Components refer to the services that you deploy, including containers and common processes. For example, a workload on the Cloud Container Engine (CCE) is a component, and the Tomcat running on the VM is also a component.
The component list displays the type, CPU usage, memory usage, and alarm status of each component, helping you learn their running status. You can click a component name to learn more information about the component. AOM supports drill-down from a component to an instance, and then to a container. By viewing the status of each layer, you can implement dimensional monitoring for components.
If a component name is complex and difficult to identify, you can add an alias for the component.
Click Add alias in the Operation column to add an alias.
Tags are identifiers of components. You can distinguish system components from non-system ones based on tags. By default, AOM adds the System Service tag to system components (including icagent, css-defender, nvidia-driver-installer, nvidia-gpu-device-plugin, kube-dns, org.tanukisoftware.wrapper.WrapperSimpleApp, evs-driver, obs-driver, sfs-driver, icwatchdog, and sh). You can click in the upper right corner to select or deselect Hide system component. AOM also allows you to customize tags for easier component management.
In the component list, click Add tags in the Operation column of the component, enter a tag, and click and OK to add a tag. You can also mark the component as a system component.
Components cannot be searched by alias.
In the upper right corner of the Component Details page, you can set a time range to query the instance, host, or alarm information of the component. If no data exists within the time range, AOM automatically switches to the Component Monitoring page.
Click an instance name to monitor the resource usage and health status.
On the component details page, click the View Monitor Graphs tab, and choose More > Add to Dashboard in the upper right corner to add the view template to the dashboard for monitoring.