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vSphere ESXi Resource Pool Monitoring

Requires Opsview Cloud or Opsview Monitor 6.2

This Host Template is part of the Vsphere Monitoring Opspack

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Opsview Supported

Host Template: OS - VMware vSphere ESXi Resource Pool

Monitor your ESXi Resource Pools with a variety of checks including CPU Usage, Memory Usage and Memory Ballooning. This Host Template includes support for VMware vMotion, so you can keep monitoring Resource Pools even if they are moved between Hosts with no change to your Opsview configuration.

See all of the Opsview's virtualization monitoring solutions at VMware Monitoring.

This Host Template includes the following Service Checks:

Service Check Name Description Default Thresholds (Warning, Critical) UOM
vSphere - Resource Pool - CPU Used CPU Used in MHz. N/A MHz
vSphere - Resource Pool - Memory Used Amount of host physical memory consumed, and the amount used for virtualization infrastructure. N/A B
vSphere - Resource Pool - Memory Balloon Amount of memory allocated by the Virtual Machine memory control driver, which controls ballooning. N/A B

Usage Instructions

NOTE: Resource Pool metrics are only supported when authenticating with ESXi credentials.

NOTE: To monitor a Resource Pool within a Cluster, the Cluster must contain Hosts.

vMotion Support

To allow for vMotion support (moving Resource Pools between ESXi Hosts without having to update your Host details), you must use the vCenter Credentials Variable listed in Step 2. Additionally, all Hosts utilized in vMotion must share login credentials to allow Opsview to maintain monitoring. The ESXi Host Name is optional if using vCenter Credentials.

When using vMotion, the ESXi Host containing the requested resource can be found automatically without needing to specify the Host the resource is on. However, this automatic retrieval of the Host will extend the runtime of the service checks and if performance is a concern, the Opsview Host configuration should be updated with the correct ESXi Host details.

Providing the vCenter Credentials variable will also allow for enhanced error handling when carrying out Service Checks.

Step 1: Add this Host Template

Add the OS - VMware vSphere ESXi Resource Pool Host Template to your Opsview Monitor host. If the resource you're monitoring has no hostname or public IP, then open the Advanced settings pane and change Host Check Command to Always assumed to be UP.

For more information, refer to Opsview Knowledge Center - Adding Host Templates to Hosts.

Step 2: Add and configure variables required for this Host Template

The Service Checks in this Host Template use the following variables, and they will be added to your Opsview Monitor instance when you import the Opspack:

VSPHERE_ESXI_RES_POOL_NAME

Parameter Position in Variable Name Description
--esxi-res-pool-name Value ESXi Resource Pool Name Name of the ESXi Resource Pool

VSPHERE_ESXI_CREDENTIALS

This variable is optional but either 'VSPHERE_ESXI_CREDENTIALS' or 'VSPHERE_VC_CREDENTIALS' needs to be set.

Parameter Position in Variable Name Description
--esxi-username Arg1 ESXi Username Username for the ESXi Host
--esxi-password Arg2 ESXi Password Password for the ESXi Host

VSPHERE_ESXI_HOST_NAME

Parameter Position in Variable Name Description
Opsview UI Only Value ESXi Host Display Name Display Name for ESXi Host Service Checks
--esxi-hostname Arg1 ESXi Host Name Name of the ESXi Host

VSPHERE_VC_CREDENTIALS

This variable is optional but either 'VSPHERE_ESXI_CREDENTIALS' or 'VSPHERE_VC_CREDENTIALS' needs to be set. Setting this variable allows for enhanced error handling when carrying out ESXi Service Checks.

Parameter Position in Variable Name Description
--vcenter-username Arg1 vCenter Username Username for vCenter instance
--vcenter-password Arg2 vCenter Password Password for vCenter instance
--vcenter-server Arg3 vCenter Instance Name Name of the vCenter instance

For more information, refer to Opsview Knowledge Center - Adding Variables to Hosts.

For mode-specific help, run the plugin with the -h -m <mode> flags. This will list the required and optional Variable Arguments for that mode. The appropriate mode for each Service Check is listed here:

Service Check Name Mode
vSphere - Resource Pool - CPU Used ESXiResPool.CPU.Used
vSphere - Resource Pool - Memory Used ESXiResPool.Mem.Used
vSphere - Resource Pool - Memory Balloon ESXiResPool.Mem.Balloon

SSL Certificates

Additionally, you can use the following variable to pass in your SSL certificates for use when connecting to the service provider to gather metrics:

VSPHERE_CERTIFICATES

Parameter Position in Variable Name Description
--ca-path Arg1 CA Certificate Path Path to the CA Certificate
--client-cert Arg2 Client Certificate Path Path to the Client Certificate
--client-key Arg3 Client Key Path Path to the Client Key

Step 3: Apply changes and the system will now be monitored

vSphere ESXi Resource Pool Service Checks