Using Event Viewer Event Levels Creating Custom Views Windows Logs Monitoring Performance
Event Viewer is one of the primary tools to watch a Windows system
You can double click on any event in the center pane Provides important details for troubleshooting purposes – Source – Event ID – User
Event Levels Information events—indicates a change has occurred or describe a successful completion of an operation Critical events—is an event that an application or component cannot automatically recover from Error events—indicate a problem has occurred external to the application that might impact functionality
Event Levels Warning events—indicate events that may lead to a problem in the future
Not a new feature in 2008 Does allow to save custom views which is a new feature Some custom views are created automatically – Server roles—each time you add a server role, a custom view is created – Administrative events—shows critical, error and warning events from all administrative logs
Application—logs events from applications. Security—displays all audited events. Events include file auditing (who is accessing the file), logon events and other objects. System—logs events related to the operating system. A service not starting would be logged to the system event log
Monitoring tools: – Performance Monitor—uses objects and counters to monitor performance – Resource Monitor—constantly running and capturing counters on the core four resources of your system. Processor Memory Disk subsystem Network Interface