Understanding the Report Format

Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 will reach end of support on April 11, 2017. To stay supported, you will need to upgrade. For more information, see Resources to help you upgrade your Office 2007 servers and clients.

 

Applies to: Exchange Server 2007, Exchange Server 2007 SP1, Exchange Server 2007 SP2, Exchange Server 2007 SP3

The Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 Management Pack for MOM 2005 SP1 can generate several reports that will give you critical information about the computer that is running Exchange 2007 and its environment. The report layout is easy to follow. Much of the actual information about the report, such as dependencies and configuration, is contained within the body of the report.

The rest of this topic outlines the overall categories of reports together with the specific reports and a brief description of each.

The Report Format

The main features of the report are as follows.

Information that is used to Generate Report Information

By default, all the reports execute and show the last seven days of data for the relevant set of computers. However, while the report is generating or as soon as it is finished, you can modify the parameters and then click View Report.

The following is an example of the parameters that would be used for the Availability reports. Other reports have slightly different sets of parameters.

Parameter Note

Begin Date/End Date

The default is 00:00, eight days before the current date, to 11:59:59, one day before the current date.

Computer Group

This parameter specifies the names of computer groups. The default is the appropriate group for the selected report. For example, the default computer group for the Mailbox Service Availability report is Microsoft Exchange 2007 Mailbox Servers.

Computer

This parameter specifies the domain and/or names of the computers in the selected Computer Group.

SLA%

This parameter specifies your own service level agreement (SLA) value for each service. This determines at what value the availability numbers turn from green to red. For example, if the SLA is set at 99.95 percent, any availability numbers larger than or equal to 99.95 percent will be green. Availability numbers lower than 99.95 percent will appear as red in the report.

View Report

The View Report button to the right of the parameters enables you to view the report filtered by the parameters that have been specified.

Description of Document Map

The Document Map, at the left side of the report layout, shows the content areas of the report. You have the option to hide or to show the Document Map. Common content areas are as follows.

  • Service Availability   This area shows, in a graphical format, the availability of the service that is based on input that you provide, such as the period for which the report was run.

  • Summary Chart   This area shows, in a pie chart format, the overall server performance levels of the specified computers.

  • Daily Chart   This area is a graphical presentation of analysis of actions for all included computers over time.

  • Results by Computer   This area presents individual tables of information by computer.

  • Dependencies   This area contains information about performance counters, related rules, related views, and applicable Events. Report groups can have events that are common to all the reports within the group. For example, the MSExchange Monitoring Server Info (ID: 300001) is common to all reports within the Service Availability reports.

  • Configuration   This area includes a comprehensive description of the report, the report parameters, and the calculation method.

  • Related Reports   This area contains links to related reports.

Export a Report

Click Select a format to select one of the following file formats:

  • HTML with Office Web Components

  • Excel

  • Web archive

  • Acrobat (PDF) file

  • TIFF file

  • CSV (comma delimited)

  • XML file with report data

After you have selected a format for your report, you can Export it to a location of your choice. It is a good idea to experiment with each file format so that you can find the one that best suits your requirements.