High Availability Suite
Suite Componenets | System Event Manager
The Halcyon System Event Manager comprises a set of monitors that can detect
many types of events and situations on your system. The monitors included with
the product are:
- Job Queue Monitor
- Device Monitor
- Output Queue Monitor
- Object Monitor
- Distribution Queue Monitor
- User Profile Monitor
- Inactivity Monitor
- System Status Monitor
- Pool Monitor
- Job Status Monitor
Job Queue Monitor
The Job Queue Monitor can monitor the status of the job queue itself and can also
monitor the number of jobs waiting on a job log.
It can also determine whether a particular job has been queuing for longer than
expected.
You decide what action to take if an undesirable situation is detected.
Timings of certain critical jobs may be important to the smooth running of a
business - imagine what would happen if payroll did not run on time!
Device Monitor
The Device Monitor can monitor the configuration status of any type of device,
including printers, tape drives, communication lines etc. and can raise an alert or
take appropriate action if an undesirable situation is detected.
For example, it can take immediate action if a communication line goes into
Recovery Pending or Varied Off status.
Output Queue Monitor
The Output Queue Monitor can monitor the number of spooled files queuing on
any output queue and can raise an alert or take the appropriate action if a
specified threshold is exceeded.
It can also monitor for a particular spooled file entry arriving on an output queue,
or the length of time spooled files have been queuing.
Or it can raise an alert if the number of pages in a spooled file exceeds a certain
amount.
It can also monitor the status of the output queue itself.
Object Monitor
The Object Monitor can monitor the existence of any type of object, including
objects in the IFS. It can also monitor for the existence of a member within a file.
If a file exists, the monitor can check to see whether it contains any data and/or if
it contains more than the specified number of records.
The contents of data areas can also be checked against specific values.
Distribution Queue Monitor
The Distribution Queue Monitor can monitor the status of a distribution queue and
the queue depth.
User Profile Monitor
The User Profile Monitor can monitor that status of user profiles, detecting any
that become disabled, and can also monitor the storage used by each user.
Inactivity Monitor
The Inactivity Monitor can monitor any interactive job, including those connected
via TCP/IP, to detect when a job has been inactive for more than a specified
amount of time.
Different selection criteria can be applied to different groups of jobs, users or
subsystems.
The action taken can be made dependent on the program being run, the job
status (e.g. LCKW, DSPW etc.), the user or the time of day, etc.
Signed-on sessions can be disconnected or ended, or a screen saver can be
activated, optionally with password protection.
System Status Monitor
The System Status Monitor can monitor the number of jobs in the system, the
ASP used, the amount of CPU being used, the number of batch jobs held, etc.
Pool Monitor
The Pool Monitor can check pool size, number of data base pages or non-database
faults, jobs going wait-to-ineligible etc.
Job Status Monitor
The Job Status Monitor can monitor users or jobs exceeding time slice, job
priority, CPU percentage, and also specified jobs that have been running for
longer than expected.
It can also determine whether an expected job is indeed active.
Ease of Use
The Halcyon Event Manager was developed, and continues to be developed, by a
team of ex-IT Managers. We know only too well that I.T. personnel work in a busy
department and very often do not have time to read through manuals to find out
how a product works. Halcyon Software screens are, in the main, selfexplanatory,
so a minimal amount of manual reading is required.
You will also find that the software is shipped with system defaults already
defined, thereby helping you to get up and running in the shortest possible time. |