agent you need to install it to them all. We are packaging it up for silent install and automated deployments using SCCM to 14000 VMs. If you are looking to monitor a lot of vms the you need to make sure you have designed you vrops environment to cope with it. Monitoring using the vcenter adapter and the eops adapter as well added a lot of overhead.
Could you please tell me if I can relate the application with the VM where it is hosted?
You can create an Application Group - Environment | Applications | Application Tab. You can add the resource(s) to that group and see workload, anomalies, and stress scores for that group of resources.
Hi Sxnxr;
Could you please tell me, does the agent takes another vrops licence or it uses the same licence of the VM ?
Thank you.
Regards.