PRTG Manual: WMI Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Sensor
The WMI Microsoft SQL Server 2014 sensor monitors the performance of a Microsoft SQL Server via Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI).
For a detailed list and descriptions of the channels that this sensor can show, see section Channel List.
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Consider the following remarks and requirements for this sensor:
Remark |
Description |
---|---|
Performance impact |
This sensor has a high performance impact. Stay below 200 WMI sensors per probe. Above this number, consider using multiple remote probes for load balancing. |
WoW64 |
This sensor requires WoW64 (Windows 32-bit on Windows 64-bit) for target systems that run Windows Server 2016. |
Credentials |
This sensor requires credentials for Windows systems. |
Target system |
You can only add this sensor to a target system that runs a Microsoft SQL database. |
IPv6 |
This sensor supports IPv6. |
Hosted probe |
You cannot add this sensor to the hosted probe of a PRTG Hosted Monitor instance. If you want to use this sensor, add it to a remote probe device. |
The sensor has the following default tags that are automatically predefined in the sensor's settings when you add the sensor:
- wmisqlserversensor
- wmisqlserversensor2014
For more information about basic sensor settings, see section Sensor Settings.
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Service |
The service that this sensor monitors. The service name is provided as returned by the SQL server. |
Name |
The name of the server instance that this sensor monitors. The display name is provided as returned by the SQL server. |
Naming Method |
Select whether PRTG automatically selects the name of the WMI class used for monitoring:
|
WMI Class |
This setting is only visible if you select Manually enter the WMI class name above. Enter the WMI class name that the sensor uses to monitor the server instance. |
Result Handling |
Define what PRTG does with the sensor result:
In a cluster, PRTG stores the result in the PRTG data directory of the master node. |
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Performance Counters |
You see a list of different groups of performance counters that the sensor can monitor for the instances that you selected above. Every sensor that PRTG creates for the server instances monitors the performance counters you select here.
Depending on your selection, PRTG creates a sensor with the specified channels. To monitor more than one of the listed groups of performance counters, add the sensor several times for the respective instances. After sensor creation, this setting shows the performance counter that this sensor monitors. |
Setting |
Description |
---|---|
Primary Channel |
Select a channel from the list to define it as the primary channel. In the device tree, PRTG displays the last value of the primary channel below the sensor's name. The available options depend on what channels are available for this sensor. You can set a different primary channel later by clicking below a channel gauge on the sensor's Overview tab. |
Graph Type |
Define how this sensor shows different channels:
|
Stack Unit |
This setting is only visible if you select Stack channels on top of each other above. Select a unit from the list. PRTG stacks all channels with this unit on top of each other. By default, you cannot exclude single channels from stacking if they use the selected unit. However, there is an advanced procedure to do so. |
By default, all of these settings are inherited from objects that are higher in the hierarchy. We recommend that you change them centrally in the root group settings if necessary. To change a setting for this object only, click under the corresponding setting name to disable the inheritance and to display its options.
For more information, see section Inheritance of Settings.
Which channels the sensor actually shows might depend on the target device, the available components, and the sensor setup.
Channel |
Description |
---|---|
Average Wait Time |
The average amount of wait time for each lock request that resulted in a wait |
Batch Requests/Sec |
The number of Transact-SQL command batches received. This statistic is affected by all constraints (such as input/output, number of users, cache size, or complexity of requests). High batch requests mean good throughput. |
Buffer Cache Hit Ratio |
The percentage of pages found in the buffer cache without having to read from disk. The ratio is the total number of cache hits divided by the total number of cache lookups since an instance of SQL Server was started. After a long period of time, the ratio moves very little. Because reading from the cache is much less expensive than reading from disk, you want this ratio to be high. Generally, you can increase the buffer cache hit ratio by increasing the amount of memory available to SQL Server. |
Connection Memory (KB) |
The total amount of dynamic memory the server is using for maintaining connections |
Database Pages |
The number of pages in the buffer pool with database content |
Number of Deadlocks/Sec |
The number of lock requests that resulted in a deadlock |
Full Scans/Sec |
The number of unrestricted full scans. These can be either base-table or full-index scans. |
Lock Requests/Sec |
The number of new locks and lock conversions requested from the lock manager |
Logins/Sec |
The total number of logins started |
Logouts/Sec |
The total number of logout operations started |
Optimizer Memory (KB) |
The total amount of dynamic memory the server is using for query optimization |
Page Life Expectancy |
The number of seconds a page stays in the buffer pool without references |
Page Splits/Sec |
The number of page splits that occur as the result of overflowing index pages |
SQL Cache Memory (KB) |
The total amount of dynamic memory the server is using for the dynamic SQL cache |
SQL Compilations/Sec |
The number of SQL compilations per second. Indicates the number of times the compile code path is entered. Includes compiles because of recompiles. After the SQL Server user activity is stable, this value reaches a steady state. |
SQL Recompilations/Sec |
The number of SQL recompiles per second. Counts the number of times recompiles are triggered. In general, you want the recompiles to be low. |
Stolen Pages |
The number of pages used for miscellaneous server purposes (including procedure cache) |
Table Lock Escalations/Sec |
The number of times that locks on a table were escalated |
Target Server Memory (KB) |
The total amount of dynamic memory the server can consume |
Total Server Memory (KB) |
The total amount of dynamic memory that the server is using |
User Connections |
The number of user connections. Because each user connection consumes some memory, configuring overly high numbers of user connections could affect throughput. Set user connections to the maximum expected number of concurrent users. |
KNOWLEDGE BASE
What security features does PRTG include?
My WMI sensors don't work. What can I do?