Monday, May 21, 2012
en-USfr-FR

Bienvenue sur le site MSLYNC du Groupe des Utilisateurs Lync

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Bienvenue sur le portail du Groupe des Utilisateurs de Lync.

Bienvenue sur votre site consacré aux technologies mises en oeuvre au sein des communications unifiées. Ce site est une source d'information, mais c'est aussi le site du Groupe des Utilisateurs Lync (G.U.L.) qui a été lancé officiellement le 20 Janvier 2011 lors d'un événement conjoint avec Microsoft et avec la collaboration de plusieurs partenaires (Jabra, NET, Plantronics, Polycom...).

Inscrivez vous sur ce site du groupe des utilisateurs de Lync (et de la communication unifiée en général) (bouton  'INSCRIPTION'  en haut à droite) pour vous tenir informés et avoir accès à l'ensemble des ressources du site !

Plusieurs vidéos de mise en oeuvre de LYNC sont en ligne. Consulter la page Tutos de mise en oeuvre

Une présentation Powerpoint "Planification, déploiement et migration vers Lync Server 2010" réalisée par Damien CARO  (Microsoft) est disponible en téléchargement.
Les présentations Powerpoint de la réunion de lancement de Lync sont disponibles sur la page
Ressources --> Documents

Un incident matériel sur le serveur physique hébergé a eu pour conséquence une interruption de service de 3 jours. Un nouvel hébergement a été mis en place avec l'ensemble des données sauvegardées avant l'incident. Le site est de nouveau opérationnel avec l'intégralité des informations.

Pascal.

Lync 2010 : De nombreux outils et documents sont disponibles. Une actualité est consacrée à ces nouveautés. Une nouvelle page référence les différentes ressources disponibles autour de Lync 2010 (cliquez ici).

Merci pour votre fidélité et pour vos retours.
Pascal.

Blog du site Lync.fr

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KEMP sponsor du site du GUL
5/9/2012 8:13:00 AM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

KEMP (http://www.kemptechnologies.com/fr/) propose des dispositifs d’équilibrage de charge réseau (HLB) qui sont certifiés par Microsoft pour Lync et Exchange.

KEMP-LM3600

KEMP sponsorise le site du Groupe des Utilisateurs Lync. Dans le cadre de ce sponsoring/partenariat, des tutoriels sur la mise en place de ces équipements vous seront bientôt proposés sur le site.

Pascal.

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Mise à jour du poster Lync 2010
4/2/2012 2:28:00 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

 

Microsoft à mis à jour le poster des flux de Lync 2010 en version Version 5.11 (26 Mars 2012).

L’URL est ici. Attention, seule la version anglaise est mise à jour.

Bonne lecture.

Pascal.

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Les équilibreurs de charge KEMP certifiés par Microsoft
3/26/2012 10:29:00 AM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

KEMP propose depuis quelques temps des dispositifs matériels pour l’équilibrage de charge réseau (Hardware Load Balancer ou HLB). Ces équipements apportent des solutions fiables pour a mise en place d’architectures pouvant supporter un grand nombre de connexions et d’utilisateurs. Mais avec la généralisation des architectures hautement disponibles, ces équipements sont tout simplement devenus indispensables surtout avec Lync 2010.

KEMP propose une vaste gamme de produit, maintenant certifiés pour Exchange 2010 et Lync 2010. Le constructeur propose aussi des versions ‘appliance virtuelle’ de ces produits LoadMaster sous VMWare ou Hyper-V.

Le site web de KEMP propose en téléchargement de nombreux documents au format PDF. Les documents sur la configuration des équipements KEMP pour Exchange et Lync sont particulièrement intéressants car ils contiennent de nombreuses informations générales et recommandations sur la mise en place de la haute disponibilité des serveurs Microsoft.

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Un environnement virtuel Lync 2010 complet (Correctif)
1/14/2012 4:32:03 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

 

Dans le cadre des évaluations et du développement sur les plateformes Lync, Exchange et Sharepoint, Microsoft propose des VHD pré-configurés pour la mise en place de plateformes virtuelles sous Hyper-V. La documentation présente la plateforme proposée par Microsoft :

Snap2

La première partie des VHD et la documentation sont disponibles sur le site de Microsoft : http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=28350
La suite des VHD se trouve sur ce lien : http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=28810

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2012
1/2/2012 12:11:00 AM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

Bonne et heureuse année 2012 à tous les visiteurs et tous les membres de de ce site !

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Les inscriptions aux Techdays sont ouvertes !
12/10/2011 1:45:03 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

clip_image001

Depuis quelques jours maintenant, il est possible de s’inscrire pour les TechDays 2012. N’hesitez pas à venir nous retrouver lors de cet événement. Pour s’inscrire sur le site Techdays, cliquez sur l’image !

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Référencement des communautés Lync
12/10/2011 1:35:00 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

Microsoft a mis en place des pages dédiées au support et à l’aide. Il y a une action dédiée à Lync. Vous y trouverez des liens vers les différents sites Microsoft qui traitent de Lync, mais aussi les lien vers les blogs et sites communanutaires. Votre site du Groupe des Utilisateur y est présent. Profiter de ces ressources disponibles sur le lien suivant :http://support.microsoft.com/ph/15708

A mettre dans vos favoris et à consommer sans modération.

