SolarWinds is making performance monitoring for VMware environments a reality. The release of a new free tool, SolarWinds VM Monitor, and an update to its flagship Orion Network Performance Monitor (NPM) will allow IT professionals to take advantage of the key characteristics of SolarWinds’ solutions – enterprise-class performance combined with affordability, quick deployment and ease of use – to manage and monitor their virtual deployments.
Businesses, both large and small, are moving to virtualization in order to consolidate their server and network infrastructure, save money, and improve overall uptime and flexibility. These virtual deployments add additional monitoring challenges to an already complex network environment. Many affordable network management solutions lack the ability to extend monitoring to performance and availability of virtual machines (VMs), potentially impacting critical business services including e-mail, web applications, and ERP. If performance and fault monitoring for these environments is costly and complicated, IT organizations will struggle to realize the full potential of a virtual environment.
“Ten years ago, we sought to create a new approach for network management solutions based on the combination of enterprise-class performance, affordability and ease of deployment and use. Today, more than 50,000 customers, from small businesses to the Fortune 500, trust our solutions to help them monitor and manage critical networks,” said Kenny Van Zant, chief product strategist. “As the adoption of VMware environments continues to grow, we have extended our approach to virtualization, giving network engineers and administrators the ability to make the most of their virtualization investment.”
SolarWinds VM Monitor delivers an intuitive, desktop dashboard that continuously monitors a VMware ESX server and the associated virtual machines by providing real-time monitoring of ESX health indicators. SolarWinds’ free tool, available for download today, makes it easy to:
Quickly check the health of a single VMware ESX server by monitoring CPU and memory utilization, number of virtual machines configured and running, and much more
View detailed individual virtual machine health statistics including VM name, IP address, VM state, as well as processor, memory and disk usage.
Leverage best practice thresholds to begin monitoring virtualized servers out-of-the-box
Prevent performance degradation by checking threshold specific indicators to remediate issues
When users are ready to expand monitoring to their full VMware virtual environment, Orion Network Performance Monitor (NPM) enables network engineers to monitor thousands of VMware ESX servers, as well as associated virtual machine instances, and VMware VirtualCenter. With this update, Orion NPM can read host MIB information from each VMware ESX server and its corresponding virtual machines, detailing statistics such as CPU utilization, memory utilization, disk usage, and much more. The latest release also offers ESX-specific alerts and reports. Orion Network Performance Monitor offers:
Monitoring and analysis of real-time, in-depth network performance metrics for routers, switches, physical servers, ESX servers, virtual machines, and any other SNMP-enabled devices
Do-it-yourself deployment that allows users to be up and running in about an hour
Highly intuitive, customizable web interface with point-and-click simplicity that supports multiple views including cutting-edge maps and global Top 10 lists
Advanced alerting for correlated events, sustained conditions, and complex combinations of device states
Scalability to accommodate growth and management needs with Orion Enterprise Operations Console, additional polling engines, and additional web servers
Modules to expand monitoring of NetFlow traffic analysis and VoIP performance, wireless devices, applications and servers
Users can find more information, tips from SolarWinds company experts as well as peer support and perspectives on Orion NPM, at Thwack, the SolarWinds online community. Integrated links within the products give SolarWinds customers the ability to search product forums, post questions, exchange custom scripts and templates, and immediately access valuable knowledge and resources directly from the community’s more than 18,000 members.
About Virtualization News Desk SYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.
Micro Focus has announced the availability of Micro Focus COBOL for Eclipse, encompassing versions of Micro Focus' Net Express and Server Express solutions designed specifically for the Eclipse open source ecosystem.
Micro Focus COBOL for Eclipse provides an integrated development en...
Only if you were on the dark side of the moon could you have missed the impact of the iPhone. Its sweeping success has brought mobile services into the mainstream. As the first device to convincingly integrate traditional phone capabilities with Web access, it highlights the multi-chan...
Much like “Web 2.0″, cloud computing was a collection of related concepts that people recognized, but didn’t really have a good descriptor for, a definition in search of a term, you could say. When Google CEO Eric Schmidt used it in 2006 to describe their own stuff and then Amaz...
It’s time to wrap up the year 2008 - a year of change with Obama, the Olympic Games and the financial crisis. It was also the year when Yahoo said no to Microsoft. 2009 will be all about Cloud Computing: the technological hype has started already but the commercial breakthrough will ...
Genuitec has announced the production release of MyEclipse Enterprise Workbench 7.0. The new release, built upon Eclipse 3.4.1/Ganymede, delivers a comprehensive environment for AJAX and Web Services in the Eclipse space. In addition, MyEclipse 7.0 is delivered on top of the Pulse Ecli...
There's a new release of OpenSolaris out – OpenSolaris 2008.11 – out a whole three weeks before the end of 2008. There was a 2008.05 release, aka Project Indiana, in May but that wasn’t as commercial or production-oriented as this one. Both run only on x86 machines, not Sun's own...
SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NEWSLETTERS
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR RSS FEEDS & GET YOUR SYS-CON NEWS LIVE!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice: