Page History
This section includes the following topics:
- About the update to Precise v9.6.1
- Planning the update
- Performing the update from Precise v9.0 to Precise v9.6.1
NOTE | This document describes the update procedure when updating from a Precise v9.0.1 installation to Precise v9.6.1. Therefore, if you are updating from an earlier Precise installation, see the relevant Upgrade Guide, or if you are installing Precise v9.6.1 on a clean system, see instead the Precise Installation Guide. |
About the update to Precise v9.6.1
Updating to Precise v9.6.1 both updates the existing Precise Framework and agents and replaces the previously existing Precise system, while preserving the previously captured monitored data. As a result, the update process involves downtime of the Precise product.
To ensure an efficient and successful update process, verify that you read about and implement the preparations for the update, as they appear in Planning the update on page 7.
Once all preparations have been completed, perform the update, as detailed in Performing the update from Precise v9.0.1 to Precise v9.6.1 on page 10.
Changes in the Precise for Web logic
In version 9.6.1, we have made changes in the Precise for Web logic with regards to the Collector settings. They have been changed from Domain related to Instance and Cluster related.
During the conversion, we analyze per instance the usage of each domain and apply the existing settings based on the results. This may result in the loss of some non-recently used domain settings for that specific instance.
The default parameter settings after the update for all instances & clusters will be "Parameter name only", regardless of the previous definitions.
The maximum amount of entries in the Exceptions table will be 15.
Changes in the Precise for Web configuration
In version 9.6.1, the User defined configuration changed. We no longer support User Defined 1 and User Defined 2. Should you have defined them in the previous version and you want to keep using them, you may need to redefine the User Defined 1 and 2 as User Defined Transaction Name. It is also possible that the definition can no longer be used.
Changes in supported platforms
In version 9.6.1, Precise for Tuxedo is no longer supported. If you start the update process and Precise for Tuxedo is detected, you get the following error message:
You have Precise for Tuxedo configured for the environments below
Uninstall Precise for Tuxedo from the following environments:
Uninstall Precise for Tuxedo in the indicated environments and restart the update or refrain from upgrading to Precise version 9.6.1.
Planning the update
The update process should be planned in advance, to ensure both the full benefit from your v9.6.1 system and adherence to your schedules and needs.
To ensure a quick and efficient update, it is necessary to consider the following criteria before beginning the procedure:
- Prerequisites for the update
- The order of the servers update
- Downtime of the monitored technologies
- Downtime of the Precise product
- Update planning checklist
Prerequisites for the update
Before planning the update process, verify that:
- All minimum requirements were met before updating to v9.0.1, as per the Pre cise Minimum Requiremen ts for Ins tallation g uide.
- The Precise installation that is going to be updated is fully updated to v9.0.1. If it still has agents that were not yet updated to v9.0.1, complete the update to v9.0.1 prior to starting to update to v9.6.1.
- There is free disk space on the servers that have Precise v9.0.1 installed, as follows:
- 0.5GB on each server with Precise Agents
- 2.5 GB on the Precise Framework server
- There is 0.5GB free disk space on the client server that the update will be executed from.
- You do not have Precise for Tuxedo in your environment.
The order of the servers update
Your existing Precise installation typically spans many servers. Since the update to Precise v9.6.1 is performed per server, you should plan in advance the order in which you will update all servers comprising your existing Precise installation.
If you are not able to update all servers at once, but will update a few servers at a time, take note of the implications described in The implications of a phased update to Precise v9.6.1 on page 8.
The order of the server update is:
- First all FocalPoint servers need to be updated.
- Then all other servers can be updated.
When starting the update, you must select all the FocalPoints servers. You can add additional servers for the update later (once the FocalPoints servers are updated), or as part of the FocalPoint update (in this case the server update will start once the FocalPoint servers are completely updated).
The implications of a phased update to Precise v9.6.1
If you are not updating all servers at once, but are updating a few servers at a time, the following limitations will apply to your Precise system functionality:
- After an update has started, a server that has not fully completed the update cannot have instances installed, edited, or uninstalled.
- For installed Web and J2EE Clusters, new instances will not be installed until the cluster's servers are updated.
- If you have created a Template Listener as part of you server’s image, new Template Listener installations will fail after the update. You must recreate the Template Listener once the framework update has been completed.
Downtime of the monitored technologies
The update process does not require any downtime of the monitored technologies.
Downtime of the Precise product
The update process involves downtime of the Precise product itself as described below.
FocalPoints
When updating the servers with the Precise FocalPoints, your installed Precise performance monitoring system will not be in operation. Once the Precise Framework update is complete, Precise v9.6.1 will resume all performance monitoring previously provided by Precise v9.0.1.
The time required for updating a server with the Precise FocalPoints may vary depending on the strength of the server with the FocalPoint, the strength of the server where you are using AdminPoint to apply the update, the file transfer speed, the amount of Precise technologies monitored by Precise, and the time it takes to perform post-application action items. In general, updating a server with a Precise FocalPoint is estimated at one hour.
