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The Windows Performance Counters widget graphically shows Windows performance counters from one or more selected computers.
Performance counters are measurements of computers' states or activities. They're useful when you want to find out how computers are affected by what users do with them.
The widget can show any Windows performance counter that your PerformanceGuard administrator has defined.

Select Counters

Use the Windows performance counters menu in the top part of the dashboard to select the counters that you want to view in the widget.
You can select:

  • A group of counters
Example: PhysicalDisk

If you select a group, you automatically select all counters in that group as well as all instances of those counters.

  • Specific counters from a group
Example: The %DiskTime counter from the PhysicalDisk group

If you select a counter, you automatically select all instances of that counter.

  • Specific instances of a counter
Example: The C: instance of the %DiskTime counter from the PhysicalDisk group
When you use the Windows metrics menu, there's a search field that you can use to search for counters. You can also use the search field to search for computer names, in which case the search results will display all counters that exist for computers whose names match your search.

When I search, matches are sometimes highlighted in blue, and sometimes not. Why?  When your search matches a counter, PerformanceGuard highlights the match in blue letters in your search results. When you search for a computer name, PerformanceGuard lists matching counters in the search results, but it doesn't highlight anything, because there's no exact match between the computer name and the names of relevant counters.

Widgets with Many Counters

If your widget contains so many different counters that it's difficult to distinguish between individual counters, you can:

  • View the values of individual counters if you place your pointer over the data points in the widget's graph area.
  • Hide unwanted counters if you click their names in the legend area below the graph. When you want to view the counters again, simply click their names once more.

Set Up the Widget

You can only do this if you're a PerformanceGuard administrator.

Before you set up the widget, you need to find out if you have set up custom counter templates that cover all the counters that you want to be able to view in the widget.
You also need to check that you've applied the custom counter templates to the required agent configuration groups.
Both processes are described in Custom Counter Templates: Collect Data from Any Windows Performance Counter.
It's your custom counter templates, and how you've applied them to agent configuration groups, that determine:

  • Which counters that PerformanceGuard collects (and consequently which counters you can view in the widget)
  • Which computers that PerformanceGuard collects the counters from

When you're ready to add the widget to a dashboard, you simply select the required counters in the widget setup dialog's Windows performance counters menu. That menu works just like the one described under Select Counters in the previous.

Many performance counters in the same widget can be confusing. It's better to use multiple widgets with a few counters in each.

Toggle Minimum and Maximum Values On and Off

The widget by default shows average values. To toggle minimum and maximum values on and off, click the widget's  icon.

Display of minimum and maximum values works best if the widget only contains a few counters. If the widget contains many counters, you can hide some of them. See Widgets with Many Counters in the previous.

When you view minimum and maximum values, you can reveal otherwise hidden peaks.
The difference can be dramatic. Look at this example: When we view average values, the highest average value is 18, but when we view the minimum and maximum values, the maximum value for the same period turns out to be 79.

How can the maximum value be much higher than the average? PerformanceGuard has typically sampled data many times between the data points in the graph. The maximum value is the highest value that PerformanceGuard has recorded when it sampled data in the interval between the points on the graph, but the maximum value may not have occurred very often, and therefore it may not contribute very much to the average value. The same principle applies to minimum values.

Zoom

To zoom in, click and drag across the required area of the timeline.

Connect All Samples

The samples in the graph will by default be Automatic  . If you don't want this you can select Connect All  or set them to Disconnect All  .

Adjust Vertical Axis (Y-Axis)

To adjust the vertical axis of a graph, click the widget's  icon. If the graph has multiple vertical axes, you can adjust each axis separately.
When you adjust an axis, bear in mind that you won't be able to see data points that are outside the range that you specify.

Resolution

To sort the large data-sets and view them more clearly in the graph, click the widget's resolution  icon.
You can use resolution when you have a large number of individual graphic elements that you can not distinguish between them. It is very similar to the idea of putting data into categories / class as it divides the data values into a set of disjoint intervals called Bins. It will allow you to group individual data values into one instance of graphic element.

You can select from the lowest time interval such as (1 min) to the highest interval such as (1 week, 1 month).
Example: You can see a significant difference in display of data values from 04:00 to 08:00 when resolution is selected at the intervals of 30 min, 1 hour and 4 hours allowing you to visualize data in ways that are meaningful. Click thumbnail to view image in full size. null null null

The data values which fall in to those selected respective intervals, a bin, are replaced by a value representative of that interval. The data outside of the [start, end] range is discarded and thus will not be displayed on the graph.

STATISTICS

When you view the graph, you can also see a Statistics table by switching to Statistics mode  . Statistics icon will not be visible if there is no data available.

Note that the Statistics table shows the weighted average for the graph's samples. That means that each value to be averaged is assigned a weight based on the number of occurrences of that value.

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