5.8.5

Table Of Contents
Table 22. Object Health States
Badge Icon Description User Action
The health of the object is
normal.
No attention required.
The object is experiencing some
level of problems.
Check the Details tab and take
appropriate action.
The object might have serious
problems.
Check the Details tab and take
appropriate action as soon as
possible.
The object is either not
functioning properly or will
stop functioning soon.
Check the Details tab to identify
the most probable cause of the
problem and act immediately.
No data is available.
The object is offline.
A vCenter Operations Manager administrator can change the badge score thresholds. For example, a green
Health badge can indicate a score above 80 instead of 75, as set by default.
The Health Weather Map
The Health Weather Map displays the health status of all the objects related to the object that you have
selected in the inventory pane.
The Health Weather Map is available for all objects in the inventory except virtual machines. For virtual
machines, vCenter Operations Manager displays a Health Trend graph.
Each square in the Weather Map represents a related object, directly or indirectly connected to the selected
object. For example, if you selected an ESX host in the inventory pane, the number of squares in the Health
Weather Map equals the sum of all virtual machines and datastores under this ESX host plus the Datacenter,
vCenter Server, and the World object that are above the ESX host in the inventory pane. The squares in the
Health Weather Map are not sized, so there is no visible correspondence between object types in the
inventory and the squares in the map. You can use the Health Weather Map for a quick overview of the
current condition and how it has changed during the past 6 hours. If you notice a red or yellow square, you
can click it to navigate to the Details tab of the object that corresponds to this square, and view more
information about its health.
By default, the Health Weather Map displays the current badge values. You can click the time line in the
bottom of the map to switch to earlier periods.
NOTE Selecting an earlier time period that is one or more hours away from the current moment displays the
condition of the monitored system as it was on the hour. For example, if the current time is 3:15 p.m. and
you click -1, vCenter Operations Manager displays the Health Weather Map for 3:00 p.m. If you click -2,
vCenter Operations Manager displays the Health Weather Map for 2:00 p.m.
Using the Workload Badge Under the Health Badge
The vCenter Operations Manager Workload badge measures how hard an object must work for resources. A
workload score of 0 indicates that a resource is not being used and a score that approaches or exceeds 100
might cause performance problems.
Workload is an absolute measurement that calculates the demand for a resource divided by the capacity of
an object. Resources might include CPU, memory, disk I/O, or network I/O.
Chapter 2 Beginning to Monitor the Virtual Environment
VMware, Inc. 13