Updating a server with a FocalPoint will be fastest when application of the update is performed using AdminPoint on the Main node server with the Precise FocalPoint, and the update is located on storage providing good response time to that server.
If you have a federated Precise deployment, then when updating the servers with the FocalPoint of the Main node, your entire Precise federated deployment will not be operable for performance monitoring. When updating another node's servers with a FocalPoint, only that node will not be operable for performance monitoring.
Non-FocalPoint agents
Precise agents will not collect performance data while they are being updated. The time it takes to update a server running Precise agents varies depending on the technology type and the amount of Precise agents on that server, as well as the factors described above regarding updating the server with the Precise FocalPoints. In general, updating a Precise agents server is estimated at 20 minutes.
Update planning checklist
The following checklist can be used to verify that you are ready to start performing the update to Precise v9.6.1:
q my.precise.com was reviewed for a newer version of this document. If there is a newer version, download it and use it instead of this one.
q Minimum requirements for installation were all met prior to updating to v9.6.1.
q The update order of the Precise installation was planned according to The order of the servers update on page 7.
q Planning according to Planning the update on page 7 was completed.
q my.precise.com was reviewed for product updates.
q Downtime has been coordinated for the Precise product.
Performing the update from Precise v9.0.1 to Precise v9.6.1
...
The upgrade is performed by downloading the latest version of Precise, applying the upgrade on the desired server(s), and performing additional actions that appear in AdminPoint before and after application.
...
NOTE | Before starting the update, it is recommended to download the latest infra hotfix for version 9.0.1 and install it on the Precise FocalPoint. Verify that you complete all action items before starting the update. |
Table of Contents | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
To upgrade to the latest version of Precise
...
- Verify that all planning and preparations as listed
...
- in Planning the
...
- upgrade are complete.
Download
...
the latest version of Precise from the Precise Customer Support Portal at https://
...
...
...
NOTE | If you are updating to Precise v9.6.1 from the DVD provided by Precise, downloading and unzipping the product is not needed. |
...
...
...
.
Verify that your Precise system is working properly. If you experience any problems,
...
refer to the Precise Customer Support Portal at https://
...
...
force.com/precise/or contact Precise Customer Support.
Applying the
...
upgrade
To apply the
...
upgrade on Precise servers
- Go to AdminPoint
...
- > Management > Updates, and then select Apply Updates. The Update Installation wizard opens.
- In the
...
- Select Updates dialog box, click Add
...
- Update, and then type the \Upgrade
...
- v10.
...
- x.
...
- x to
...
- v10.
...
- x.
...
- x\Upgrade\Upgrade to
...
- v10.
...
- x.
...
- x\Upgrade.zip file path from the folder you unzipped the
...
- download to,
...
- OR click the
...
- Browse button
...
- , select the path, and then click OK. The
...
- upgrade appears in the
...
- Available Updates table.
Select
...
V10xx_UPGRADE
...
from the Available Updates table, and
...
then click the appropriate arrows between the tables
...
to move it to the Updates to
...
Apply table.
...
Info Once this step
...
is complete, the
...
upgrade is saved in the Available Updates table. If
...
the application process is restarted or repeated for any reason, skip this step.
Click
...
Next. The Select servers screen
...
appears. This screen displays a list of all the servers
...
selected for update.
...
Info By default, all displayed servers
...
are selected to be updated. According to your preparation, as mentioned in
...
Server upgrade order, you can choose to exclude servers which you do not want to update at this point by clearing their selection.
Click
...
Next. The update preparation
...
begins. Any pre-action items
...
(
...
depending on your installation configuration)
...
are listed on your screen. Perform the action items and mark them as done.
...
Info At this point, while the Precise FocalPoint is being restarted, an empty screen may appear.
Once all pre-action items are
...
complete, or if no pre-action items are required, the update
...
continues automatically. The Applying
...
Update screen
...
appears, displaying a progress bar for the update.
After the update application is complete, additional steps appear on screen. It is recommended, but not mandatory, to perform each action item shown on screen before progressing to the next step.
Click
...
Next. The
...
Finish screen appears, announcing that the application is complete.
Applying the update with the CLI utility
The update can also be applied with the CLI utility. Before applying the update using the CLI utility, verify that you follow the planning and preparations mentioned above. To apply the update with the CLI utility, see
...
Upgrading using the CLI utility
...
.
...
Info |
---|
All steps in |
...
Upgrading using the CLI utility, except for those involving AdminPoint, are also relevant when applying the update with the CLI utility. |
About Precise Business Storage Optimizer
The Precise Business Storage Optimizer v9.6, included in the \Business Storage Optimizer folder of the Precise v9.6.1 download or DVD, is fully compatible with Precise v9.6.1.
2
Updating from v9.0.1 to v9.6.1 using the CLI utility
This section includes the following topic:
Applying the v9.0.1 to v9.6.1 update using the CLI utility
NOTE | Before starting the update using the CLI utility, you must download the latest infra hotfix for version 9.0.1 and install it on the Precise FocalPoint. Verify that you completed all action items before starting the update. |
To apply the upgrade update
- Run the CLI i3-update-load command to load the upgrade.zip file:
Windows infra\bin\psin_cli.bat
-action i3-update-load
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
-zip-file Pr ecise DVD\Upg rade to v9.6.0\U pgrade.zip
UNIX ./infra/bin/psin_cli.sh
-action i3-update-load
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
-zip-file Pr ecise DVD\Upg rade to v9.6.0\U pgrade.zip - Run the CLI i3-update-prepare command to prepare the update:
Windows infra\bin\psin_cli.bat
-action i3-update-prepare
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
-{-servers “<ser ver s>” | -all-servers true}
-updates-ids V960_UPGRADE
UNIX ./infra/bin/psin_cli.sh
-action i3-update-prepare
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
-{-servers “<ser ver s>” | -all-servers true}
-updates-ids V960_UPGRADE - Run the CLI i3-update-install command to apply the update:
Windows infra\bin\psin_cli.bat
-action i3-update-install
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
{-servers "<servers>" | -all-servers true}
-updates-ids V960_UPGRADE
UNIX ./infra/bin/psin_cli.sh
-action i3-update-install
-i3-user admin
-i3-clear-password admin
{-servers "<servers>" | -all-servers true}
-updates-ids V960_UPGRADE - Perform the post-update action items that appear.
Troubleshooting
This section describes:
Troubleshooting the Precise Update
This section describes a number problems and solutions on how to solve problems that occur during the update of Precise.
An error occurs when running the prepare stage on the Precise FocalPoint server
When an error occurs during the prepare stage on the Precise FocalPoint, you may be asked to reopen the user interface. Using the “regular” URL will result in an error. Therefore use <precise-url>/admin.
When starting the update, a message appears to uninstall Precise for Tuxedo
This message indicates the environments in which Precise for Tuxedo is found. Precise for Tuxedo is no longer supported in Precise version 9.6.1 and therefore it needs to be uninstalled should you decide to perform update.
Glossary
abandonment rate | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the percentage of users that abandon the loading of the Web page before it completes downloading. |
action | An operation that Alerts FocalPoint automatically performs when detecting a warning or critical status for a specific metric. According to the defined action, Alerts FocalPoint opens a message box, sends an email or SNMP trap, or executes a program. |
action item (manual) | Some installation steps cannot be executed automatically by Precise Installer. The administrator is required to execute them manually. Action Items are presented (when necessary) at end of installation or product update. |
AdminPoint | The central administration console of Precise that facilitates the maintenance, configuration, and management of all installed Precise components, such as monitoring the status of all Precise agents and PMDB processes, getting license information, starting and stopping the agents, getting log data on agents and events, changing PMDB settings, and installing patches. See also PMDB and agent. |
advice | In Oracle, an algorithm that is designed to recommend on gathering statistics, creating new indexes, change existing indexes, and add or delete hints to make Oracle's Optimizer choose a better access path and make the statement perform better. Can be activated from any DML (Data Manipulation Language) statement. |
agent | A program that runs on a server machine to collect, process, or communicate performance information. The Precise installation consists of multiple agents. |
alert | The state of an Alerts metric that has reached a near-critical or critical status. An alert is issued by Alerts, triggering an action and informing of a problem that has occurred or is likely to occur within the area sampled by the specific metric. See also action. |
Alerts | These products provide alerts to problematic conditions before they turn into performance problems, based on predefined metrics and thresholds. Alerts can automatically perform an action, such as displaying a pop-up message, sending an email message or SNMP trap, or running a program. |
Alerts FocalPoint | An agent that receives data from the InformPoint agents, stores it, and performs any action that has been user-defined for that specific alert, such as displaying a pop-up message, sending an email message or SNMP trap, or running a program. See also InformPoint. |
alert type | In Alerts, the status of all metrics belonging to a metric group or a monitored instance, indicating the current performance level through colors. See also alert and metric. |
application server metric | In J2EE, a metrics that is provided by the application server or by customer code. This can include metrics published by the Java Management Extension (JMX) APIs or vendor-specific APIs, such as IBM's Performance Management Interface (PMI). |
AppTier | The abbreviation for an application tier in a Precise environment. An AppTier contains one or more instances of the same technology and purpose. Application tiers do not necessarily correspond to distinct physical servers: in many cases, the tiers are logical, with one server running multiple AppTiers or one AppTier spans a cluster of servers. A Precise environment may contain multiple AppTiers on the same technology. For example, you may group J2EE instances (JVMs) into a J2EE Presentation AppTier and a J2EE Business Logic AppTier. Segmenting application service time into the contribution of individual application tiers is helpful in identifying the source of performance problems. Analyzing the performance and behavior of each tier separately is crucial for isolating the root causes of performance problems. |
cabinet | In Oracle, SQL Server, DB2, and Sybase, the highest logical level in the SQL workspace hierarchy. A cabinet contains folders and, within folders, statements. |
call path | A subset of a stack trace including only those methods that have been instrumented. |
client cache | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the percentage of requests taken from the client cache (http status 304). |
client side collection | |
cluster | A group of servers or instances that are configured to be treated as a single entity. In Oracle, all Oracle instances of the same Oracle database (RAC configuration) are treated as a cluster and presented in the Precise for Oracle UI as a Database. In J2EE, a group of JVMs that serve the same application can be defined as Cluster (even if they are not defined as a cluster in the application server configuration). All JVMs of the same cluster share the same configuration. |
collapsed access plan | In SQL Server and Sybase, the access plan of a unique group of statements or batches that belong to the same collapsed statement or batch but have different access plans. This can differ due to the constants in the text of the original (not collapsed) statements. See also explained statement and collapsed statement. |
collapsed statement | In Oracle, SQL Server, Sybase, and DB2, a statement whose constants are replaced with parameters. Each collapsed statement can have several access plans, according to the occurrences of its statements. See also collapsed access plan. |
