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12/3/2009This is a great post detailing System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2008 R2 CPU Types to help customize placement ratings. If you ever used SCVMM (System Center Virtual Machine Manager) 2008 R2, you might have notices different CPU Types under the Processor properties of each Virtual Machine or inside Hardware Profiles. You might wonder what these CPU Types are and how they could come into play while Virtual Processor scheduling is actually being handled by Hyper-V while you can’t find this option anywhere in Hyper-V management console?!!
Well, this option is there just as a hint for SCVMM (when it doesn’t know anything about the Virtual Machine itself) to provide workload description for intelligent placement. For instance, if you create new VM you can say that you expect it to be equivalent of 2 proc 3.33 GHz Xeon with utilization of 40%. Placement will make sure that this VM is deployed on the right host that can provide enough CPU resources. Once VM is deployed and running, VMM will use historical performance information about this VM during migrations. Also note that CPU utilization parameter in “Customize Ratings” dialog is normalized to VM processor type.
<snip> Read the rest @> Mark Ghazai's Blog : What is CPU Type in SCVMM 2008 R2 VM Processor Hardware Profile? 12/1/2009Matt posts this great article (with screencasts) to introduce you to Service Level Dashboard 2.0. This brings me nicely on to the Service Level Dashboard 2.0. SLD 2.0 is a free download, that bolts onto, and extends the current SLD in SCOM 2007 R2, and provides a much richer experience when it comes to visualizing the status of your infrastructure, and subsequently reporting on said infrastructure. If you’re wondering what I mean by ‘much richer experience’, take a look at this:  <snip>
Read more @> virtualboy : Monitor Mission-Critical Apps with Service Level Dashboard 2.0 10/14/2009 The System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Cross Platform Update supports the monitoring of Unix/Linux Servers including: - Monitoring of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 servers (both 32-bit and 64-bit versions)
- Support of Solaris Zones
- Fix for defunct Process issue
- The Cross Platform Agent may not discover soft partitions on Solaris systems. Therefore, the disk provider may be unloaded, and the Cross Platform Agent may stop collecting information from the system disks.
- The Cross Platform Agent may not restart after the AIX server reboots.
The latest versions of all the Operations Manager 2007 R2 Unix/Linux agents are included in this update. Operating Systems supported in this update: - AIX 5.3 (Power), 6.1 (Power)
- HP-UX 11iv2 (IA64/PA-RISC), 11iv3 (IA64/PA-RISC)
- Red Hat Enterprise Server 4 (x86/x64), 5 (x86/x64)
- Solaris 8 (SPARC), 9 (SPARC), 10 (SPARC/x86)
- SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 (x86), 10 (x86/x64), 11 (x86/x64)
Download details: System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Cross Platform Update 9/8/2009 Today, the System Center team is excited to share with you our plan to release System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R3. This new release of the ConfigMgr is packed with some extremely cool features, which over the coming months we plan to share with you in different ways.
Recent shifts in the world economy have brought new focus on IT departments, and also to technology investment. Organizations are being pressured to do more with less, while at the same time manage an increasing range of working scenarios, mobility requirements, and business demands. Through all of this, they need to maintain security levels, answer compliance challenges and address the growing Green IT landscape. As organizations look to reduce financial costs and environmental impacts, power management is proving to be a successful approach. The payback for power management is clear – when a PC is using less power it translates directly into reduced operational costs – either directly through reduced energy consumption or from a growing number of electrical companies that offer rebates to companies that can prove enforcement of centralized power management policies. In addition, continuous PC power management pays environmental dividends measured in terms like Kwh, or CO2 emissions savings. Forrester estimates that more than 90% of firms are implementing or considering PC power management. Despite the advanced capabilities provided in Windows Vista and Windows 7, The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that no more than 10% of all enterprise PCs in use have their power management capabilities turned on today. Without centralized management power management simply doesn’t happen. Through research with our customers, partners, and industry experts, it became clear that System Center needed to deliver this capability in the box, with ‘R3’ as the release vehicle. System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R3 There are a few areas of focus for ConfigMgr R3, with the main engineering effort concentrating on Power Management. Here are the goals for this feature: Power Management The goal of this capability is to enable Configuration Manager to further reduce the operational costs of IT by providing basic power management features native to the product. Our approach is based on 3 primary areas: A. Help the organization plan a power strategy by monitoring current power state and consumptions and reporting on machine utilization trends, current power settings and current energy consumption B. Enable the Administrator to easily create, deploy and enforce specific power settings using the existing ConfigMgr infrastructure −Ability to set peak and non-peak schedules −Ability to remediate settings if changed −Ability to opt out machines from power policy C. Provide the business meaningful report formats that are relevant to Power Management Here is a quick video of some of the sample reports we plan to release. These are a ‘mockup’ and do not represent final calculations, views, values etc.
