Define the Acceptable Number of Configuration Changes Records
Use the Configuration Changes tab on the Root Group Form to enable or disable and define a warning limit for the number of configuration change records that you expect to created per hour. In addition you can set the maximum number of records stored in a granule. Once a granule reaches the maximum size all further records for the granule are discarded.
The settings in the tab are only used if Configuration Changes Auditing is enabled, see Configuration Changes Auditing.
Use the following fields to enable or disable and define the Configuration Changes record limits:
Use the Severity combo box to select the Severity Level. This is the severity of the alarm that you want Geo SCADA Expert to display in event messages when the number of records created per hour reaches the number defined in the Warning and Maximum fields. You can disable the alarms by setting the Severity to None, in which case the Warning field is grayed out.
This field is only displayed if the Area of Interest feature is enabled on your system. Use the field to specify the Area of Interest with which overactive alarms are to be associated (see Assign a Different Area of Interest to an Item's Alarms and Events).
Enter the number of configuration changes records per granule per hour that raise a warning alarm. If the number of records in an individual granule reaches this number an alarm is raised to indicate that the granule is overactive. The minimum value you can enter is 500 records. The default value is 14,400 records/hour (4 records/second for an hour).
This default is provided to avoid false alarms and data loss on large systems.
For this feature to be effective you need to specify values appropriate for your system, to avoid problems before a warning is generated.
The Warning alarm message indicates which granule is overactive including both the time and the filename.
"Too many configuration change records (# records in hour beginning <time>) file <filename>"
When an alarm is triggered, the alarm source indicates which stream contains the overactive data file (granule) (if streams are enabled).
"Configuration Changes (Stream #)"
The Warning field is unavailable and grayed out if the Severity is set to None.
Enter the maximum number of configuration changes records per granule per hour that can be logged. If the number of records in an individual data file reaches this number an alarm is raised to indicate that the granule has reached the maximum value and no more configuration changes will be audited for the objects in this stream for the remainder of this period. The minimum value you can enter is equal to the Warning number of records or 500 if alarms are disabled. The default value is 115,200 records/hour (32 records/second for an hour).
This default is provided to avoid false alarms and data loss on large systems.
For this feature to be effective you need to specify values appropriate for your system, to avoid problems before a warning is generated.
Lowering the maximum number of records below the size of existing granules prevents any further records being added to those granules, it does not affect the existing records in those granules.
The Maximum alarm message indicates which granule was overactive and is now full including both the time and the filename.
"Too many configuration change records, granule is full (# records in hour beginning <time>) file <filename>"
When an alarm is triggered, the alarm source indicates which stream contains the overactive data file (if streams are enabled).
"Configuration Changes (Stream #)"
If the Severity field is set to None, no alarm is raised when the Maximum number of records is reached.
LOSS OF DATA
When configuration changes granules become overactive:
- Review who or what is making large numbers of the changes.
- Check or change the stream size (so that fewer objects per stream are generated), see Define the Stream Size for Maximum Performance.
- Check and/or change the 'audited origins' so that fewer types of changes are recorded, see Configuration Changes Audited Origins.