collector | The program that runs on the monitored server to collect performance information. Some technologies allow a single Collector (agent) to serve multiple instances running on the same server. Other technologies require a dedicated Collector per monitored instance. In most cases, it must be installed on the monitored server. Collectors for SAP, SQL Server, and Sybase may reside on a remote server. See also agent. |
collector slice size | In J2EE, the smallest unit of data presentation and storage. It can be configured as 30 seconds or five minutes. If SmartLink is configured, relevant Web and Microsoft .NET Collectors will report to SmartLink using the same collector slice size. Regardless of the defined collector slice size, the most granular slice size presented on both the Precise for Web UI and the Precise for Microsoft .NET UI will be 15 minute intervals. |
completion rate | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the percentage of users that completed the loading of a Web page. |
count | The number of occurrences observed during a measurement interval. |
CPU time | The average amount of time consumed by the operating system actively processing instructions on behalf of a running activity. |
critical status | In Alerts, the status represented by a red bullet indicating that the value of the sampled metric has exceeded the near-critical and critical threshold values. See also metric. |
Cross-App Tiers | In Insight, Report Manager, and Alerts, a perspective that provides high-level information about the performance of all AppTiers in an environment including operating system data. It provides a holistic view of the entire environment and helps understand how the AppTiers interact. See also AppTier. |
current data | In SmartLink, the end-to-end activity, detected by Precise over the last five minutes, including activities that are still in progress. In all databases products, a workspace that presents Current Sessions and the SQL statements that were executed including statements that are still in progress. |
custom | Represents invocations of a type not specifically defined. See also work time. |
customized metric | In Alerts, a user-defined metric that measures site-specific parameters. |
drilldown | Within Precise products and Insight SmartLink, the filtering of analyzed data by clicking a specific entity. Then, additional information about the selected entity is presented, plus a breakdown of its activity by another entity. For example, drilldown on a transaction and get an overtime graph of the selected transaction, plus a list of top users that executed the selected transaction. |
entry point | Usually a top-level HTTP or EJB request. An entry point can originate when a user clicks in a browser or an E-commerce server invokes a remote EJB. J2EE makes a distinction between service request invocations and other invocations. The first HTTP or EJB invocation within a call path is designated as an entry point. |
environment | The highest Precise logical group. It may contain multiple AppTiers of various technologies that serve an application together. For example, a Payroll Production environment may contain all Web servers, application servers, transaction managers, databases, and servers that serve this application. Alternatively, it may contain any set of instances that form together an administrative group. Since Precise version 8.5, an instance can belong to more than one environment. Let's say a single Oracle database serves two different applications plus the DBA wants to associate this database with a group of other databases under his responsibility regardless of served applications. In this case the Oracle database will be associated to three different Precise environments. See also AppTier and instance. |
ERP Extension | In Oracle, DB2, and SQL Server, an extension to the Collector that provides detailed information on the activities and resource consumption of packaged application components. It correlates the database information and the packaged application information and lets you see users, transactions, reports, and other elements of ERP applications, such as Oracle Applications, SAP, PeopleSoft, and Siebel. |
event | In Alerts, the occurrence of a sampling or progress. A sampling occurrence occurs every time a metric samples. A progress occurrence occurs when a metric's progress status is changed or when the investigated status reaches the end of the given investigation time. In AdminPoint, all occurrences reported by Precise agents, including informational events, warnings, and errors related to one of the agents. All events are shown in the Events view. See also metric and progress. |
executions | In Oracle, SQL Server, DB2, and Sybase, the number of times a SQL statement was executed during the selected time frame. In SmartLink and SAP, the number of times a transaction was executed during the selected time frame. |
explained statement | In Oracle, SQL Server, DB2, and Sybase, a statement whose access path (chosen by the RDBMS Optimizer) is clarified and translated into a visual display. Explained results include information on the objects referenced by the statement and the operations performed on these objects. |
extended collection | In Oracle, a function that proactively specifies a future period during which Oracle activity data is collected and organized for subsequent analysis. Extended collections are an easy means to view collected information, assess application resource consumption, and identify bottlenecks that are inhibiting application performance and end-user productivity. |
Federated Precise | Federated Precise is a version of Precise (starting with version 8.5) that can manage multiple Precise installations within unified StartPoint and AdminPoint screens, displaying and managing all environments, instances, and installations. |
findings | A ranked list of top performance problems in the selected context. They are presented in Oracle, SQL Server, .NET, and J2EE. Each finding provides: a short explanation of the problem, detailed background information, and most important: one or more links to further investigate the problem and possibly get more granular findings on the selected context. |
first byte time | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the time that it takes from the moment a new Web page is called until the first byte arrives back from the Web server. |
FocalPoint | An agent that communicates with the Listeners installed on the monitored servers, receives data from the Collectors, periodically processes and stores this data in the PMDB, and serves UI requests. |
folder | In SQL Server, Oracle, DB2, and Sybase, the intermediate logical level in the SQL workspace hierarchy. Folders are grouped into cabinets and contain SQL statements. See also cabinet. |
Framework Installer | The application that facilitates the installation of Precise framework components. It can be invoked from the installation DVD to install a new Precise deployment. It can also be invoked from an existing Precise deployment to install an additional framework node and attach it to the originating Precise deployment. See also Framework node. |
Framework node | A set of FocalPoint agents that are installed together and manages a set of monitored instances. The performance data of these instances will be loaded into a dedicated PMDB. A single Precise deployment may contain multiple framework nodes (using a separate PMDB for each node). An environment cannot span over multiple framework nodes.
