Archive for the ‘Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide’ Category

Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide for System Center 2012 – Operations Manager

Operations Manager is a component of Microsoft System Center 2012 that helps the organization monitor services, devices, and operations for multiple computers from a single console. This guide leads the reader through the process of planning the Operations Manager infrastructure by addressing the following fundamental decisions and tasks:

· Identifying which services, applications, and infrastructure need to be monitored.

· Determining the resources needed to employ Operations Manager to monitor the selected resources.

· Designing the components, layout, security, and connectivity of the Operations Manager infrastructure.

image

Figure 1. System Center 2012 capabilities and components

What’s New in System Center 2012 -Operations Manager

The most relevant infrastructure changes include:

· RMS removal and the new RMS emulator. The single largest change impacting design and planning is the removal of the root management server (RMS). All management servers are peers now that there is no RMS. Therefore, the RMS is no longer a single point of failure because all management servers host the services previously hosted only by the RMS. Roles are distributed to all the management servers. If one management server becomes unavailable, its responsibilities are automatically redistributed. An RMS emulator role provides for backward compatibility for management packs targeting the RMS. If the organization does not have any management packs that previously targeted the RMS, the RMS emulator will not be required.

· Data warehouse. The data warehouse is now required.

· Resource pools. A resource pool is a collection of management servers, or gateway servers, used to distribute work among themselves and take over work from a failed member. All management servers are members of the All Management Servers resource pool, which balances the monitoring load of the management group as new management servers are added, and provides automatic failover for monitoring.

 

Applicable Scenarios

This guide addresses the planning and design decisions involved in creating a successful Operations Manager infrastructure. It has been written to address the needs of the following groups:

· Organizations with no monitoring solution that are planning to monitor services, applications, and infrastructure with Operations Manager.

· Organizations now using another monitoring solution that are planning to move to Operations Manager.

· Organizations consolidating multiple monitoring solutions to Operations Manager.

· Organizations with multiforest environments where Operations Manager will be used to monitor and manage resources that span Active Directory Domain Services forest boundaries.

· Organizations that have distributed environments with systems separated by wide area network (WAN) links.

· Organizations with services in perimeter networks separated by firewalls.

· Organizations interested in implementing centralized security event log collection and reporting to meet internal audit or regulatory compliance requirements.

· Organizations upgrading from Microsoft Operations Manager 2007 to System Center 2012 – Operations Manager.

· Organizations requiring coexistence with existing management systems.

Customers with complex scenarios should consider having their architecture reviewed by Microsoft Consulting Service prior to implementation because that organization is best able to comment on the supportability of a particular design.

Related Resources

Check out all that the Infrastructure Planning and Design team has to offer! Visit the IPD page on TechNet,www.microsoft.com/ipd, for additional information, including our most recent guides.

Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide for System Center 2012 – Operations Manager

Operations Manager is a component of Microsoft System Center 2012 that helps the organization monitor services, devices, and operations for multiple computers from a single console. This guide leads the reader through the process of planning the Operations Manager infrastructure by addressing the following fundamental decisions and tasks:

· Identifying which services, applications, and infrastructure need to be monitored.

· Determining the resources needed to employ Operations Manager to monitor the selected resources.

· Designing the components, layout, security, and connectivity of the Operations Manager infrastructure.

image

Figure 1. System Center 2012 capabilities and components

What’s New in System Center 2012 -Operations Manager

The most relevant infrastructure changes include:

· RMS removal and the new RMS emulator. The single largest change impacting design and planning is the removal of the root management server (RMS). All management servers are peers now that there is no RMS. Therefore, the RMS is no longer a single point of failure because all management servers host the services previously hosted only by the RMS. Roles are distributed to all the management servers. If one management server becomes unavailable, its responsibilities are automatically redistributed. An RMS emulator role provides for backward compatibility for management packs targeting the RMS. If the organization does not have any management packs that previously targeted the RMS, the RMS emulator will not be required.

· Data warehouse. The data warehouse is now required.

· Resource pools. A resource pool is a collection of management servers, or gateway servers, used to distribute work among themselves and take over work from a failed member. All management servers are members of the All Management Servers resource pool, which balances the monitoring load of the management group as new management servers are added, and provides automatic failover for monitoring.

 

Applicable Scenarios

This guide addresses the planning and design decisions involved in creating a successful Operations Manager infrastructure. It has been written to address the needs of the following groups:

· Organizations with no monitoring solution that are planning to monitor services, applications, and infrastructure with Operations Manager.

· Organizations now using another monitoring solution that are planning to move to Operations Manager.

· Organizations consolidating multiple monitoring solutions to Operations Manager.

· Organizations with multiforest environments where Operations Manager will be used to monitor and manage resources that span Active Directory Domain Services forest boundaries.

· Organizations that have distributed environments with systems separated by wide area network (WAN) links.

· Organizations with services in perimeter networks separated by firewalls.

· Organizations interested in implementing centralized security event log collection and reporting to meet internal audit or regulatory compliance requirements.

· Organizations upgrading from Microsoft Operations Manager 2007 to System Center 2012 – Operations Manager.

· Organizations requiring coexistence with existing management systems.

Customers with complex scenarios should consider having their architecture reviewed by Microsoft Consulting Service prior to implementation because that organization is best able to comment on the supportability of a particular design.

Related Resources

Check out all that the Infrastructure Planning and Design team has to offer! Visit the IPD page on TechNet,www.microsoft.com/ipd, for additional information, including our most recent guides.

Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide for Malware Response

Download the Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide for Malware Response

The  Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide for Malware Response empowers readers to take action quickly in the event of a malware incident by matching the technology solution to the business need and aligning business and IT from the beginning. This guide discusses three primary recovery methods: cleaning the system, recovering system state, and rebuilding the system. Each method presents different risks and benefits to the organization. The guide also describes approaches to investigating outbreaks and cleaning infected systems. Read this guide to make an informed decision about how to return the systems to operation while limiting the likelihood of the malware infecting additional systems.

The guide empowers readers in the following ways:

  • Shortens the time required to recover from a malware outbreak by describing the decisions to be made.
  • Provides a cost-effective and straightforward solution by matching the most suitable technologies to the business needs.
  • Prompts decisions to be made in choosing one of three courses of action: clean, restore, or rebuild a system.

To learn more aboutInfrastructure Planning and Design Guide for Malware Response click  here. To download the guidance, click here.

Posted February 20, 2011 by Robert Smit in Infrastructure Planning and Design Guide

  • Tag