- Getting started
- Best practices
- Tenant
- About the Tenant Context
- Searching for Resources in a Tenant
- Managing Robots
- Connecting Robots to Orchestrator
- Storing Robot Credentials in CyberArk
- Storing Unattended Robot Passwords in Azure Key Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in HashiCorp Vault (read only)
- Storing Unattended Robot Credentials in AWS Secrets Manager (read only)
- Deleting Disconnected and Unresponsive Unattended Sessions
- Robot Authentication
- Robot Authentication With Client Credentials
- SmartCard Authentication
- Configuring automation capabilities
- Audit
- Settings - Tenant Level
- Resource Catalog Service
- Automation Suite robots
- Folders Context
- Automations
- Processes
- Jobs
- Apps
- Triggers
- Logs
- Monitoring
- About Monitoring
- Machines
- Processes
- Queues
- Queues SLA
- Queues
- Assets
- Storage Buckets
- Test Suite - Orchestrator
- Integrations
- Troubleshooting
About Monitoring
Orchestrator provides a monitoring solution that gives you real-time metrics to help you keep an eye on the health and state of your system. Be it in regards to Machines, Queues and Queues SLA, or Processes, you can check the state of your system in either the last hour or last day.
There are four entities available in the Monitoring page - Machines,Processes,Queues, and Queues SLA - each concerning the corresponding resource as found in Orchestrator. You can switch between them as follows:
For each component there are two views available, depending on the level of detail you require:
- General View - displays monitoring information concerning all the resources of the selected type. For example, the Queues component page displays information about all existing queues on an aggregate basis.
- Individual View - displays monitoring information concerning one specific resource of the selected type. For example, on the Queues page, you can display information pertaining to the performance of one Queue by selecting it from the general view. You can return to the general view by clicking the arrow on the top-left of the page.
Each component comes with specific filters, which enable you to isolate the displayed data as desired:
- The Interval filter allows you to control the granularity of the displayed data and check the health of your system in either the last day or the last hour.
- The Include Subfolders filter is displayed on all monitoring pages when a folder is selected, and it allows you to select whether the contents of the selected folder's subfolders are displayed. By default, this is set to No.
The monitoring functionality is controlled by a general-purpose permission set (Monitoring), per-object permissions (Machines, Queues, Jobs) and filter-pertaining permissions (Folders). In order to give permissions on one component, you need to grant View permissions on Monitoring, and View permissions on the component itself, otherwise the corresponding pages are not displayed at all.
Explicitly:
- View on Monitoring and View on Machines - allows you to see the content of the Monitoring > Machines pages.
- View on Monitoring and View on Queues - allows you to see the content of the Monitoring > Queues pages.
- View on Monitoring and View on Jobs - allows you to see the content of the Monitoring > Jobs pages.
Additionally:
- Edit on Monitoring and View on Queues - allows you to disable errors from the Error Feed widget on the Monitoring > Queues page.
- Edit on Monitoring and View on Jobs - allows you to disable errors from the Error Feed widget on the Monitoring > Jobs page.
- View on Folders - allow you to filter the content of the page by existing subfolder(s).