|
garbage collection | An automatic process in the Java runtime environment that periodically reclaims memory used by objects that are no longer referenced. The process can impact an application's performance while memory is being reclaimed. Java programmers may initiate garbage collection explicitly. |
grouper | In Web, the identifier that is used to group other identifiers, such as sites or URLs. |
hint | In Oracle, an instruction directed at the Oracle Optimizer that includes considerations for an execution plan. The Oracle Optimizer will build an execution plan based on the hint, ignoring its own set of considerations. |
hour group | A unit that reflects the type and level of activity within the system at different times. By defining the times of the day that are peak and off-peak, or day and night, the performance analysis can be focused on those particular times of the day. If, for example, most performance problems occur within nighttime and weekend batches, it can be useful to focus only on them. |
InformPoint | In Alerts, an agent that retrieves performance data from all installed Precise products, analyzes it, and sends an alert to the Alerts FocalPoint when the predefined thresholds are exceeded. See also agent. |
Insight | The Precise product family that facilitates the process of monitoring and correlating system performance. It consists of Insight. See also Report Manager. See also FocalPoint. |
Insight FocalPoint | An agent that receives performance information from Insight Savvies, which monitor the environment. Insight FocalPoint then correlates, processes, and stores this information in a centralized location. The Insight performance history is stored in the PMDB. See alsoSavvy. See also PMDB. |
instance | A monitored object of a specific technology. The following list specifies what constitutes an instance for the various supported technologies: J2EE - a Java Virtual Machine (JVM - a logical name set by the user), Microsoft .NET - a Common Language Runtime (CLR - a logical name set by the user), Oracle Applications - an Oracle Applications Form server, Oracle - an Oracle instance, SAP - a SAP system, SQL Server - an SQL instance, Sybase - a Sybase instance, Tuxedo - a Tuxedo domain, Web - a Web server, WebSphere MQ - an IBM WebSphere Queue Manager, DB2 - a DB2 non-partitioned database or a DB2 database partition. During installation, the instance is associated with one AppTier and environment. An Instance can be moved to a different environment or associated with multiple environments without re-installation nor losing historical data. See also environment. |
instance statistics | See performance counter. |
instance/database changes | In SQL Server and Oracle, the part of the Collect Schema Changes process that captures instance definition changes and database option changes and saves them in the PMDB. |
instrumentation | The process of inserting fault-tolerant recording hooks in Java byte code, .NET MSIL, HTML pages, or other monitored components, resulting in the capture of performance metrics. In J2EE, a mechanism that enables collecting performance information when an application is executed. The process involves inserting special fault-tolerant recording hooks into application class objects. In WEB, the insertion of recording hooks into HTML pages can either be in memory (Dynamic Instrumentation) or file-based (Static Instrumentation). |
instrumentation context | See invocation context. |
internal invocation | The process of invoking a request from an HTTP request (Servlet or JSP) or an EJB. J2EE displays an internal invocation like any other invocation. |
invocation | An execution of a J2EE entity (a Servlet, EJB, SQL Statement, method, and so on). When mentioned in plural (Invocations), means the amount of times that the entity was executed. |
invocation context | The context within which a method is invoked. For example, if Method A is invoked both from Method B and from Method C, there will be two different invocation contexts for the performance metrics collected for Method A, one for when it is invoked from Method B and one for when it is invoked from Method C. See also call path and instrumentation context. |
JRE (Java Runtime Environment) | As the runtime part of the Java software, the combination of the components that enable the execution of a Java program: a Java virtual machine, the core class libraries, and the files that form the Java platform.
