Book Image

Getting Started with Microsoft System Center Operations Manager

By : Kevin Greene
Book Image

Getting Started with Microsoft System Center Operations Manager

By: Kevin Greene

Overview of this book

Most modern IT environments comprise a heterogeneous mixture of servers, network devices, virtual hypervisors, storage solutions, cross-platform operating systems and applications. All this complexity brings a requirement to deliver a centralized monitoring and reporting solution that can help IT administrators quickly identify where the problems are and how best to resolve them. Using System Center Operations Manager (OpsMgr), administrators get a full monitoring overview of the IT services they have responsibility for across the organization - along with some useful management capabilities to help them remediate any issues they've been alerted to. This book begins with an introduction to OpsMgr and its core concepts and then walks you through designing and deploying the various roles. After a chapter on exploring the consoles, you will learn how to deploy agents, work with management packs, configure network monitoring and model your IT services using distributed applications. There’s a chapter dedicated to alert tuning and another that demonstrates how to visualize your IT using dashboards. The final chapters in the book discuss how to create alert subscriptions, manage reports, backup and recover OpsMgr, perform maintenance and troubleshoot common problems.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Getting Started with Microsoft System Center Operations Manager
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Distributed applications overview


The term distributed application originates from the developer world where an application would typically comprise two (client and server) or three (client, server and middleware) tiers within the service model. Using this type of distributed model, application developers gained a complete understanding of how each tier functioned and this enabled them to deliver faster development cycles for new releases.

In the operations world, IT administrators have responsibility for monitoring and managing the many disparate components that form the basis of their organizations IT service catalog. The pressure is on for them to deliver comprehensive monitoring of IT services but with a visibility that's easy to understand for both senior management and non-tech savvy employees alike. This is where Microsoft has seized their opportunity with distributed applications in OpsMgr by enabling IT administrators to map out the different components of an IT service and bring...