5.8.5

Table Of Contents
Procedure
1 Select Environment > Environment Overview.
2 Drag the resource from the list in the right pane of the Environment Overview page to the GEO
Location tag value name.
You can press Ctrl+click to select multiple individual resources or Shift+click to select a range of
resources.
The resources that you selected are now associated with the GEO Location tag value.
View the Resource Map
You can use the world map on the Geographical tab on the Environment Overview page to see the health of
the resources at some or all of your defined locations.
The GEO widget shows a map similar to the map on the Geographical tab. You can add the GEO widget to
any dashboard.
Prerequisites
n
Activate the geographical location feature in vCenter Operations Manager. See “Activate the
Geographical Location Feature,” on page 27.
n
Create GEO Location tag values for your office locations. See “Create a GEO Location Tag Value,” on
page 28.
n
Assign resources to the GEO Location tag values. See “Assign a Resource to a GEO Location Tag
Value,” on page 28.
Procedure
n
To show the world map, select Environment > Environment Overview and select the Geographical tab
in the right pane.
n
To show specific locations on the map, select one or more tag values under the GEO Location tag in the
left pane.
By default, the Geographical tab shows all resources for all locations.
n
To move the map, drag the map or use the direction arrows in the top left corner of the map.
n
To zoom the map, click the plus and minus buttons under the direction arrows.
Configure Parent-Child Resource Relationships
When resources are related, the health score of one resource is based on the metrics of its child resources
and its own metrics. You can define resource relationships so that vCenter Operations Manager analytics
can consider these relationships when it calculates health scores.
Most, if not all, resources in an enterprise environment are related to other resources in that environment.
Resources are either part of a larger resource, or they contain smaller component resources, or both.
The most common resource relationships gather similar resources into tiers and related tiers into
applications. You define those relationships by defining applications. In addition, frequently other
relationships exist between resources. For example, for each application that runs on an application server,
you might define a child resource. You define these types of relationships by configuring resource
relationships.
You must define applications and tiers to add resources to tiers or tiers to applications. See Chapter 5,
“Configuring Applications,” on page 59.
Chapter 3 Configuring Resources
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