|
JSP (Java Server Page) | An HTML page with special tags for Java scripting. An application server processes the tags and generates a Servlet. |
JVM (Java Virtual Machine) | An instance of a JRE that executes Java programs. A server-side Java application server is itself a Java program that runs inside a JVM. Servlets, JSPs and EJBs are Java programs (applications) that run within the application server's JVM. J2EE monitors the JVM running the application server and the server-side Java applications within the application server. |
JVM Heap Memory | The amount of real computer memory that is allocated to the JVM for executing Java programs. |
key metric | In Alerts, a parameter that monitors a very important performance aspect. The status of the Oracle instance (up/down), for example, is crucial for system performance. If the instance is down, this is the first problem that needs to be solved. Marking a metric as key metric ensures that a critical alert raised for this metric receives top priority by the person that is responsible to handle alerts at any time. It can also help determine which alert to handle first in case of multiple alerts. In Alerts, key metrics are always displayed at the top of a metric table when it is sorted by alerts so that they get immediate attention. |
Listener | The agent that facilitates the communication between the various Precise agents across different servers must be installed on every server where Collectors or FocalPoint agents are installed. The Listener allows communication with all other agents installed on the monitored server, while only the Precise Listener port is known by other servers. |
login name | In SQL Server and Sybase, the session identifier that represents the credential used to connect to the database. When an ERP extension is installed, the user name of the packaged application's client overrides the login name. For example, when SAP extension is installed, the SAP user name overrides the login name. |
machine | A session identifier. A machine as sampled, for example, by the SQL Server Collector is the identification of the machine where the client process executes. Machine is also sampled by Oracle, DB2 and Sybase. In Insight terminology Machine is called Client machine. |
Main framework node | A main framework node is the single point for login and also serves as the Precise FocalPoint for the entire deployment. |
major collection count | Number of estimated major garbage collection events that occurred during the last J2EE collector slice. A major garbage collection can stop the application while JVM heap memory is being reclaimed. See also garbage collection. |
major garbage collection time | Percentage of time spent by the JVM executing major garbage collection events during the displayed interval. See also garbage collection. |
MBean | A Java object that represents a manageable resource. In J2EE, MBeans, or Managed Beans, are used for application server metrics. |
memory logger interval | The interval at which the J2EE Collector gathers JVM heap memory data. All snapshots of the memory logger's data collected according to the memory logger interval are summarized with counters in the current aggregation interval. The memory logger interval's time span is typically a small fraction of the aggregation interval. |
metric | In Alerts, a query that helps measure performance in the environment. Three types of metrics are available: System metrics relate to the internal resources, operations, and objects of the monitored infrastructure; application metrics reflect the way the applications perform; user-defined metrics can be customized to specifically relate to a site. When a metric's value exceeds one of the defined thresholds, its status changes to near-critical (yellow bullet) or critical (red bullet). See also key metric. |
metric set | In Alerts, a unit that groups metrics that measure related performance aspects. The following metric sets exist: Status: includes metrics that alert to functional problems related to the instance. Performance: includes metrics that alert to performance problems related to the instance. Load: includes metrics that alert to instance-related load problems that may later cause errors or crashes. Service: includes metrics that alert to instance-related SLA breaches. The metrics in this set are sampled by Insight. Performance Trending: includes metrics that alert to potential future performance problems. The metrics in this set are sampled by Report Manager. |
| Load Trending: includes metrics that alert to potential future load problems. The metrics in this set are sampled by Report Manager. Customized: includes user-defined metrics. Precise Status: includes metrics that alert to the near-critical or critical status of the installed Precise environment. |
module | A session identifier. In Oracle it contains the value of MODULE column in V$SESSION table. In DB2 it contains the command name of non-SQL statements or the package name for SQL statements. |
near critical status | In Alerts, a status indicating that the value of the sampled metric has exceeded the defined near-critical threshold. A near-critical status is indicated by a yellow bullet. |
network time | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the time spent on network activity from the server side perspective. This includes the time to read the request from the network and the network time to send the response back to the client. |
node | See Framework node. Note: when creating a new installation from DVD, it would be called "Framework." In the UI screens (columns in tables, choosing a system for a new environment etc), we would call them "Nodes." For example: choose a node for the new environment. When adding a new system within AdminPoint, it would be called a "Framework node". |
packaged application | An application that is created and/or maintained by a third party and is not custom-built to one's specific needs. The following packaged applications have special treatment by Precise: SAP, Oracle Applications, PeopleSoft, and Siebel. They are harder to modify because the application code is either not available or hard to understand. See also ERP Extension. |
page size | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the amount of data loaded from the server to display the page. |
page views | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the number of Web pages viewed at a specific Web site during a selected time period. |
parent metric | In Alerts, a joining of several child metrics. Each time a parent metric samples, it gathers data from a set of child metrics and presents it as a single metric query. The individual child metric values are displayed on the Thresholds tab of the Properties dialog box in Alerts. See also submetric. |
performance counter | In SQL Server, a Windows performance counter as reported by the operating system. In Oracle, an instance level statistic as gathered from some Oracle V$ views. In Sybase, a sysmonitors counter collected by Sybase. In Web, an operating system or a Web server performance counter. |
PMDB | The Precise data warehouse of performance and availability data. It can be hosted on an Oracle or SQL Server database. |
portal server | An application server for Web-based applications that commonly provide personalization, single sign-on, and content aggregation from different sources and that host the presentation layer of Information Systems. Aggregation is the action of integrating content from different sources within a Web page. A portal may have sophisticated personalization features to provide customized content to users. Portal pages may have a different set of portlets creating content for different users. |
portlet | A Java-based Web component, managed by a portlet container, that processes requests and generates dynamic content. Portlets are used by portals as pluggable user interface components that provide a presentation layer to Information Systems. |
Precise deployment | An independent Precise system. It contains and manages various agent types and provides centralized monitoring and administration. A Precise deployment may contain multiple framework nodes. One of them is defined as the main framework node and it manages all other nodes of the Precise deployment. |
Precise FocalPoint | |
Precise FocalPoint agent | An agent that manages all agents in a single Precise deplotment. Additional product FocalPoint agents manage specific technologies and resources. |
Precise Proxy agent | When multiple Framework Nodes are managed by a single Precise deployment, the Precise FocalPoint agent manages all of the agents of the main Framework node, while every other framework node has a Precise Proxy agent to manage all its agents. |
precise_root | This is the term used in a path for the Precise installation directory. The terms <i3_root> or i3 root can appear in text too. |
program | A session identifier in Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, Insight, and Alerts. A program as sampled, for example, by the SQL Server Collector, is the name of the executable that connects to the database. Applications that do not set the application name have N/A as program. When a SAP extension is installed, the SAP transaction overrides the program, and it may change during the application's lifetime. When a Siebel extension is installed, the Siebel views override the program, and it may change during the application's lifetime. In Insight, program is the name of an executable as recognized by the operating system. If an executable is invoked from a script (a batch or a shell), the script is displayed as the command entity. In Alerts, program is part of the customized metrics definition and is the name of the executable or stored procedure executed in the database that runs when the metric is sampled. In action definitions, program is the name of the executable that will run if the metric exceeds its threshold. |
progress | In Alerts, the management state of a metric for which an alert has been raised. The following statuses exist: Open: An alert is raised. Investigated: The alert is taken care of. Closed: The problem has been solved. |
Proxy FocalPoint | See Precise Proxy agent. |
recommended index | In SQL Server, a function that uses the Microsoft Index Tuning Wizard to recommend on adding indexes or statistics for a selected statement, batch, or table. Based on the results of this function, the Optimizer will choose a better access plan and make the respective statement or batch perform better. For statements and batches, recommendations are based on the content of the statement or batch. For tables, recommendations are based on all the statements that are stored in the PMDB, are executed during the selected time period, and have an average duration time greater than the value defined in the registry (where 0 is the default). See also advice. |
related SQL | In Oracle, a generated statement that uses alternative syntax to access the database in different ways and returns the same output as the original statement. |
relative frequency | Number of contributor invocations per entry point. For example, if a service request calls three methods each time it is invoked, the Relative Frequency for the method is three invocations per service request execution. Similarly, if a service request calls one method every other time it is invoked (half of the time), the Relative Frequency for the method is 0.5 invocations per service request execution. |
rendering time | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the time that it takes for a Web page to be loaded from the moment the first byte arrives until the Web page is fully loaded or the user interrupts or abandons the loading process. |
report | A collection of queries, programming code, and layout settings that Report Manager executes to generate graphical results like tables and charts. |
Report Manager | Uses historical information to identify problematic conditions, track long-term performance, volume trends and patterns, view availability problems over long periods of time and on different levels, compare the performance of similar systems, correlate between performance metrics of different products, assist in capacity planning, and generate demand-driven, user-defined reports. |
Report Manager FocalPoint | An agent that examines the PMDB tables to produce scheduled performance reports. See also PMDB. |
report parameter | In Report Manager, a keyword used in a report. Its value is set during the report execution. A parameter's value can be updated either permanently or for the current execution only. |
report property | In Report Manager, the attributes that define a specific report, consisting of report parameters and scheduling information. See also report parameter. |
request | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the number of HTTP requests sent for a viewed entity. |
request error | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the percentage of requests completed with an HTTP error. |
sampling | In Alerts, the process during which a metric queries a Precise product for a specific instance, retrieves values, and calculates the metric's alert level. |
sampling base | In Alerts, the start time of a scheduled sampling process (by default Sunday, 00:00 AM). |
sampling period | In specific Alerts, metrics, the time frame during which statistical data is returned from other Precise products. Such a metric is for example Oracle’s General Behavior metric, which returns database behavior for a certain period of time. |
sampling rate | In Alerts, the frequency of a metric's regular sampling schedule. The sampling rate is measured in minutes. |
Savvy | An Insight agent that collects AppTier-specific performance data. |
scalability | A system's ability to withstand load. For example, positive scalability means that the system continues to function properly even when it is called upon to service a larger number of users. |
schema changes | In Oracle and SQL Server, a process that captures schema changes and saves them in the PMDB. In SQL Server, instance configuration parameters and database option changes are also captured. |
Script installer | A component of Precise Agent Installer that enables adding a small JavaScript script, also known as a Web browser-side agent, to the Web pages of your Web site. |
