Managing the capacity of your XenServer infrastructure



Excerpt named hoco_goals was not found in document xwiki:IT-Operations-Management.Continuous-Optimization.BMC-Helix-Capacity-Optimization.hoco1911.Implementing.Managing-the-capacity-of-your-vSphere-infrastructure.WebHome.

As a Capacity Planner or XenServer Technology Specialist, you can use BMC Helix Capacity Optimization to configure, administer, and manage the capacity of your XenServer infrastructure. BMC Helix Capacity Optimization enables you to collect and analyze data from XenServer infrastructure elements:

  • Providers (hosts)
  • Consumers (virtual machines)
Descriptions: Provider, Consumer

Provider: Infrastructure element with the physical resources, such as CPU, memory, storage, and that provides these resources to a Consumer. For example, host.

Consumer: Logical or virtual infrastructure element that consumes or uses the resources from a Provider. For example, virtual machine.

manage_xen.png

As described in the flow diagram, the BMC Helix Capacity Optimization data source (ETL or Gateway Server) collects data from the XenServer infrastructure elements. The collected data is transferred to the BMC Helix Capacity Optimization data warehouse where it is processed, and then displayed on the user interface. You can use the product features to review, analyze, and manage the capacity of your XenServer infrastructure providers and consumers.

The following sections describe how you can achieve these goals:

Managing the capacity of XenServer infrastructure providers

You can analyze and manage the capacity of your XenServer infrastructure providers by using the XenServer views. For the infrastructure data to be available in the view, the Administrator must first set up the data source to collect data.

Step 1. Collect data and install the views

As an Administrator, use one of the following methods for data collection:

After data collection starts, data is loaded in the data warehouse daily and Indicators are available in the Workspace. 

As an Administrator, you must install the XenServer views and Capacity Pools view and grant the necessary permissions to Capacity Planners and XenServer Technology Specialists to access these views.

Step 2. Analyze the collected data

To get a high-level view of the infrastructure usage and health, use the out-of-the-box capacity pools in the Capacity-Pools-view.

For detailed analysis, see XenServer-Overview.

The following common use cases are described here:

Understand the usage and health of your XenServer infrastructure providers

Review and analyze the out-of-the-box capacity pools for XenServer hosts for a high-level understanding of their health and usage. For more information, see Capacity-Pools-view

You can drill down into a specific host for detailed analysis.

An Administrator can create capacity pools as per your requirement. You can then view and analyze them in the Capacity Pools view.

Understand resource availability, utilization, and utilization trend of your XenServer infrastructure providers

Review and analyze the resource metrics of XenServer providers on the Host page in the XenServer view page in the XenServer Overview view.

Identify the XenServer providers that have exhausted or exhausting resources

Use the Future Saturations page in the XenServer view to get a quick view of the XenServer hosts that have exhausted or exhausting resources (CPU, memory, and storage).

Managing the capacity of XenServer infrastructure consumers

You can analyze and manage the capacity of your XenServer infrastructure consumers (virtual machines) by using the capacity views. For the infrastructure data to be available in the view, the Administrator must first configure data collection.

Step 1. Collect data and install the views

As an Administrator, you can use the following data sources to collect data for your XenServer virtual machines:

Before you use this ETL, you must instrument the VMs. 

Instrumenting VMs

The memory utilization value that is collected from an instrumented VM is based on the actual memory of the VM. The Agent collects resource consumption breakdown at process or workload level and helps you to detect specific in-guest OS level resource constraints (for example, in-guest paging due to the physical memory configuration of the VM being too low). BMC recommends that you instrument your business-critical VMs to collect OS-level memory usage values. 

To instrument a VM: 

  1. Install a Capacity Agent inside the VM from which you want to collect metrics.
  2. Configure the Gateway Server and Capacity Agent to initiate data collection. For more information, see Collecting-data-via-Capacity-Agents
  3. Configure and use the out-of-the-box BMC-TrueSight-Capacity-Optimization-Gateway-VIS-files-parser to collect the required metrics from the VM.


After data collection starts, data is loaded in the data warehouse daily and Indicators are available in the Workspace.

As an Administrator, you must install the XenServer views and grant the necessary permissions to Capacity Planners and XenServer Technology Specialists to access these views.

Step 2. Analyze the collected data

Use the capacity views to analyze the imported data of XenServer virtual machines. Depending on the data source, you can use the XenServer Overview view or the Servers Overview view for analysis.

To view and analyze the key capacity metrics and charts for XenServer VMs, use the XenServer-Overview view. It displays metrics collected by the BMC-TrueSight-Capacity-Optimization-Gateway-VIS-files-parser ETL.

To view and analyze the granular metrics (actual memory utilization value, workload data, and process level data) that are collected from the VM, use the Servers-Overview-view

The following common use cases are described here.

Determine and analyze the available resources and their utilization per VM

Review and analyze the relevant metrics on the Virtual-Machines-page-in-the-XenServer-view to determine the available resources and their utilization per VM. For example, utilization metrics for CPU and memory.

Identify the XenServer VMs that have exhausting resources

Review the Future Saturations page in the XenServer view to identify XenServer virtual machines that have exhausting resources (CPU, memory, storage). The page also provides actionable recommendations to help you handle them.

Analyze the trend and behavior of the actual (OS-level) memory utilization of XenServer VMs

Review the Servers views to review and analyze the trend and behavior of the actual memory utilization of the XenServer virtual machines.

These views display data that is collected from instrumented VMs.

Performing advanced analysis

The earlier sections explained how you can use the out-of-the-box capacity views to manage your environment. These capacity views help you analyze your XenServer infrastructure using a predefined set of metrics.

To perform advanced analysis on the imported XenServer data, such as identifying specific performance issues, trends, and bottlenecks, you can use Analysis.

About Analysis

An analysis is a visual tool that you can use to identify the behavior of a set of metrics and the relationships among them. Each analysis can focus on the business driver metrics of an application, on the performance of an application's systems, and on the events related to an application. Analysis can also be used to compare performance and business driver metrics to determine a system's behavior under load. 

The following use case explains how to analyze the CPU utilization of xen virtual machines over time: 

For more examples, see Creating-an-analysis.

Managing the future demand

By using the capacity views and analysis charts, you can analyze the data of your existing capacity. To predict and plan your IT resource needs, use Models.

Predicting the behavior of your resources

Use Models to predict service performance and obtain forecasts of historical series of metrics, including deep details on the modeling techniques used in forecasts and how to interpret the results of model runs.

About models

A model is a simplified mathematical description of service components that evaluates historical data, predicts future behavior, and simulates what-if scenarios. Models are always built on existing data and analysis. After you create a model, define scenarios to perform multiple predictions under different conditions. With Models you can forecast and model changes in service demands.

How to determine when a virtual machine underutilizing the resources

For more information, see Modeling-capacity-usage.

 

Tip: For faster searching, add an asterisk to the end of your partial query. Example: cert*