In
SAS Environment Manager, resources are organized into groups to make
them easier to locate and manage. There are six different types of
groups:
resource groups
These groups are automatically
created. When resources are discovered and then added to the inventory
of monitored resources, they are added to the appropriate resource
group. The three resource groups that are automatically created in
SAS Environment Manager are platforms, servers, and services. It is
important to note how SAS resources map to the resource hierarchy.
For example, logical SAS servers are added to the services group.
compatible groups
These groups contain
selected instances of a single type of resource (for example, SAS
Object Spawners). Creating a compatible group enables you to view
aggregate metrics for a resource type. Compatible groups also make
it easier for you to locate resources that you need to monitor. For
example, you can create a group containing several servers of critical
importance, which prevents you from having to search for those servers
among the large numbers that might be on your site. After you create
a compatible group, you can add resources to the group if they match
the selected group type.
mixed groups
These groups are user-created
groups that can contain multiple types of resources. Mixed groups
can contain other groups, platforms, servers, and services, or applications.
Availability is the only metric that is available for a mixed group.
This type of group is useful for functions such as checking the availability
of a SAS Object Spawner and all of the spawned services or for viewing
the collective availability of a group of resources.
application
These groups are a
set of selected services, usually running in different servers on
multiple platforms, that together fulfill a single business purpose.
Creating application groups enables you to manage your infrastructure
from an application perspective, as opposed to a hardware perspective.