server | Also called a host machine or server machine. The combination of a computer and associated operating system software that is accessed by multiple clients to perform requested functions and typically returns results to the clients. |
server-side collection | In Web, the collecting of performance data from the Web server instance through the Web server agent. |
service + network time | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the service and network time, including the total amount of time the request took to reach the server. |
Service Level Agreement | |
service time | In Web and SmartLink, the time elapsed from when a request is received by the server to the time a response is sent back to the computer that made that request. The service time is measured on the server side. In J2EE, the time it takes an invocation to complete execution. In other words, service time is the average length of time between the start time and end time of a Java method execution. For example, the SQL service time is the time it takes the JDBC method executing the SQL statement to be completed. The service time includes CPU and wait time. The service times are reported in the interval in which they complete execution. Though a contributor's average service time may be very small, the contributor may be called many times. As a result, a contributor's overall contribution to performance may be large even though its average service time is low. |
servlet | A class that is loaded only once and for which the application server uses multithreading to process requests. The servlet generates an HTML page that is sent back to the Web browser. |
size | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the bytes sent and received. |
SLA (Service Level Agreement) | A formal definition of an information system's performance goals. Within Precise, an SLA consists of clauses corresponding to various system activities. Once a system's SLA is defined, its SLA compliance can be analyzed, and breaches can be isolated to identify their causes. |
SmartLink | In Insight, a component that provides transactive, correlated information across AppTiers from the user's perspective. Insight SmartLink functions in PeopleSoft and Web applications environments. |
SmarTune | In Oracle, SQL Server, and .NET, an algorithm that analyzes performance metrics, identifies and ranks potential problem areas, and provides advice for correcting the problems. |
socket | An I/O abstraction layer that enables processes to communicate with each other, regardless of whether they are on the same server. Sockets are bi-directional FIFO pipes that look like regular file I/O to the developer with the abstraction layer handling all of the low-level communication details. |
StartPoint | The opening page of Precise. It provides a quick overview of the environment status and links to launch any of the Precise products. |
Statistics workspace | In Oracle, DB2, SQL Server, Sybase, J2EE, and Web this workspace presents instance level statistics such as hit ratios, utilization, JMX metrics, logging, and more. |
submetric | Also called child metric. In Alerts, the subquery of a parent metric. A child metric gathers its own data and combines it with the data gathered by other child metrics to form the result of the parent metric. Each child metric has its own thresholds and may be enabled or disabled individually. See also parent metric. |
summary table | A container that stores the information collected by the Precise agents and loads it into the PMDB. Summary tables store the same data at different levels of granularity: time slice, hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly. By storing data in multiple summary tables, Precise can present a detailed view and progressively higher-level views of the same data. Summary tables are particularly useful for data aging. A data purging policy can be implemented for each summary table so that detailed data is retained for short-term historical analyses while more summarized data is used for long-term analyses and trending. |
technology | A technology identifies the monitored object. For example, Oracle, SQL Server, Sybase, and DB2 are different technologies, while all Web servers (such as: Apache, IIS, and WebSphere) are defined as a single Web technology. A single monitored object can be monitored by two different technology's Collectors. For example, WebLogic server can be monitored by both a Web Collector and a J2EE Collector. |
throughput | The number of average completions per second that are observed during an interval. |
time slice | A unit used to break up long sessions into smaller time periods. The length of a time slice is preset and cannot be changed. It represents the maximum time that passes before the data collected can be displayed. For example, if the length of a time slice is 15 minutes, the collection is only updated at 15-minute intervals.
The length of a time slice is different for each technology: In Oracle, SQL Server, Sybase, DB2, Web, .NET, MQ, Tuxedo, Network, and OS, a time slice is 15 minutes. In J2EE and SmartLink, a time slice is either 30 seconds or 5 minutes. In Precise for SAP, a time slice is 5 minutes. See also collector slice size. |
URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) | The relative path to a resource after the location (network node) is found. |
URL mapping | In Web, a function that defines rules that map URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) with dynamic parameters originating from a specific domain to a format that identifies the Web pages and prevents them from having different URLs. |
Web client browser side | In Web, the gathering of performance data from the browser running on the desktop of the Web application's user, through the static or dynamic instrumentation of Web pages. |
Web server | A program that receives client requests for Web pages, retrieves the static pages and/or issues a request for dynamic page creation to an application server, and sends the pages to the client. In Web, a computer that delivers (serves up) Web pages. Every Web server has an IP address and possibly a domain name. |
work time | The time spent in the specific entity excluding time spent by called (other) entities. In J2EE, work time of a method is calculated as the service time of that method minus the service time of the methods it invoked. |
work type | In Web, a counter that keeps track of the type of the Web instance, such as Web, PeopleSoft, SAP, or Siebel. |
workspace | A display unit in Precise products. All workspaces display data from different perspectives. For example, in Oracle, SQL Server, and Sybase, the Current workspace shows information on the sessions currently active in an application, and the Objects workspace displays information on Oracle or SQL Server database objects that can be used to understand relationships and associations between database schema objects. |
Precise. Performance intelligence from click to storage. Learn more > >
Precise. Performance intelligence from click to storage. Learn more > >
...