The Object Type is selected in the Create a Blank Query tab as the first step of defining a new query. You select from a list of the available types for the query’s Data Source Type, such as Host or Agent.
This section of the definition sets the root of the path from which the query searches for objects of the given Data Source Type. The From field can be chosen from data sources or parameters that you have set in Required Parameters. When Monitoring is chosen in the From field, the Path menu lists the entire Monitoring schema. A query search starts at the root of the object hierarchy, denoted by “/”, or at the object declared in the required parameters.
A query returns a list of data objects. Instead of directly returning these data objects, the Aggregations settings creates new data objects that contain only aggregated values. For example, if a query returns a set of alarms, you can replace these data objects with an Alarm data object containing the maximum severity of those alarms.
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Value: The count of returned data objects |
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Type Name: The name of the type of data object being selected by the query and counted |
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Click the button under Aggregations. |
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In the Calculate drop-down list select how you want the property field calculated. |
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In the Property drop-down list, select the type of property used in the aggregation. |
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Click the button with the tooltip Add Aggregation if you need to define another aggregation. |
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For a max aggregation, it aggregates the max property of the metric values, and stores it back into the max property in the aggregated MetricValue. |
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For a min aggregation, it aggregates the min property of the metric values, and stores it back into the min property in the aggregated MetricValue. |
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For an average aggregation, it aggregates the average property of the metric values, and stores it back into the average property in the aggregated MetricValue. |
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For a weighted average aggregation, it aggregates the weighted average property of the metric values, and stores it back into the average property in the aggregated MetricValue. The count property of a metric is used for the weight. For example, if the collected metric is Response Time, its average should be calculated by weighting the various observed values by how many times each different value occurred. On the other hand, if the system is monitoring two hosts, a simple average of CPU usage is appropriate to guard against the case where the sample rates for collecting data on the two hosts are different. If sample counts were used to weight the average, the host that was sampled more frequently would skew the result. |
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For a sum aggregation, it aggregates the average property of the metric values, and stores it back into the sum property in the aggregated MetricValue. |
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The only situation in which each history object within the Metric is not aggregated is if the timeRange used for the Query uses RAW granularity, which means that each observation from the agent gets its own history row. In this case, the history lists from the various metrics being aggregated do not match up (in number, or in date/times), so there is no way they could be aggregated. |
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For a max aggregation, the period/max under the Metric, which gives the maximum value for the whole timeRange. |
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For a min aggregation, the period/min under the Metric, which gives the minimum value for the whole timeRange. |
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For an average aggregation, the period/average under the Metric, which gives the average value for the whole timeRange. |
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For a sum aggregation, the current/sum under the Metric, which gives the sum of the values on the most current observations. |
Identifying Values settings only appear after you have created an aggregation.
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Click the button under Identifying Values. |
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Select the Property (relative to the Object Type) and the Text Value to be assigned to that property. |
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