WorkloadsWorkloads provide a way to subdivide the resource consumption on a server, making it possible to analyze performance in terms of the assets being utilized by each business service delivered by IT. You can analyze and report on workloads within TeamQuest IT Service Analyzer. You can also handle workload-related alarm events with TeamQuest Alert, provide workload-based management reporting with TeamQuest IT Service Reporter, plan future capacity based on forecasted changes in business workloads with TeamQuest Model. For ultimate flexibility in understanding how resources are being employed in the delivery of services, workloads from multitiered servers can be combined for analysis using TeamQuest's IT Resource concept.
Workloads categorize system activity by a common characteristic, such as:
Defining WorkloadsYou can define workloads around common characteristics, such as department, applications used, account id, logins, or even CPU or memory size. Workloads are defined in workload sets. All of the workloads in a set add up to the total work done on the system. Any work not matching any of the workload definitions you have in a set is matched with a default workload called "Other."
You can define workloads that span multiple systems, recognizing the fact that applications and services typically span multiple systems. This allows you to model the enterprise from the perspective of the user. You can define workloads on each individual system, or you can use TeamQuest Administration Server to manage workloads as policies and apply them to multiple servers at once. The Administration Server allows you to change a workload definition in one place, then apply that change automatically to other systems. Real-world UsesWorkloads are valuable tools for both performance management and capacity planning:
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