SQL Server monitor

The SQL Server monitor shows the measurements and server properties that can be monitored on the SQL database server during the test run.

Set up the SQL Server monitor

This task describes how to configure the SQL Server monitor.

  1. Prerequisite

    If your monitor accesses a server outside of your internal network, you may need to set up a web proxy to collect data from it. For details, see Prerequisite (use a proxy server).

  2. From the LoadRunner Enterprise navigation toolbar, click and select Monitors (under Assets).

  3. In the test resource tree, select an existing monitor profile, or click New Monitor Profile and create a new monitor profile.

  4. In the Monitor Profile page, click Add Monitor and select SQL Server.

  5. In the SQL Server page, enter the server details:

    UI Elements

    Description

    Server

    The name or IP address of the server whose resources you want to monitor.

    User Name

    The monitored server's user name, if relevant.

    Password

    The monitored server's password, if relevant.

  6. Click Get Counters to display a list of available metrics and counters, and select the relevant measurements that you want to monitor.

    The following table describes the default counters that can be monitored on version 6.5 of the SQL Server:

    Measurement

    Description

    % Total Processor Time

    The average percentage of time that all the processors on the system are busy executing non-idle threads. On a multi-processor system, if all processors are always busy, this is 100%, if all processors are 50% busy this is 50% and if 1/4 of the processors are 100% busy this is 25%. It can be viewed as the fraction of the time spent doing useful work. Each processor is assigned an Idle thread in the Idle process which consumes those unproductive processor cycles not used by any other threads.

    % Processor Time

    The percentage of time that the processor is executing a non-idle thread. This counter was designed as a primary indicator of processor activity. It is calculated by measuring the time that the processor spends executing the thread of the idle process in each sample interval, and subtracting that value from 100%. (Each processor has an idle thread which consumes cycles when no other threads are ready to run). It can be viewed as the percentage of the sample interval spent doing useful work. This counter displays the average percentage of busy time observed during the sample interval. It is calculated by monitoring the time the service was inactive, and then subtracting that value from 100%.

    Cache Hit Ratio

    The percentage of time that a requested data page was found in the data cache (instead of being read from disk).

    I/O - Batch Writes/sec

    The number of 2K pages written to disk per second, using Batch I/O. The checkpoint thread is the primary user of Batch I/O.

    I/O - Lazy Writes/sec

    The number of 2K pages flushed to disk per second by the Lazy Writer.

    I/O - Outstanding Reads

    The number of physical reads pending.

    I/O - Outstanding Writes

    The number of physical writes pending.

    I/O - Page Reads/sec

    The number of physical page reads per second.

    I/O - Transactions/sec

    The number of Transact-SQL command batches executed per second.

    User Connections

    The number of open user connections.

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Notes and limitations

If you encounter a "Failed to retrieve measurements" error when trying to get monitor counters or run a test, see Monitor fails to retrieve measurements.

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See also: