Is this normal?
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Re: Need help with high load
Well, I upgraded to the 1.2 version and we're still having some problems. It is running better with the upgrade, but still runs slowly if we have too many people looking at the performance graph pages at the same time.
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Re: Need help with high load
We get asked all the time how well our software scales, so at the risk of being embarrassed how many is too many?
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- Too Basu
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Re: Need help with high load
How many CPU's does your Nagios XI host have?
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Re: Need help with high load
We've got two CPU's on this system.
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Re: Need help with high load
The problem is that we have some pages with 8 performance graphs all showing at the same time. One person can cause the server significant changes. Before the 1.2 upgrade, I noticed we were having problems. We're upgrading our system to something even bigger this next week (4 CPUS, 16 GB ram, 3+ GHZ processor) to see if we can help the problem a little.mmestnik wrote:We get asked all the time how well our software scales, so at the risk of being embarrassed how many is too many?
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Re: Need help with high load
We would also be interested in making our minimum requirements more accurate. Any information you could provide would be helpful. Thank you.
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Re: Need help with high load
I'll see what I can do.mmestnik wrote:We would also be interested in making our minimum requirements more accurate. Any information you could provide would be helpful. Thank you.
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- Too Basu
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Re: Need help with high load
We have been running the VM with 2 x CPU's.
The ESX server it is running on has dual Intel Xeon X5365 @ 3.00GHz.
We will be installing some new ESX servers in about 4 weeks. These will be dual Intel Xeon X5680 @ 3.33GHz. I think this is a jump in 2 generations of CPU's.
I am very interested to see if the newer CPU's with the newer virtualisation technologies has any direct impact on the performance of the Nagios XI host.
The ESX server it is running on has dual Intel Xeon X5365 @ 3.00GHz.
We will be installing some new ESX servers in about 4 weeks. These will be dual Intel Xeon X5680 @ 3.33GHz. I think this is a jump in 2 generations of CPU's.
I am very interested to see if the newer CPU's with the newer virtualisation technologies has any direct impact on the performance of the Nagios XI host.
As of May 25th, 2018, all communications with Nagios Enterprises and its employees are covered under our new Privacy Policy.
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Re: Is this normal?
I need to open this one back up again. Now that Nagios is getting more popular in our business, more people log into it every day to see how their systems are doing. We are experiencing slowness on our server again. The new graphs are becoming really popular here as they have shown us several problems in the company. The problem is that I need a way to adjust the refresh rates or some way to split out apache to another system in order to minimize the problems.
Any updates on this?
Any updates on this?
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Re: Is this normal?
We've now received our new ESX server. It has dual Intel Xeon X5680 @ 3.33GHz
The existing ESX server has dual Intel Xeon X5365 @ 3.00GHz.
After migrating my Nagios XI VM over to the new server the performance improvement is very noticable.
The graph you are looking at is the Nagios XI VM CPU usage over 1 week. You can see how much less CPU is used after the VM is migrated to the new ESX host.
The XI VM has:
It's very clear, the new CPU's with the latest virtualisation technologies have a significant impact on how well the VM's run.
You can see that for a server doing exactly the same task on two seperate CPU generations there are noticable performance improvements.
This highlights how easy virtualisation allows you to take benefit of newer technologies without having the complexities of migrating from old hardware to new. Massive savings in labour.
The existing ESX server has dual Intel Xeon X5365 @ 3.00GHz.
After migrating my Nagios XI VM over to the new server the performance improvement is very noticable.
The graph you are looking at is the Nagios XI VM CPU usage over 1 week. You can see how much less CPU is used after the VM is migrated to the new ESX host.
The XI VM has:
- 3 x Virtual CPU's
274 Hosts
1928 Services
It's very clear, the new CPU's with the latest virtualisation technologies have a significant impact on how well the VM's run.
You can see that for a server doing exactly the same task on two seperate CPU generations there are noticable performance improvements.
This highlights how easy virtualisation allows you to take benefit of newer technologies without having the complexities of migrating from old hardware to new. Massive savings in labour.
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As of May 25th, 2018, all communications with Nagios Enterprises and its employees are covered under our new Privacy Policy.