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

Sky Blue to the rescue!


One of the best things about working with OpsMgr is the amazing amount of free resources made available by the System Center community. The excellent 'Sky Blue' management pack from Charles Champion (Premier Field Engineer at Microsoft) is an example of one of these community resources and this is a management pack you definitely want to deploy to help you with your alert tuning and management processes.

As you learnt earlier in the Working with alerts generated by monitors section, it's a bad idea to close alerts generated by monitors without resolving the original problem or creating an override for it. The reason for this is that the health state of the monitor stays unhealthy and the alert that notified you of the change in state is now missing from the console. This is a common scenario that we come across on customer sites and one that the Sky Blue management pack will quickly remediate.

This basic (but very useful) management pack protects against accidental...