Relators

Relators tie together – or relate – the other three basic building block namely Rules, Alerts, and Monitoring Groups

In a Relator the Rule to be executed against the servers and devices in the Monitoring Groups are specified

Also specified are the Alerts fired when an issue is detected

The benefit of a Relator is Rules, Alerts, and Monitoring Groups are all shared

Each Relator has its own monitoring rate — the frequency in minutes or seconds the Relator executes to check the servers and devices in the Monitoring Group

Each server and device is checked independently of the others — the results of checking one server or device in the Monitoring Group in no way affects the results of checking other servers or devices

Relators can also optionally use calendars

Argent calendars are derived from, and shared with, the Argent Job Scheduler

Thus any complex calendar can easily be created

For example, a common use of the Argent Calendar feature is the ability to run Relators on the second-last week of the quarter to check there are sufficient resources (such as free disk space) to correctly perform all End-Of-Quarter processing

All Relators are initially defined in Test mode – this prevents a Relator from starting prematurely

Relators have an optional Trace Log enabling testing and debugging of the Relator before it is put into production