Pascal.

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3ieme Réunion du groupe des utilisateurs Lync
11/29/2011 12:59:00 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

Ce matin, mardi 29 novembre 2011, s’est déroulé la 3ieme réunion du GUL dans les locaux de Microsoft. Une trentaine de personnes était présentes. Cette réunion avait pour thème principal la fédération et les connexions externes.

Je tiens a remercier Eudes Olivier ROBERT pour l’organisation de cette réunion.

Les présentations faites par Eudes Olivier ROBERT, William TARET, Yannick VARLOUD, Philippe BLANQUART,Eric CHAUVOT et Pascal CREUSOT et merci à Etienne LACOUR (Microsoft) pour sa présence et ses interventions pertinentes !

Les présentations sont mises à disposition sur le site au niveau des documents.

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Mise a jour CU4 de Lync 2010
11/24/2011 1:49:00 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

Lync-Client-150x150

Microsoft a mis à disposition depuis quelques jours la mise à jour Cumulative Update 4 de Lync 2010. Actuellement seule la version Anglaise de cette mise à jour est proposée (KB 2493736) ce qui correspond à la version 7577.183. Attention car c’est le même numéro de KB que pour les cumulative Update précédente qui est utilisé. Au moment de l’écriture de cette information, seule la version EN est disponible en CU4. Vérifiez bien avant de lancer le téléchargement.

Cette mise à jour concerne aussi bien les clients que les serveurs, mais tous les composants ne sont pas sont pas impactés par cette mise à jour. La CU4 n’est pas la version qui intègre la possibilité de se connecter en mobile, comme souvent annoncé, mais cette mise à jour est certainement un élément nécessaire pour la mise en œuvre prochaine des composants de mobilité.

L’installation coté serveur peut se faire soit automatiquement à partir du Cumulative Update installer (recommendé) ou manuellement à partir des liens ci-dessous.

Mises à jour coté serveur 

Mises à jour des clients

Cette mise à jour de version CU4 apporte de nouvelles commandes powershell (qui laissent entrevoir le support prochain de la mobilité) comme décrit ci dessous :

  1. CsAutodiscoverConfiguration – Modifies an existing collection of Autodiscover configuration settings. The Autodiscover service provides a way for client applications such as Lync Web Access or Microsoft Lync Mobile to locate key resources such as a user’s home pool or the URL for joining a dial-in conference.
  2. New-CsWebLink - Creates a new web link that points to the Autodiscover service. The Autodiscover service provides a way for client applications such as Lync Web Access or Microsoft Lync Mobile to locate key resources such as a user’s home pool or the URL for joining a dial-in conference.
  3. Test-CsMcxPushNotification – Verifies that the push notification service is working. The push notification service (Apple Push Notification Service and Microsoft Lync Server 2010 Push Notification Service) provides a way to send notifications about events such as new instant messages or new voice mail to mobile devices like iPhones and Windows Phones, even if the Microsoft Lync 2010 application on those devices is currently suspended or running in the background.
  4. CsMobilityPolicy – Modifies an existing mobility policy. Mobility policies determine whether o r not a user can use Microsoft Lync 2010 Mobile. These policies also manage a user’s ability to employ Call via Work, a feature that enables users to make and receive phone calls on their mobile phone by using their work phone number instead of their mobile phone number.
  5. CsMcxConfiguration – Modifies an existing collection of Microsoft Lync Server 2010 Mobility Service configuration settings. The Mobility Service enables users of mobile phones such as iPhones and Windows Phones to do such things as exchange instant messages and presence information; store and retrieve voice mail internally instead of with their wireless provider; and take advantage of Microsoft Lync Server 2010 capabilities such as Call via Work and dial-out conferencing.
  6. CsPushNotificationConfiguration – Modifies an existing collection of push notification configuration settings . The push notification service (Apple Push Notification Service and Micros oft Lync Server 2010 Push Notification Service) provides a way to send notifications about events such as new instant messages or new voice mail to mobile devices such as iPhones and Windows Phones, even if the Microsoft Lync 2010 application on those devices is currently suspended or running in the background.

Bonne mise à jour.

Pascal.

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Fonctionnement du carnet d’adresses Lync
11/20/2011 8:16:00 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr

J’ai déjà rencontré de nombreuses interrogations autour du fonctionnement du carnet d’adresses (Adress Book) de Lync 2010. Les clients ne disposent pas immédiatement de la fonction de sélection de l’utilisateur dans la liste car le carnet d’adresses n’est pas mis à jour de manière immédiate. Le principe de fonctionnement se décompose en plusieurs étapes comme suit :

  • Un premier processus effectue toute les minute une mise à jour entre le contenu de l’Active Directory et les modifications sont mise à jour dans la base SQL Backend et dans la base rtcab..
  • Toutes les 24 heures, par défaut à 1h30 du matin,un processus de synchronisation met à jour les fichiers du carnet d’adresses depuis la base SQL rtc.
  • Les clients Lync et Lync Phone Edition download les fichiers .lsabs et .dabs qui sont stockés dans le partage de fichiers et mis à jour par le processus précédent. .

image

Exemple de capture d’écran des fichiers .lsabs et.dabs qui se trouvent dans le dossier partagé de Lync :.1-WebServices-1\ABFiles\00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000\00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000. Ces dichiers ont étés générés à 1h30 du matin.

