3286.1
We have a client who has Windows 2000 infrastructure services and applications in a Data Center. This Data Center (DC) is connected to 300 remote offices on a WAN. Each remote office has a Windows 2000 infrastructure (DC, DHCP etc.) server.
The client has deployed a distributed architecture of TNG to support this environment. The distributed architecture includes a TNG COR (SQL DB) and DSM machines in the data center. Additionally there is a DSM at each remote site used to monitor the Windows 200o infrastructure server. The agents being used on the Windows 2000 infrastructure server are Windows 2000 agent, Event agent and Log agent. The remote sites connect to the COR (SQL DB) at the Data Center.
The DSM was planned at each remote site to localize traffic so that events could be aggregated at the DSM and sent to the TNG Server at the Data Center. On the contrary what we have discovered is that this has lead to very high traffic between the DSM at the remote site and the TNG Server at the Data Center.
Does anyone has insight into
1) what could be causing this behavior?
2) what could be done to avoid this high traffic generated between the DSM at the remote site and the TNG server at the DC?
We have a client who has Windows 2000 infrastructure services and applications in a Data Center. This Data Center (DC) is connected to 300 remote offices on a WAN. Each remote office has a Windows 2000 infrastructure (DC, DHCP etc.) server.
The client has deployed a distributed architecture of TNG to support this environment. The distributed architecture includes a TNG COR (SQL DB) and DSM machines in the data center. Additionally there is a DSM at each remote site used to monitor the Windows 200o infrastructure server. The agents being used on the Windows 2000 infrastructure server are Windows 2000 agent, Event agent and Log agent. The remote sites connect to the COR (SQL DB) at the Data Center.
The DSM was planned at each remote site to localize traffic so that events could be aggregated at the DSM and sent to the TNG Server at the Data Center. On the contrary what we have discovered is that this has lead to very high traffic between the DSM at the remote site and the TNG Server at the Data Center.
Does anyone has insight into
1) what could be causing this behavior?
2) what could be done to avoid this high traffic generated between the DSM at the remote site and the TNG server at the DC?