The best way to do this is through dashboards - creating a table and converting it to a report. Drag virtual machines over and select Properties. Create a table from here. Below is a sample one I created. Is this what you are looking for or do you want more granularity?
The growth rates are tied to the logical disks vs. the actual VMDKs, since a VMDK could have multiple logical volumes. The easiest way would probably be to create a derived metric that rolls those all up to the VM level vs. each drive in the table (hard to make columns auto appear if a drive exists/doesn't)
DELL-Kevin Fl
22 Posts
1
September 17th, 2013 18:00
Hi Mark,
The best way to do this is through dashboards - creating a table and converting it to a report. Drag virtual machines over and select Properties. Create a table from here. Below is a sample one I created. Is this what you are looking for or do you want more granularity?
mdeepe-cornerst
7 Posts
0
September 17th, 2013 20:00
Thanks for the insight. What I would be looking for would be another column showing weekly growth. Any ideas where that would be hiding?
DELL-Thomas B
171 Posts
1
September 19th, 2013 02:00
The growth rates are tied to the logical disks vs. the actual VMDKs, since a VMDK could have multiple logical volumes. The easiest way would probably be to create a derived metric that rolls those all up to the VM level vs. each drive in the table (hard to make columns auto appear if a drive exists/doesn't)