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  1. In the up.time Web interface, begin by clicking My Infrastructure.
  2. Begin adding your VMware vCenter Server as an up.time Element. In the My Infrastructure view, click Add System/Network Device.
  3. In the Add System window, select VMware vCenter Server from the Type of System/Device drop-down. This reveals configuration fields specific to this type of monitored Element.
  4. Complete the fields similar to those below:

    • The Display Name is used throughout the up.time interface, as well as reports.
    • The Description can contain any extra information such as the version number or IP address.
    • The Options fields tell up.time how to find and access your vCenter Server.
    • You can leave the vSync Settings options at their defaults.
    Note
    titleStick to the Basics

    By default, the Collect up.time Agent data and Collect WMI Agentless data check boxes are clear. This means the metrics up.time retrieves for each monitored VM is what the vCenter Server itself collects and provides to up.time. For these "basic VMs," their metrics are a subset of what can be collected from the guest operating system using the up.time agent or using WMI. For simplicity in this guide, we will work with a "basic" vCenter Server inventory. You can learn more about agent- and WMI-based data collection in the next module, where you are adding physical servers.

  5. Click Save. up.time will search searches for your vCenter Server and import its inventory of ESX hosts and VMs as up.time Elements. This can take a minute or more, depending on how large your vCenter inventory is.
  6. up.time will inform informs you when the vCenter Server has been is added:

    Click Done to close the Add System window. 

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Note
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Depending on the size of your vCenter Server inventory, importing one could exceed your up.time license. If this were to happen, you might see the following:

  • ESX hosts and VMs that you may have been expecting expect to see do not respectively appear in the Discovered Hosts and Discovered Virtual Machines infrastructure groups.
  • Correspondingly, the expanded vCenter Server hierarchy may display empty datacenter objects. ESX hosts and VMs that are not monitored due to exceeding the license will do not appear here, along with the vCenter Server objects to which they belong (for example, resource pools or clusters).

In this scenario, you need not worry. up.time has in fact imported these; it is simply ignoring them. We will learn more about this in the next section.

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This validation step can be particularly enlightening if your vCenter Server import exceeded your license, and resulted in automatic exclusion of ESX hosts and VMs being automatically excluded from the monitored inventory in up.time.

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  1. Click My Infrastructure.
  2. Click the vCenter Server's gear icon, then in the pop-up menu, click Graph Performance. Whenever you take this action with an Element, you are taken to its Quick Snapshot.
    Whenever you graph the performance of an Element from the My Infrastructure view, its Quick Snapshot is displayed. What exactly is shown depends on the type of Element, which we will see throughout this part of the Getting Started Guide. In this case, the vCenter Server's Quick Snapshot shows datacenter-level information that is directly pulled from the vCenter Server metrics:
     
    You can incorporate these basic metrics into your up.time monitoring plans (such as alerts or reporting). It's more likely, however, that your interest will be is with the virtual machines that are a part of the vCenter Server inventory.
  3. Click My Infrastructure to return to the main inventory view.
  4. Expand the Discovered Virtual Machines Infrastructure Group, and click the gear icon for any of the VMs. In the pop-up menu, again, click Graph Performance to display that Element's Quick Snapshot. This displays metrics for the VM that have been are pulled from the vCenter Server's metrics: 

    As with the vCenter Server Element's metrics, you can incorporate these into your alerts and reports. However, this "basic VM" view allows you to work only with what the vCenter Server provides; there may be cases where you want to add a little extra "up.time power," and install an up.time agent on the VM. This is something you will learn a bit more about in the next module.
Note
titleLicense Check!

In this module, if the inventory imported from vCenter Server exceeds open slots in your license, some of the inventory will have been is ignored, and you will have no space left to add Elements to your monitored inventory. In the next two tracks In this Getting Started Guide, you will be are adding servers and network devices. If you plan on following either or both of these tracks, you need to anticipate the number of servers and network devices you will add. To follow the server track, you'll need at least 2; to follow the network device track, you'll need at least 1. The easiest way to free up space is to manually ignore VMs; each VM you ignore opens a license spot for a new Element.

Return to the Inventory Detail view for the vCenter (My Infrastructure > gear icon > View > Inventory Detail). Select VMs, ESX hosts, or even an entire cluster, then click Add Selected Elements to Ignore. That number of spots will be The spots are freed up in your license, which you can verify by clicking Config > License Info.

Alternatively, you can also contact up.time Customer Support to look into increasing the size of your license.

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Next: Add Physical Servers