An effective approach to power management needs to maximize power policy deployment while minimizing the impact to the end-user. System Center Configuration Manager helps customers further reduce their operational costs by adding new in box capability to their ConfigMgr infrastructure, and by seamlessly enabling power management client agent services to their existing Collection landscape. In addition to power management, ConfigMgr R3 will provide customers with enhanced scale and performance support above current numbers. In addition, further capabilities – in time for your Window 7 deployments – around Operating System Deployment will be enabled. Configuration Manager 2007 R3 will release will release as a beta at the end of October 2009, with a targeted release of late Q1 calendar 2010. Continued blogging and product news, Twitter updates, interviews with key people on the project, and some videos and demos of the new code in action will be releasing over the coming months. Read the complete article @> Nexus SC: The System Center Team Blog : Announcing System Center Configuration Manager 2007 R3 9/6/2009 The DPM Configuration Analyzer (DPMCA) is a diagnostic tool you can use to evaluate important configuration settings on DPM 2007 servers. The tool scans hardware and software configurations of the DPM servers you specify, evaluates them against a set of predefined rules, and provides you with best practice suggestions that can make your DPM experience more optimal. You can install the DPMCA on any computer, and remotely scan a set of DPM Servers specified, with a specific user credential. Note: The DPMCA does not duplicate or replace the prerequisite checks performed during the setup of DPM 2007 Server or its components. Read More @> Download details: DPM 2007 Configuration Analyzer 9/4/2009Use this to monitor redundant network links. What’s unique about this tutorial is losing one link will not set the link state to failed, as the network connections only degraded (unless the backup link fails) What if you have an environment which is geographically dispersed and uses redundant WAN links to provide connectivity between the locations and you want to monitor these links with Operations Manager? You are using Operations Manager 2007 to monitor the environment and you want to know if a remote location is up or down, and to be provided with alerts which specific links go offline. A while back I discussed the concept of using TCP Port monitors to provide rudimentary network monitoring (up/down, and response time) which is available at http://cameronfuller.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!A231E4EB0417CB76!993.entry. With TCP Port monitors we can determine if a router is up or down and how responsive the test is. However this gets more complex when you have redundant links. For our example, we wants alerts if we lose either link to the remote location but we want a critical alert if we lose all connectivity to the remote location. This type of a situation is an example of where distributed applications can be extremely useful. To provide redundancy in case a single watcher node failed we configured two different watcher nodes for each network link we were monitoring with a TCP port monitor which was monitoring the IP address of the router or switch on port 22. We used the distributed application designer to model this network configuration as shown below:
<snip> Read more @> Using TCP Port Monitors, Distributed Applications and Savision Live Maps to monitor redundant network links 8/19/2009Pete Zerger posts a great article on deploying Adobe Acrobat 9 using System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM) 2007 I was searching for a good end-to-end blog post on deploying Adobe Reader 9.x with ConfigMgr 2007 and found there were only a couple of light discussions out there. In this post, I’ll provide all the information and resources needed to customize and deploy Adobe Reader, as well as a pointer to some tips for side-stepping potential issues with Adobe Reader co-existence with Adobe Acrobat. In this article - Extracting the MSI
- How to Create the Transform
- Coexistence of Reader and Acrobat
- ConfigMgr Command Line
- Caveats and Issues
