HP WebQoS Administration Guide

Logs and Filters
SLOs, Thresholds, and the History Log
Chapter 7 97
Status column - Displays the color-coded status associated with SLOs
and thresholds.
Red: Violation. The SLO or threshold is in violation and no
corrective actions are being executed by WebQoS.
Yellow: At risk. The SLO or threshold is in violation, but WebQoS
is executing a corrective action to try and bring it back into
compliance.
Only one SLO or threshold can be yellow on any given system, as
only one corrective action is executed at a time. If you select the
Services View, the SLO status for SLOs on several systems (if they
are configured) would be shown.
Green: In compliance. The SLO or threshold is being met.
Blue: Inactive. The SLO is inactive; WebQoS is disabled.
Aqua: Not connected. The SLO is not currently connected to the
system, or that the system is not connected to a web server. For a
site, the web server is not connected to the SCA. For a service, the
SCO is not running.
The management console updates the status display every 30
seconds. An SLO can show a status of “not connected” if the
display has not yet been updated. Click on another site, service, or
system to get an updated status.
Orange: Never connected. The SLO was never connected. When
you configure a site, the WebQoS configuration database and the
web server running that site are notified. If the web server is
off-line, the WebQoS Service Control Agent (SCA) tries to contact
the site later. In the mean time, the site status is defined as “never
connected.
Red: In error. The SLO or threshold is in error. This is most likely
a state for the site that is inherited by the SLOs. It usually means
the web server is not functioning properly. For example, the web
server is unable to start up or shut down completely.
NOTE If there is a problem with the web server, for example if the web
server is unable to start or shut down completely, the SLOs inherit
this problem and the SLO status is represented with a blue, aqua,
orange, or red color code.