Ability to monitor the Directory Server using Netscape Console.


Try This:

Navigate to the Directory Server branch on your console.


See Chapter 10, Managing You Directory Server,  of the Administrator's Guide.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Try This:

Use Netscape Console to observe the total number of connections to this server since server startup.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Try This:

Use Netscape Console to observe the Current Resource Usage for Active Threads. 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Try This:

Use Netscape Console to view General Information about the database


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Try This:

Use Netscape Console to observe the Entry cache hits on your server.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Try This:

Use Netscape Console to observe the tables for each index file that makes up your database.  How do these tables compare with the indexes identified in the Configuration section of this WBT.

Monitoring Your Server

You can monitor your directory server's current activities from either the server console or the command line. You can monitor database and cache activities in the same manner.  The following section describes how to monitor your server's activity from the Server Console.

Monitoring Your Server from the Server Console

To monitor your server's activities through the server console:

On the Console, in the left pane, through the tree, open the host, open the server group and double click on the Directory Server. 


 
From the resulting display, select the Status tab and click Performance Counters in the navigation tree in the left pane.  The Server tab in the right pane displays current information about server activity. If the server is currently not running, this tab will not provide performance monitoring information. 
Click Refresh to refresh the currently displayed information. If you want the server to continuously update the displayed information, select the Continuous check box and then click Refresh.

General Information

Note the general information under the Server tab.  This a place you could look if you wanted to know the software version of your server.  You can also find the server's machine data tree DN, the server host name, the server port number, the current change log number, and other useful information.

Resource Usage

You monitor your resource usage through three tables that appear below the general information. 

The first of these is the Resource Summary table which provides the resource-specific information. 
 
Resource Usage Since Startup Average Per Minute
Connections  Total number of connections to this server since server startup.  Average number of connections per minute since the server started. 
Operations Initiated  Total number of operations initiated since server startup. Operations are any client requests for server action, such as searches, adds, and modifies in the directory tree. It is likely that multiple operations will be initiated for each connection.  Average number of operations per minute since the server started. 
Operations Completed  Total number of operations completed by the server since server startup.  Average number of operations per minute since the server started. 
Entries sent to clients  Total number of entries sent to clients since the server started. Entries are sent to clients as the result of search requests.  Average number of entries sent to clients per minute since the server started. 
Bytes sent to clients  Total number of bytes sent to clients since the server started.  Average number of bytes sent to clients per minute since the server started. 

Current Resource Usage

This is the second of the three main tables displayed when you monitor your server. 
 
Resource Current Total
Active Threads  Current number of active threads. Each thread represents a single operation currently active in the server. Additional threads may also be created by internal server housekeeping tasks, such as replication
Open Connections  Total number of open connections. Each connection can account for multiple operations, and therefore multiple threads.
Remaining available connections  Total number of remaining connections that the server can concurrently open. This number is based on the number of currently open connections, and the total number of concurrent connections that the server is allowed to open. The latter value is determined by the operating system, and is expressed as the number of file descriptors available to a task. Refer to your operating system documentation for more information on file descriptors. 
Threads waiting to write to client  Total number of threads waiting to write to the client. This happens anytime the server must pause while sending data to a client. Reasons for this are a slow network, a slow client, or an extremely large amount of information being sent to the client. 
Threads waiting to read from client  Total number of threads waiting to read from the client. This happens if the server starts to receive a request from the client and then the transmission of that request is halted for some reason. Generally, threads waiting to read are an indication of a slow network or a slow client. 
Thread Concurrency  Meaningful on Solaris 2.x only. Provides an indication of the level of thread concurrency. 
Databases in use  Total number of databases being serviced by the server. Currently, this value is always 1. 

Connection Status

This is the third of the three main tables displayed when you monitor your server. This table provides information on the amount of resources in use by each currently open connection. Values are:
  • Time opened: Indicates the time on the server when the connection was initially opened.

