Monitor...
WebSphere Application Server provides Performance Monitoring Infrastructure (PMI) data to help monitor the overall health of the WAS environment. PMI provides average statistics on WAS resources, application resources, and system metrics.
Monitor the following statistics at a minimum:
Metric | Meaning |
---|---|
Average response time | Include statistics, for example, servlet or enterprise beans response time. Response time statistics indicate how much time is spent in various parts of WAS and might quickly indicate where the problem is (for example, the servlet or the enterprise beans). |
Number of requests (transactions) | Enables you to look at how much traffic is processed by WAS, helping you to determine the capacity that you have to manage. As the number of transactions increase, the response time of your system might be increasing, showing the need for more system resources or the need to retune your system to handle increased traffic. |
Number of live HTTP sessions | The number of live HTTP sessions reflects the concurrent usage of your site. The more concurrent live sessions, the more memory is required. As the number of live sessions increase, you might adjust the session time-out values or the JVM heap available. |
Web server thread pools | Interpret the Web server thread pools, the Web container thread pools, and the Object Request Broker thread pools, and the data source or connection pool size together. These thread pools might constrain performance due to their size. The thread pools setting can be too small or too large, therefore causing performance problems. Setting the thread pools too large impacts the amount of memory that is needed on a system or might cause too much work to flow downstream if downstream resources cannot handle a high influx of work. Setting thread pools too small might also cause bottlenecks if the downstream resource can handle an increase in workload. |
The Web and EJB thread pools | |
Database and connection pool size | |
Java virtual memory | Use the JVM metric to understand the JVM heap dynamics, including the frequency of garbage collection. This data can assist in setting the optimal heap size. In addition, use the metric to identify potential memory leaks. |
CPU | You must observe these system resources to ensure that you have enough system resources, for example, CPU, I/O, and paging, to handle the workload capacity. |
I/O | |
System paging |
To monitor several of these statistics, WAS provides the Performance Monitoring Infrastructure to obtain the data, and provides the Tivoli Performance Viewer (TPV) in the administrative console to view this data.