ConfigMgr 2007: How to deploy Adobe Reader and Acrobat 9 - Resources and Caveats 8/7/2009Great tool to find the overrides that have been set on your SCOM deployment. Except of viewing the overrides, you can also do the following by right clicking on an override: 1 - Move the override to a different MP. This is usefull if in the past you saved overrides to the "Default Management pack" 2 - Change the target of the override. If you created an override to lets say disable a monitor for all SQL 2005 Databases and want to change it to only SQL 2005 Databases in a particular group, you can do it. 3 - Delete an override. Get it at @>> OpsMgr++ : Override Explorer v3.3 7/27/2009Sudheesh Narayanaswamy posts a great walkthrough on deploying Windows Vista (or Windows 7) via System Center Configuration Manager. Although the steps required to deploy an OS using Configuration Manager 2007 are available in many places, I decided to create a simple, concise step by step procedure for OSD deployment using SCCM that will hopefully come in handy if you are trying to use the OSD feature in SCCM for the first time. Preparing the Environment for Configuration Manager OSD Step 1: Create a user account to be assigned as the Network Access Account: Note: You can user an existing account or you can configure a new account. 1. On the Start menu, point to Administrative Tools, and then click Active Directory Users and Computers. The Active Directory Users and Computers window appears. 2. Create a new user named Network Access with a password and ensure that the password does not have to be changed at next logon. 3. Close Active Directory Users and Computers. Note: This account is used by the client to access the Configuration Manager Distribution point when booted under WinPE so make sure the account has the necessary permission for this action. Step 2: Create a Network Access Account: <snip> Read the rest @> The Configuration Manager Support Team Blog : A step by step for using OSD through System Center Configuration Manager 2007 6/21/2009 The Migratedatasourcedatafromdpm.Ps1 DPM Powershell Script is Included in Service Pack 1 of Data Protection Manager 2007. The MigrateDatasourceDataFromDPM is a command-line script that lets you migrate DPM data for individual “data source(s)” or all Replica volumes and recovery point volumes to different physical disks. Such a migration might be necessary when your disk is full and cannot be expanded, your disk is due for replacement, or disk errors show up. Depending on how you have configured your environment, this could mean one of more of the following scenarios for moving data source data: · DPM Physical disk to another DPM Physical disk · DPM Data source to different DPM Physical disk · DPM Data source to Custom volume. The MigrateDatasourceDataFromDPM script moves all data for a data source or disk to the new volume or physical disk. After migration is complete, the original disk from where the data was migrated from is not chosen for hosting any NEW backups, however the recovery points located on the source disk can be used for restores until the recovery points are expired. Note: You must retain your old disks until all recovery points on them expire. After the recovery points expire, DPM automatically de-allocates the replicas and recovery point volumes on these disks. <snip> Read the rest @> Ask the Core Team : How to Use The Migratedatasourcedatafromdpm.Ps1 DPM Powershell Script to Move Data
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John Gilham is the veteran Microsoft solutions consultant located in San Diego, CA.
Gilham Consulting customer's utilize his small firm for Microsoft technology integration including:
- IT infrastructure design (Hyper-V, AD, DNS, automated platform deployments)
- Microsoft security solutions (PKI, NAP, 802.1x, Forefront)
- Unified Messaging & VOIP (Exchange 2007 & OCS 2007 R2)
- System Center Management Solutions (SCDPM, SCVMM, SCCM, and SCOM)
- IT and Data Center Operations
- IT project management
They choose Gilham Consulting due to their proven track record in delivering Microsoft centric solutions. John's customers’ have ranged in size from Fortune 100 companies, non-profits, and well funded startups all across North America.
He believes that Microsoft products, when managed and architected properly, allow the best platform for organizations to automate and track their business processes to serve their customers more effectively.
This blog is a collection of the better references we've stumbled across on Microsoft focused best practices relevant to our current or future projects.
Please enjoy, correct, and contribute! |
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