![dash board view dash board view](https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/scale_medium/0/966/492454-pgr4ch1.png)
However, I like to see where things are headed so I’ll keep this checked.
![dash board view dash board view](https://help.mypurecloud.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/performance_dashboards_icons.png)
You could even uncheck forecasting all together as this dashboard will mostly be used to troubleshoot events that occurred in the past. In this example I expanded the disk I/O group and selected the average write latency (ms).įor the metric configuration, we’ll uncheck the trend of the historic data and set the forecast to only show the next day. Note that you can plot multiple metrics on the same chart, but for the sake of keeping things readable, we’ll just select one. Select the metric you want to view from the data menu. In the subjects menu, expand the vSAN Adapter and select vSAN Disk Group. Depending on the number of disk groups you have for each of your host clusters, you may want to adjust the maximum number of plot lines. Select a trendline graph from the presentation menu. Give this view a name and a description of it’s intended use. Select dashboards from the top menu, views from the left-hand menu, and click on the green plus sign to create a view. To begin, we’ll start by creating a new view. Today, we’re going to take things a step further and include some views into a dashboard so that we can compare all disk groups for a selected cluster to quickly identify anomalies. But what if you want to compare that cluster’s disk groups for specific metrics in a single representation and avoiding all that back and forth comparison? Impossible you say? That dashboard works awesome if you want to look at a particular disk group.
#Dash board view how to#
In last week’s post, we learned how to create a custom dashboard to view vSAN disk group metrics for a selected cluster.