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Disk tab – HP Matrix Operating Environment Software User Manual

Page 124

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Disk Tab

Table 19 Attributes available for use in analysis queries: Disk Tab

Description

Attribute Name

Section

Percentage of the available bandwidth being
utilized, measured in megabytes per second
(MB/s).

For more information see

“Units and

terminology” (page 217)

.

Peak Disk I/O (%)

Disk I/O Utilization (%)

15–Min Disk I/O (%)

90%ile Disk I/O (%)

Avg Disk I/O (%)

Total data being transferred, measured in
MB/s.

For more information see

“Units and

terminology” (page 217)

.

Peak Disk I/O (MB/s)

Disk I/O Utilization (MB/s)

15–Min Disk I/O (MB/s)

90%ile Disk I/O (MB/s)

Avg Disk I/O (MB/s)

The number of data disk transfers per second,
measured in Input/Output Operations per
Second (IOPS). Each disk block that is read or
written counts as an I/O operation.

This metric is only collected from physical Linux
and Windows systems.

Peak Disk I/O (IOPS)

Disk I/O Utilization (IOPS)

15–Min Disk I/O (IOPS)

90%ile Disk I/O (IOPS)

Avg Disk I/O (IOPS)

The system's disk I/O capacity as defined by
the user. If a value is not explicitly entered for
the system, the all-time highest observed
reading is used to estimate capacity.

Disk I/O Cap (MB/s)

Disk Capacity

The Disk High-Water Mark – the system's
all-time peak observed disk throughput in
MB/s, observed over the life of the system.

Disk HWM (MB/s)

The headroom percentage indicates how much
the demand for the disk I/O could grow before
violating the system's disk I/O utilization limits.

This metric is capped at 3100% to avoid
dividing by zero or other small numbers.

Disk I/O Headroom

The percentage of valid disk samples in the
selected interval. Data points can be invalid
if:

The system is down and data cannot be
collected from it.

The CMS is down and cannot collect any
data.

Data was collected, but a user marked the
data as invalid.

% Disk Valid

NOTE:

Peak, 15-minute sustained, 90th percentile, and average values are available as separate

attributes. See

Table 14 (page 117)

.

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Using Capacity Analysis