Compute
Elastic Cloud Server
Huawei Cloud Flexus
Bare Metal Server
Auto Scaling
Image Management Service
Dedicated Host
FunctionGraph
Cloud Phone Host
Huawei Cloud EulerOS
Networking
Virtual Private Cloud
Elastic IP
Elastic Load Balance
NAT Gateway
Direct Connect
Virtual Private Network
VPC Endpoint
Cloud Connect
Enterprise Router
Enterprise Switch
Global Accelerator
Management & Governance
Cloud Eye
Identity and Access Management
Cloud Trace Service
Resource Formation Service
Tag Management Service
Log Tank Service
Config
OneAccess
Resource Access Manager
Simple Message Notification
Application Performance Management
Application Operations Management
Organizations
Optimization Advisor
IAM Identity Center
Cloud Operations Center
Resource Governance Center
Migration
Server Migration Service
Object Storage Migration Service
Cloud Data Migration
Migration Center
Cloud Ecosystem
KooGallery
Partner Center
User Support
My Account
Billing Center
Cost Center
Resource Center
Enterprise Management
Service Tickets
HUAWEI CLOUD (International) FAQs
ICP Filing
Support Plans
My Credentials
Customer Operation Capabilities
Partner Support Plans
Professional Services
Analytics
MapReduce Service
Data Lake Insight
CloudTable Service
Cloud Search Service
Data Lake Visualization
Data Ingestion Service
GaussDB(DWS)
DataArts Studio
Data Lake Factory
DataArts Lake Formation
IoT
IoT Device Access
Others
Product Pricing Details
System Permissions
Console Quick Start
Common FAQs
Instructions for Associating with a HUAWEI CLOUD Partner
Message Center
Security & Compliance
Security Technologies and Applications
Web Application Firewall
Host Security Service
Cloud Firewall
SecMaster
Anti-DDoS Service
Data Encryption Workshop
Database Security Service
Cloud Bastion Host
Data Security Center
Cloud Certificate Manager
Edge Security
Managed Threat Detection
Blockchain
Blockchain Service
Web3 Node Engine Service
Media Services
Media Processing Center
Video On Demand
Live
SparkRTC
MetaStudio
Storage
Object Storage Service
Elastic Volume Service
Cloud Backup and Recovery
Storage Disaster Recovery Service
Scalable File Service Turbo
Scalable File Service
Volume Backup Service
Cloud Server Backup Service
Data Express Service
Dedicated Distributed Storage Service
Containers
Cloud Container Engine
SoftWare Repository for Container
Application Service Mesh
Ubiquitous Cloud Native Service
Cloud Container Instance
Databases
Relational Database Service
Document Database Service
Data Admin Service
Data Replication Service
GeminiDB
GaussDB
Distributed Database Middleware
Database and Application Migration UGO
TaurusDB
Middleware
Distributed Cache Service
API Gateway
Distributed Message Service for Kafka
Distributed Message Service for RabbitMQ
Distributed Message Service for RocketMQ
Cloud Service Engine
Multi-Site High Availability Service
EventGrid
Dedicated Cloud
Dedicated Computing Cluster
Business Applications
Workspace
ROMA Connect
Message & SMS
Domain Name Service
Edge Data Center Management
Meeting
AI
Face Recognition Service
Graph Engine Service
Content Moderation
Image Recognition
Optical Character Recognition
ModelArts
ImageSearch
Conversational Bot Service
Speech Interaction Service
Huawei HiLens
Video Intelligent Analysis Service
Developer Tools
SDK Developer Guide
API Request Signing Guide
Terraform
Koo Command Line Interface
Content Delivery & Edge Computing
Content Delivery Network
Intelligent EdgeFabric
CloudPond
Intelligent EdgeCloud
Solutions
SAP Cloud
High Performance Computing
Developer Services
ServiceStage
CodeArts
CodeArts PerfTest
CodeArts Req
CodeArts Pipeline
CodeArts Build
CodeArts Deploy
CodeArts Artifact
CodeArts TestPlan
CodeArts Check
CodeArts Repo
Cloud Application Engine
MacroVerse aPaaS
KooMessage
KooPhone
KooDrive
On this page

Show all

Component Monitoring

Updated on 2024-08-01 GMT+08:00

Components refer to the services that you deploy, including containers and common processes. For example, a workload on the Cloud Container Engine (CCE) is a component, and the Tomcat running on the VM is also a component.

The component list displays the type, CPU usage, memory usage, and alarm status of each component, helping you learn their running status. You can click a component name to learn more information about the component. AOM supports drill-down from a component to an instance, and then to a container. By viewing the status of each layer, you can implement dimensional monitoring for components.

  1. In the navigation pane, choose Monitoring > Component Monitoring.

    • The component list displays information such as Component Name, Status, Application, Deployment Mode, and Application Discovery Rules.
    • Click in the upper right corner and select Hide system component.
    • Set filter criteria above the component list to filter components.

  2. Perform the following operations as required:

    • Adding an alias

      If a component name is complex and difficult to identify, you can add an alias for the component.

      Click Add alias in the Operation column to add an alias.

    • Adding a tag

      Tags are identifiers of components. You can distinguish system components from non-system ones based on tags. By default, AOM adds the System Service tag to system components (including icagent, css-defender, nvidia-driver-installer, nvidia-gpu-device-plugin, kube-dns, org.tanukisoftware.wrapper.WrapperSimpleApp, evs-driver, obs-driver, sfs-driver, icwatchdog, and sh). You can click in the upper right corner to select or deselect Hide system component. AOM also allows you to customize tags for easier component management.

      In the component list, click Add tags in the Operation column of the component, enter a tag, and click and OK to add a tag. You can also mark the component as a system component.

      NOTE:
      • The Tags column of the component list is hidden by default. You can click in the upper right corner and select or deselect Tags to show or hide tags.
      • Application Discovery Rules:
        • Sys_Rule: AOM automatically discovers components based on the built-in application discovery rule named Sys_Rule. For details, see Built-in Discovery Rules.
        • Default_Rule: AOM automatically discovers components based on the built-in application discovery rule named Default_Rule. For details, see Built-in Discovery Rules.
        • Custom rules: Their names are customized and not fixed. Applications are discovered based on custom rules.

  3. Set filter criteria to search for the desired component.

    NOTE:

    Components cannot be searched by alias.

  4. Click the component name. The Component Details page is displayed.

    NOTE:

    In the upper right corner of the Component Details page, you can set a time range to query the instance, host, or alarm information of the component. If no data exists within the time range, AOM automatically switches to the Component Monitoring page.

    • On the Instance List tab page, view the instance details.
      NOTE:

      Click an instance name to monitor the resource usage and health status.

    • On the Host List tab page, view the host details.
    • On the Alarm Analysis tab page, view the alarm details.
    • Click the View Monitor Graphs tab to monitor the metrics of the component.
      • AOM provides a default view template (Service Template) which can be modified. You can also click View Template to customize one.
      • You can click to add a line graph or to add a digit graph to the view template. You can also delete, move, and copy metric graphs in the view template. For details, see Dashboard.
    • Adding to a dashboard

      On the component details page, click the View Monitor Graphs tab, and choose More > Add to Dashboard in the upper right corner to add the view template to the dashboard for monitoring.

We use cookies to improve our site and your experience. By continuing to browse our site you accept our cookie policy. Find out more

Feedback

Feedback

Feedback

0/500

Selected Content

Submit selected content with the feedback