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The simplest way to monitor a Windows active / passive node is t= o set up a TCP Service Monitor to check the file system on the node. = When the active server becomes passive, the file systems should move on to = the passive server, which then becomes active.
A TCP monitor that is configured to check the file systems (and fail whe= n they're not detected) will suppress alerts (such as Limited Performance D= ata, which would be generated by a performance monitor) because the file sy= stem is not down, it has simply failed over.
When you configure a TCP monitor, enter bsdsysv in the String to Send fi= eld of the monitor template.
In the Critical field of the String to Receive option, enter a list of d= rives as an inverse regular expression. For example: (C:).*(H:).*(F:)= .*(L:).*(Q:).*(K:).*(S:).
Note
You can retrieve a list of system drives by polling the agent from withi= n Uptime Infrastructure Monitor. To do this, click the name of the sy= stem in My Infrastructure tab and then click the Poll Agent option in = the navigation pane. Look for output similar to the following:
bsd: 0 sysv: 0 C: bsd: 1 sysv: 1 H: bsd: 2 sysv: 2 bsd: 3 sysv: 3 F: bsd= : 4 sysv: 4 L: bsd: 5 sysv: 5 Q: bsd: 6 sysv: 6 K: bsd: 7 sysv: 7 S: