You can generate a report of the alert history for specified dates and selected alerts.
NOTE: You also can access this report from Report | Active Directory Health | Health Alerts. See Active Directory Health reports. |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Alerts History tab. |
4 |
Click Report. |
6 |
By default all alerts are included. To filter the report, select Filter by Alerts, and select only those alerts to include in the report. Use Clear All or Select All to help you make the selection. |
7 |
To filter the list by severity, select Filter by severity, and choose the levels of alerts to display in the Alert History pane. |
8 |
Click Run. |
• |
The report remains open in the Reports tab until you run another report of this type. To redisplay the report with fresh data, click Refresh. |
• |
To print the report, click Print. |
• |
• |
To go to the Active Directory Reports list, click back to Reports. See Active Directory Health reports. |
If you know about an upcoming maintenance to the system or some other event that may cause a lot of unnecessary alerts, you can mute the collection of alerts or set a schedule to mute the alerts. During the mute period, no alerts are collected into the Active Administrator® database and no alert notifications are sent.
You can mute all alerts or just alerts for a specific forest, domain, domain controller, or site. The Mute option displays on each window in the Active Directory Health Analyzer. If you are viewing health for a specific object, the Mute option will mute the alerts for that object. For example, if you are viewing a specific site and you click Mute, only the site alerts for that site are muted. If you wanted to mute all the alerts for a site, you could mute all or mute the forest and include domain controllers and sites. Table 2 shows how alerts are muted to help you select the appropriate mute type.
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Analyzer tab. |
4 |
Select an object. See Table 2 to see what alerts are muted for each object. |
5 |
Click Mute. |
• |
6 |
Click Yes to confirm the mute. |
• |
To clear all mutes, click Clear All. |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Analyzer tab. |
4 |
Select an object. See Table 2 to see what alerts are muted for each object. |
5 |
Click Schedule Mute. |
6 |
If scheduling a mute for a forest object, optionally, select Include sites, domains and domain controllers to also mute their alerts. |
7 |
Optionally, enter the Reason the alerts are being muted. |
9 |
Optionally, select Override manual mutes to override existing mutes during the scheduled mute. |
10 |
Optionally, select Do not save observed values to suppress saving details of the alerts that occur during the scheduled mute in the database. |
11 |
Click Schedule to create the scheduled mute. |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Mute Schedule tab. |
5 |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Click Clear All in the banner. |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Analyzer tab. |
5 |
Click Mute. |
• |
To clear all mutes, click Clear All. |
• |
2 |
Select Monitor | Active Directory Health. |
3 |
Open the Analyzer tab. |
4 |
Click Mute History. |
© 2024 Quest Software Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Conditions d’utilisation Confidentialité Cookie Preference Center