Writer instructions

Page title

For most spaces, this page must be titled Space announcements.

For spaces with localized content, this page must be titled Space announcements l10n.

Purpose

Provide an announcement banner on every page of your space.

Location

Move this page outside of your home branch.

Guidelines

Announcement Support for this product will end on November 3, 2025. We recommend that you use PATROL for Linux, PATROL for AIX, or PATROL for Solaris to monitor operating systems.

Solaris monitoring


The Solaris Monitoring lets you monitor and manage your Solaris environment. It monitors the availability of your servers, which includes the following elements:

Monitored Objects

Application classes

 Description

Manages and monitors data collection.

Monitors processor statistics such as percentages of CPU utilization, CPU idle time, CPU time spent on user and system activities.

Monitors basic CPU utilization statistics for multiple processors on a computer

Provides information such as Kernel Memory Allocation (KMA) statistics, i-node usage, and Kernel usage of system resources

Monitors the Overall CPU usage, filesystem usage, and virtual memory of the system

Monitors memory activities and reports detailed memory utilization.

Monitors virtual memory and provides the memory utilization for the entire system and for each swap area

Monitors the network for information about interfaces, addresses, protocols, and traffic.

Provides you with an abstract view of the entire filesystem, regardless of the various systems' architectures and operating systems

Displays statistics on process switches, run queues, messaging, and semaphores and allows you to list zombie processes and change process priorities.

Monitors specified processes running on your system.

Schedules processes and establishes monitoring blackout periods in your environment

Provides listings of the group and password files and shows the failed logins

Monitors whether the SNMP Master Agent and subagent are running, lists configuration information, and provides diagnostic tests with which you can troubleshoot problems.

Monitors the resource consumption of individual users as well as the number of users and sessions that run on the system

Monitors the filesystems mounted on a system for information such as disk space, i-nodes, mount and unmounts file systems.

Monitors the disk drives that are mounted on a system

Monitors remote hosts running Secure Shell (SSH) protocol version 2 (SSH2) using the PSL collection method.

Acts as a container KM and hosts the instances of all remote hosts.

Monitors and manages printers, print queues, and print jobs.

Monitors and manages Solaris Containers with zones and pools statistics such as

  • State and type of the zones and pools
  • CPU share allocated to the zones
  • CPU share available in the resource pools
  • Percentage of overall CPU utilization by the zones
  • Percentage of overall CPU utilization from the resource pools
  • Percentage of CPU idle time for the resource pools
  • Percentage of CPU time spent on user activities for the resource pools
  • Percentage of CPU time spent on system activities for the resource pools
  • Percentage of time spent waiting on input and output for the resource pools

Enables you to monitor the projects in a global or a non-global zone.

Enables you to view the number of processes as well as the statistics and configuration information for a non-global zone.

Enables you to monitor and display the configuration for each configured and active domain on the system, including the control domain, based on domain roles such as the Control domain, Service domain, and Guest domain

Enables you to view statistical data for zpools (collection of virtual devices that provide physical storage) created on the computer 

 

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