Use Microsoft OMS for configuration assessment

Summary: Ed Wilson talks about using the Microsoft Operations Management Suite for configuration assessment.

Good morning everyone. Ed Wilson here, and today I want to talk about the Configuration Assessment tool in the Microsoft Operations Management Suite.

Note   There is a good article in the Microsoft TechNet Library that talks about the various OMS assessment solutions: Optimize your environment with Assessment solutions.

I launch the Configuration Assessment tool from the Overview page in my OMS console:

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The Configuration Assessment solution

After I select the Configuration Assessment tool, I see three options: Alerts, Knowledge Recommendations, and Servers and Workloads Analyzed. The alerts and servers analyzed are pretty much what I expect. For example I see 47 alerts, of which 22 are related to SQL Server. I also see that have 153 servers analyzed of which 15 are actually running SQL Server. This screen is shown here:

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Knowledge Recommendations

The option that is surprising and quite possibly amazing is the Knowledge Recommendations. I see that I have 454 recommendations that are based on 14.4 thousand articles. Dude (or dudette), there is no way that I could duplicate this amount of effort.

I see that there are 445 recommendations for SQL Server. How does this work? I click the SQL Server portion of the Knowledge Recommendations and I see that I have specific recommendations from 10 KB articles:

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I select article 2014749, which applies to five SQL Server objects, but to only one SQL Server (DB03.contoso.com). So what is the recommendation? I adjust my display to show the five SQL Server objects (OperationsManager, ServiceManager, Master, MSDB, and TempDB). I see that the RecommendationProperties shows Microsoft.SQLServer.Database.Collation:SQL_Latin1_General_CP1_CI_AS:

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So what does that mean? I search for the KB article and arrive at KB 2014749. It talks about a specific error message and tells me specifically how to correct my issue. This section of the article is shown here:

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And that is what is so cool about OMS. It would have taken me forever to arrive at this information if was not running the Microsoft Operations Management Suite. That is all I have for you today. Join me on Monday when I’ll talk about more cool MS OMS stuff.

I invite you to follow me on Twitter and the Microsoft OMS Facebook site. If you want to learn more about Windows PowerShell, visit the Hey, Scripting Guy! Blog. If you have any questions, send email to me at scripter@microsoft.com. I wish you a wonderful day, and I’ll see you tomorrow.

Ed Wilson,  The Groovy IT Dude

Microsoft Operations Suite Team

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