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Spotlight on SAP ASE 2.11 - User Guide

Spotlight on SAP ASE
Background Information Desktop Features Connect to SAP ASE Spotlight® on SAP ASE Drilldowns Spotlight® on SAP ASE Alarms Glossary
Spotlight Basics
Spotlight Connections Monitor Spotlight Connections Alarms Charts, Grids And Home Page Components View | Options Troubleshooting
Spotlight History Spotlight on Windows
Connect to Windows Systems Background Information Home Page Alarms Drilldowns View | Options Troubleshooting
Spotlight on Unix About us Third-party contributions Copyright

Spotlight Home Page

Spotlight Home Page

The Spotlight home page shows the flow of information and commands between various sub-components and the size and status of internal resources such as processes, disk files and memory structures.

Related operating system statistics are grouped together on panels that are connected by a series of graphical flows and icons. Spotlight updates these flows in real time so you can see how quickly data is moving through the system. The icons change color as Spotlight alarms are raised, upgraded, downgraded and canceled.

The display is based on the Windows architecture diagram. Windows Architecture Overview

To see the Spotlight on Windows Home Page

  1. Select the Spotlight on Windows connection from the Spotlight browser.
  2. Click .

 

Related Topics

System Panel

 

Displays information about the operating system of the machine you are currently connected to.

OS — Operating system — The version name of the Windows operating system that is installed on the target machine.

Ver — Version — The full version number of the Windows operating system installed on the machine.

SP — Service pack — The name of the service pack installed on the machine (if any).

 

Related Topics

Network Panel

 

The Network panel shows the total number of connected users, and the rate at which packets are being sent from and received by the system:

Windows Networking Users — Shows the number of clients connected to this system.

This does not show users connected to other applications that may be running on this machine (for example, Microsoft Exchange or SQL server), only the users that have established a Microsoft Networking connection to the system.

Open Sessions — The current number of Windows Networking sessions open on this machine.

A session is defined as a user connection to a Windows Networking resource. For example, a connection to the ADMIN$ and C$ shares on a server by a single users is counted as two sessions.

Theoretical Bandwidth Limit — Shows the level of network traffic graphed against a "theoretical" maximum bandwidth for the network card specified. If there are multiple network cards, use Windows Network Card Display to select the one whose data you want to display.

Alarms can be raised in this panel for all network cards in the machine, not only the card displayed.

Note: Because of the methods involved in sending data, the actual maximum on an Ethernet network usually is approximately 50% of the theoretical bandwidth. The actual bandwidth can equal the theoretical bandwidth only when using full duplex Ethernet.

Token-passing network topologies (including TokenRing and FDDI) enable a theoretical maximum bandwidth much closer to the actual.

Selected Network Card — The name of the network interface card (NIC) selected for diagnosis. If there are multiple network cards, use Windows Network Card Display to select the one whose data you want to display.

 

NBT KB Received — Represents the rate at which NetBios TCP/IP data is being received by the system from Windows Networking clients.

NBT KB Sent — Represents the rate at which NetBios TCP/IP data is being sent from the system to Windows Networking clients.

 

Total KB Received — Represents the rate at which network data is received by the system from other network systems.

Total KB Sent — Represents the rate at which network data is being sent from the system to other network systems.

 

Related Topics

Event Log Panel

 

The Event Logs panel provides a link to the Event Log drilldown.

  • It alerts you to items that have reached alarm status as per your configuration of Event Log alarms.
  • The button icon shows the number of Event Log alarms that have been raised but not yet cleared. You can acknowledge and clear alarms via the Event Log drilldown.

Note: This button is enabled on Enable Event Logs selected. Windows Event Log Metrics

 

Related Topics

Windows Event Log Metrics

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