  •  
  • Operations: Indicates the number of operations initiated by this connection, and the number of those operations completed by the server.

  •  
  • Bind DN: Indicates the distinguished name used by the client to connect to the server. If the client has not authenticated to the server, not bound is shown in this field.

  •  
  • Read/Write: Indicates whether the server is currently blocked for read or write access to the client.  Possible values are: 
  • Not blocked indicates that the server is idle, actively sending data to the client, or actively reading data from the client.

  •  
  • Blocked indicates that the server is trying to send data to the client or read data from the client, but the server cannot. The probable cause for being blocked is a slow network or a slow client.
  • Monitoring Database Activity from the Server Console

    You can monitor your database's current activities from the server console or from the command line.

    From the Status tab, select the Database tab.


     

    General Information (Database)

              Note the general information area.  It consists of: 
  • Database—identifies the type of database that you are monitoring.
  • Config DN—identifies the distinguished name that you can use to obtain these results using the ldapsearch.
  • Summary Information Table

    The Summary Information table provides information about the following:
    Performance Metric Current Total
    Read-only status Indicates whether the database is currently in read-only mode. Your database is in read-only mode when your readonly slapd.conf parameter is set to on.
    Entry cache hits Indicates the total number of successful entry cache lookups. That is, the total number of times the a server could process a search request by obtaining data from the cache rather than by going to disk.
    Entry cache tries Indicates the total number of entry cache lookups since the directory server was last started. That is, this is the total number of search operations performed against your server since server startup.
    Entry cache hit Ratio Ratio that indicates the number of entry cache tries to successful entry cache lookups. This number is based on the total lookups and hits since the server was last started. The closer this value is to 100% the better. Whenever a search operation attempts to find an entry that is not resident in the entry cache, the directory server has to perform a disk access to obtain the entry.  Thus, as this ratio drops towards zero, the number of disk accesses increases and directory server search performance drops.
    Current number of entries in entry
    cache
    Indicates the total number of directory entries currently resident in the entry cache. 
    Maximum number of entries in entry cache Indicates the maximum number of directory entries that are allowed to be maintained in the entry cache. This value is managed by the Maximum Entries in Cache parameter in slapd.conf. 

    Database Cache Information Table

     The Database Cache Information table provides the caching information as described below.
     
    Performance Metric Current Total
    Hits Indicates the number of times the database cache successfully supplied a requested page.
    Tries Indicates the number of times the database cache was asked for a page.
    Hit ratio Indicates the ratio of database cache hits to database cache tries. The closer this value is to 100%, the better.
    Whenever a directory operation attempts to find a portion of the database that is not resident in the database cache, the directory server has to perform a disk access to obtain the appropriate database page. Thus, as this ratio drops towards zero, the number of disk accesses increases and directory server performance drops.
    Pages read in Indicates the number of pages read from disk into the database cache. 
    Pages written out Indicates the number of pages written from the cache back to disk. A database page is written out to disk whenever a read-write page has been modified and then subsequently evicted from the cache. Pages are evicted from the database cache when the cache is full and a directory operation requires a database page that is not currently stored in cache.
    Read-only page evicts Indicates the number of read-only pages discarded from the cache to make room for new pages.
    Read-write page evicts Indicates the number of read-write pages discarded from the cache to make room for new pages. This value differs from Pages Written Out in that these are discarded read-write pages that have not been modified.

    Database File-Specific Table

    The server displays a table for each index file that makes up your database. Each of the tables provides the information described below. 
     
    Performance Metric Current Total
    Cache hits Number of times that a search result resulted in a cache hit on this specific file. That is, a search that required data from this file was performed and the required data was successfully obtained from the cache.
    Cache misses Number of times that a search result failed to result in a cache hit on this specific file. That is, a search that required data from this file was performed and the required data could not be found in the cache.
    Pages read in Indicates the number of pages brought to the cache from this file.
    Pages written out Indicates the number of pages for this file written from cache to disk.

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