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Alerts, alert analysis tools and usage guidelines

Updated on August 28, 2018

During application processing, a sequence of text entries that are called alert messages is written to the performance alert log (usually named PegaRULES-ALERT-YYYY-MM-DD log.ru). Alert messages identify performance-related issues or errors.

Each performance alert message is named PEGAnnnn, where nnnn is the message ID that represents the system event that generated the alert. The message describes the event and contains additional information such as the value that exceeded the threshold, the type of requestor (for example, browser), and the activity or stream that triggered the alert.

Security alerts are generated when there is a potential security risk to the Pega Platform web node. The security alert log is usually named PegaRULES-ALERTSECURITY-YYYY-MMM-DD log. These alerts are named SECUnnnn.

The alert logs contain the following alert types. The category descriptions are displayed on the My Alerts display and in the PegaRULES Log Analyzer tool.

For a list of performance and security alerts, see List of performance and security alerts in Pega Platform.

Pega Autonomic Event Services (AES)

AES monitors, gathers, and analyzes performance and health indicators from multiple SmartBPM systems across the enterprise. AES aggregates the most serious alerts and exceptions into work items for use in a work flow that can be assigned for diagnosis and resolution. These work items include information about their severity, the likely reason for their occurrence, and suggestions on how to fix them.

An Enterprise Health console provides the current status of key system functions that indicate normal, warning, and critical conditions.

AES consolidates and summarizes the Pega log and the JVM GC log, which provide key information about each monitored node.

For more information about AES, see Introduction to Pega Autonomic Event Services.

PegaRULES Log Analyzer (PLA)

This tool consolidates and summarizes the performance alert log, the Pega log, and the JVM GC log, which provide key information about operational and system health. Developers and system administrators can use this information to quickly identify, diagnose, and remediate system and operational issues that might degrade or compromise performance, stability, and scalability.

For more information, see Understanding the PegaRULES Log Analyzer.

Recommended usage thresholds

The following table identifies the recommended thresholds to monitor when managing the performance and health of your configured application. While the Pega Platform does not prevent you from exceeding these thresholds, it is recommended that your Pega Platform applications stay within these usage guidelines for optimal performance and scaling.

For Pega Cloud customers, the following thresholds are considered to be the licensed capacity for Pega Cloud Production Services.
Metrics per session/hourMaximum valuePAL value
Maximum bytes of data committed from browser to server4 MBNumber of input bytes received by the server
Maximum bytes of data sent from browser to server15 MBNumber of output bytes sent from the server
Interactions between server and browser7,500Number of server interactions
Maximum rules executed450,000Rules executed
Maximum declaratives executed (all types)45,000Declarative rules executed
Maximum context-free expressions executed3,500Context-free declarative expressions executed
Maximum properties tracked by declarative expressions60,000Tracked property changes
Maximum CPU time180 secondsCPU activity time
Maximum number of requests to the database8,000Execution of RDB database operations
Maximum number of rows committed to the database4,500Database rows committed
Maximum number of rows read from the database85 MBBytes read from database storage stream (uncompressed)
Maximum data sets written to the database60 MBBytes written to database storage stream (uncompressed)
Maximum alerts generated60Alerts

Additional usage guidelines

At any specific time:

  • No single database query should exceed 5 seconds of CPU.
  • The clipboard should not be larger than 6 MB on average.
  • No single clipboard page or repeating pages should exceed 5 MB.

For any single next-best-action decision:

  • Pages processed should not exceed 50,000.
  • Interaction history records loaded should not exceed 500.
  • Interaction history records written cannot exceed 30.
  • Strategy results returned should not exceed 70.
  • CPU time should not exceed 5 seconds.
  • Uncached customer data loaded should not exceed 1 MB.
  • Previous topic Support Play: Tuning the Sun JVM 1.4.2 and 5.0 for performance
  • Next topic Alerts for asynchronous data page processing

Tags

Pega Autonomic Event Services 7.3 Pega Autonomic Event Services Pega Cloud System Administration Pega Express

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