GroundWork Monitor 8.1.1 released!
August 4, 2020
A monitoring system is a shared tool. It’s useful for teams to operate from the same source of information, since subjective opinions can lead insights astray, especially when troubleshooting systems and network issues. You need a single source of truth.
A monitoring dashboard with drill-down capability is a basic tool for any NOC staff. Often displayed on kiosks or wall-mounted in the Network Operations Center (NOC), dashboards let you know at a glance whether anything needs attention.
A generalized and flexible dashboard may not fit the bill, however.
Often there is simply too much information displayed to allow for a specific alert to gain focus and be integrated into the incident response process. Ticketing systems with customized workflows can help, but modern ticketing systems are often complex, and can even slow down response time with cumbersome requirements. In the thick of things, you need to know that you are working on the most important items, and only those items.
GroundWork Monitor supports role-based access (RBAC), which serves to make general dashboards far more targeted, and display only the monitored resources accessible to a given user, based on their area of responsibility. This works well, as long as the user is reasonably well versed in manipulating the dashboard to further filter and expose the items of concern. For ad-hoc troubleshooting or investigation, it’s essential. However, it is still not enough to support intuitive adherence to process.
That’s where you need NOC Boards.
NOC Boards provide views of specific groups in GroundWork Monitor. These are groups of hosts (host groups), groups of specific services on specific hosts (service groups), and custom groups, that is, nested groups of either host groups or service groups.
Organizing your monitored resources into groups is a good thing. If you organize all the database monitoring, for example, into a single service group, you can expose this to the DBA support staff in the monitoring system. Groups can be dynamic, which with cloud services is an essential feature. With dynamic membership, you don’t necessarily need to maintain the group in detail, only the tags and rules that govern it. Once you have set up this level of organization, you can use NOC Boards to show the users just the problems that exist in that group.
In the image below we show the NOC Board named Global Oracle Status which has been configured to display the service group OracleStatus services, all states for the last 24 hours, both in downtime and not in downtime over the last 2 hour period, both acknowledged and not acknowledged services, and the SLA status based on the contractural percentage.
You could even show, on one display, the acknowledged and unacknowledged issues in separate lists. If it makes sense within your team, you can spilt them off and give one group access, using RBAC, to the unacknowledged issues (dispatch, for example, or triage) and another the acknowledged issues, for longer term tasks like backup/restore or database recovery.
NOC Boards are editable and customizable by users with the Admin role. They are read only for other users, and do allow for anyone to acknowledge issues, drill down to more detailed displays, or leave comments behind for other team members.
Using the GroundWork Menu Editor feature, you can create specific pages to be displayed as top-level or sub-level menu items, with specific combinations of NOC Boards for particular groups.
What does all of this provide to you?
All of which allow you to design your response workflow with simple and flexible visualizations, and this is especially important when dealing with large and dynamic infrastructures.
To continue with the idea of your DBA team, imagine you have set up a servicegroup of Oracle servers with availability and performance checks:
These are then added to a NOC Board and set to show any unacknowledged issues:
A second NOC Board is devised to show only acknowledged issues:
Now, a menu item is added that points to the two boards together, restricted to DBA role:
The resulting page is accessible to users with the DBA role. The board with the unacknowledged items can be set to auto-expand, giving an indication of open issues visible from across the room:
Now it’s not hard to see when you need to take action and repair a failure detected by the monitoring system. Nor, is it hard to see what’s being worked on (which is displayed on the second list).
There are many more uses for the NOC Boards, and they can be customized to show only specific columns in a specific order, or to give you a heads up when an SLA you set is not being met. These simple yet powerful presentation techniques make GroundWork Monitor an effective shared tool, and a source of objective truth when troubleshooting.
See our support portal GroundWork Support at www.support8.gwos.com for NOC Board how to’s and use cases.
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