To begin monitoring, select any device node in the navigation tree, then select the Add new monitor command. The following list of monitor types—more than 40 and growing—displays. See Monitor Reference to identify which operating systems support which monitors.
Let's take a look at the properties you can set if you select the Performance > Memory utilization monitor.
Note: The following standard monitor settings display on most monitors. See the Monitor Reference for monitor-specific settings.
The Test interval value in the Basic Properties section shows how much time must elapse between tests before the first alarm is generated.
The Threshold setting section specifies the minimum Free memory required by this monitor, as described by the tooltip.
The Alarm generation value specifies the minimum number of consecutive "tests" that must fail to generate an alarm.
The Alarm test interval value shows how much time must elapse between tests after the first alarm is generated. This interval is usually much longer then the Test interval, to give you time to respond to the original alarm.
After the first alarm count, each additional, consecutive test that fails will increase the alarm count by one.
The first time a monitor fails a test it begins displaying a warning icon next to the monitor in the navigation tree.
When the number of failed tests—the alarm count—matches the number in the Alarm generation field, the monitor enters an Alarm state. An alarm icon starts displaying next to the monitor in the navigation tree.
The monitor will remain in its alarm state until any one of the following occurs:
The test no longer fails, at least once, in a continuing series of consecutive tests.
The alarm is acknowledged by a user. An acknowledged alarm means a user knows about it and is acting to correct it.