Manual Chapter : Analyzing Statistics Data

Applies To:

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BIG-IQ Centralized Management

  • 5.2.0
Manual Chapter

Browse through your managed devices looking for high resource usage

Before you can analyze BIG-IP® device performance data:
  • There must be a BIG-IQ data collection device configured for the BIG-IQ® system that manages your BIG-IP devices.
  • You must have discovered the BIG-IP devices that you want to analyze, and statistics collection must be enabled for those devices.
  • It is also a good idea, though not a requirement, to define the retention policy for the statistics data you are collecting.
You can use the Device Health overview screen to review the resource usage for your BIG-IP devices.
  1. At the top of the screen, click Monitoring.
  2. On the left, click DASHBOARDS > Device > Health .
    The Device Health overview screen opens.
  3. On the Device Health overview screen, adjust the dimensions pane so that it fills up at least half of the screen.
  4. In the dimensions pane, click the down arrow on the BIG-IP Host Names dimension to expand the list of BIG-IP devices.
  5. In the CPU column click the System heading to sort the list of BIG-IP devices by CPU usage.
  6. If you find a device that is consuming a high level of CPU cycles, select it.
    The chart pane displays statistics for only the selected device.
  7. Scan the CPU chart for the distressed device, and look for the point where the cycles jumped up.
    Tip: If you find a spike, you will want to focus in to narrow the time focus. There are two ways you can zoom in on an area of interest:
    • Click either end of the focus element on the time selector to define the interval you want to examine.
    • Click and drag over the interval. A small magnifying glass pops up over the area you highlight. When you click the magnifying glass, the time selector focus is set to the area you highlighted.
    Note: When you zoom in to focus on the area of interest, the focus changes for all charts on the Device Health overview screen.
  8. Make a note of both the host name of the BIG-IP device, and the time that the CPU cycles climbed.
    You have found a device that is in distress and identified the time that the issue started.
  9. On the left, click DASHBOARDS > Device > Traffic .
    The Device Traffic overview screen opens.
  10. On the Device Traffic overview screen, adjust the dimensions pane so that it fills up at least half of the screen.
  11. In the dimensions pane, click the down arrow on the BIG-IP Host Names dimension to expand the list of BIG-IP devices.
  12. In the Name column, click the magnifying glass icon (), type the host name of the BIG-IP device noted in step 8, then click the magnifying glass icon again.
    The chart pane displays statistics for only the selected device.
  13. Use the time selector controls to focus in on the time noted in step 8, and look through the traffic charts to see if there was a spike in traffic that corresponds to the spike in CPU cycles.
    If you find that spike, you have found the reason for the spike in CPU cycles. Traffic on that device is very high. You probably want to find out more about that traffic.
  14. On the left, click DASHBOARDS > Local Traffic > Virtual Servers .
    The Virtual Servers overview screen opens.
  15. On the Local Traffic Virtual Servers overview screen, adjust the dimensions pane so that it fills up at least half of the screen.
  16. In the Name column, click the magnifying glass icon (, type the host name of the BIG-IP device noted in step 8, then click the magnifying glass icon again.
    The chart pane displays statistics for only the selected device. Additionally, only the virtual servers that reside on that device are available on the Virtual Servers dimension.
  17. In the dimensions pane, click the down arrow on the Virtual Servers dimension to expand the list.
  18. In the Bytes Avg/s column, click one of the column headings (for example C-->) to sort the list of virtual servers by average traffic level in bytes per second on this virtual server.
  19. Find the virtual server that has the highest number of new connections, and select it.
    The chart pane now displays statistics for the virtual server on the distressed device.
With the ID of the virtual server, you can figure out which application is triggering the traffic spike and figure out what your next step is from there.

Analyze application performance issues

Before you can analyze application performance data:
  • There must be a BIG-IQ Data Collection Device configured for the BIG-IQ® device that manages your BIG-IP® devices.
  • It is also a good idea, though not a requirement, to define the retention policy for the statistics data you are collecting.
  • You will need to know the name of the virtual server that hosts the application that is having performance issues.
When you learn that an application is having performance issues, you can analyze the objects that serve that application to find the likely cause.
  1. At the top of the screen, click Configuration.
  2. On the left, expand LOCAL TRAFFIC.
  3. Click Virtual Servers.
    The Virtual Servers screen opens showing a list of virtual servers managed by this BIG-IQ.
  4. On the Virtual Servers screen, in the Filter in the upper right corner, type the name of the virtual server that is hosting the troubled application.
  5. When you find the virtual server, select the virtual server name.
    The properties screen for the selected virtual server opens.
  6. Click View Statistics.
    The Virtual Servers overview screen opens, but the only items selected are the virtual server you selected, and the BIG-IP device on which it runs.
  7. Scan the statistics charts plotting data for the distressed server, and look for data (packet throughput) that indicates a problem.
    Tip: There are two ways you can zoom in on an area of interest:
    • Click either end of the focus element on the time selector to define the interval you want to examine.
    • Click and drag over the interval. A small magnifying glass pops up over the area you highlight. When you click the magnifying glass, the time selector focus is set to the area you highlighted.
    If scanning the charts does not reveal an obvious cause, your next step might be to look for a troubled pool member or node.
  8. On the Virtual Servers overview screen, click the back arrow () to return to the properties screen for the virtual server. Click it again to return to the Virtual Servers screen.
  9. Find the virtual server name again, and select the check box that corresponds to it.
    At the bottom of the Virtual Server screen, a two panel preview pane opens displaying information about the virtual server.
  10. On the right panel of the preview pane, under Related Items, click Show.
  11. Select one of the Pool Members to display its properties screen, and then click View Statistics.
    The Pools & Pool Members overview screen opens, and again, the chart data that is displayed is only for the BIG-IP, pool, and pool name that you selected.

Analyze load balancing issues

Before you can analyze load balancing data:
  • There must be a BIG-IQ data collection device configured for the BIG-IQ® device that manages your BIG-IP® devices.
  • It is also a good idea, though not a requirement, to define the retention policy for the statistics data you are collecting.
When you get a report that an application is having performance issues, you can quickly determine if the cause is related to a load balancing problem.
  1. At the top of the screen, click Configuration.
  2. On the left, expand LOCAL TRAFFIC.
  3. Click Virtual Servers.
    The Virtual Servers screen opens showing a list of virtual servers managed by this BIG-IQ.
  4. On the Virtual Servers screen, in the filter in the upper right corner, type the name of the virtual server that is hosting the troubled application.
  5. Find the virtual server name, and select the check box that corresponds to it.
    At the bottom of the Virtual Server screen, a two panel preview pane opens displaying information about the virtual server.
  6. On the right panel of the preview pane, under Related Items, click Show.
  7. Select one of the virtual servers pools to display its properties screen, and then click View Statistics.
    The Pools & Pool Members overview screen opens, and the chart data that displays is only for the pool you selected.
  8. In the dimensions pane, click the down arrow on the Pool Members dimension to expand the list.
  9. Click the name of each pool member until all of the members are selected.
  10. Right click selected names, and select Add Comparison Chart.
    A new chart is added to the top of the chart pane. The chart plots the performance of the pool members, graphing the load balancing performance over time.
  11. To change the comparison metric that plots for the selected pool members, click the down arrow in the title of the chart and select the new metric.
    You might want to try looking at the average bytes going to or from the server, or maybe the average new server connections.
  12. If the virtual server has multiple pools, you might have to repeat the last four steps a couple of times to get the full picture.