  • Ces fichiers partagés permettent la mise à jour des fichiers de cache GalContacts.db et GalContacts.db.idx qui sont stocké par le client Lync 2010 sous Windows 7 dans le dossier %userprofile%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Communicator\sip_usersip@domaine.
    Ces fichiers sont mis a jour avec un délai “aléatoire” défini entre 1 et 60 minutes.

image_thumb5
On retrouve les fichiers générés sur le poste client

Il existe un moyen de forcer le client a reconstruire ces deux fichiers en fermant le client, en supprimant ces deux fichiers et en démarrant à nouveau le client.

Pascal.

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Mise en place du Blog du Groupe des Utlisateurs Lync sur le site Mslync.fr
11/20/2011 6:02:25 PM Le Blog De MSLync.fr
Ceci est le premier billet sur le Blog du site MSLync.fr C'est donc le classique message d'ouverture sur un nouveau BLOG. Les commentaires seront autorisés; mais dovent rester courtois et constructufs. Je vous remercie par avance pour votre participation et votre compréhension.

Pascal CREUSOT.
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Les dernières infos (Actus & Tutos)

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De nombreuses nouveautées en ce mois de Mars

3/12/2011 3:05:45 PM

Depuis le lancement du Groupe des utilisateurs, l'actualité autour de LYNC 2010 a été très riche. Le... Read More..


Le Groupe des Utilisateurs est officiellement 'lancé'

1/20/2011 5:50:37 AM

Ce matin, le Groupe des Utilisateurs Lync a officiellement vu le jour chez Microsoft. Avec plus d'u... Read More..


Nomination MVP Lync et Speaker aux Techdays 2011

1/1/2011 6:01:25 PM

Je vous informe de ma nomination MVP Lync et aussi de la confirmation de ma présence aux Techdays 20... Read More..


Lync disponible en version FR

12/15/2010 7:42:19 AM

Ca y est, les clients et serveur de Lync sont disponibles en Français : Version d'évaluation du ser... Read More..


Lync 2010 a été déclaré RTM !

11/2/2010 5:38:24 AM

Lync 2010 a été déclaré RTM ce Mercredi 27 Octobre ! RTM (Ready to Manufacture) indique que le produ... Read More..


Agregation de flux RSS

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Category

How to monitor your Windows Azure application with System Center 2012 (Part 2)

Thu, 03 May 2012 08:30:00 GMT By Le Blog de Damien CARO

In the first part of this article (http://blogs.technet.com/b/dcaro/archive/2012/05/02/how-to-monitor-your-windows-azure-application-with-system-center-2012.aspx), I have explained how to enable monitoring for a Windows Azure application. We have seen that you can enable it from the code of the application or you can enable performance monitoring as well as event log monitoring by leveraging Windows Azure Powershell cmdlets or third party application.

Once that configuration part has been done, we can work on the configuration of System Center 2012, more specifically the Operation Manager component (SCOM). This requires to have installed the “System Center Monitoring Pack for Windows Azure Applications” that you can download here :
http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=11324 (At the time this post is written, the management pack is targeting SCOM 2007 but it works with the 2012 release).

Once you have installed the Azure Management pack on your SCOM server, you will have to follow those steps :

  1. Create the appropriate accounts in Operation Manager to connect to your Azure environment
  2. Create a monitoring for your Azure application
  3. View the results of the performance counters collection

Let’s walk through these steps.

Create the appropriate accounts to allow SCOM to connect to Azure

You will need three “run as” account in System Center Operation Manager 2012 :

  • One for binary authentication. This account will use the management certificate to connect to Azure.
  • One for Basic Authentication. This account will be used for the certificate
  • One that will be used for the proxy agent.

You will find the detailed step by step procedure on this blog : http://oakleafblog.blogspot.fr/2011/09/installing-systems-center-monitoring.html (Although it was made for SCOM 2007, the steps to create the accounts are still valid with SC 2012).

 

Create the monitoring of your Azure application

Because we have installed the monitoring pack for Azure, under the Authoring you can see the “Windows Azure Application” management pack template.

authoring

From there we select the “Add Monitoring Wizard” to create the monitoring for our Azure application. Select “Windows Azure Application” as the monitoring type.

1- Select Monitoring type

Type a name and select a management pack for your application.

Make sure you have the following information from your Azure Application :

  • DNS prefix of the application
  • Your Subscription ID

All what you need to do is now fill in the wizard.

3.1 - Application Details in SCOM 2012

For the Azure Certificate Run As Account and the Azure Certificate Password Run As Account, use the accounts we have created in step 1.

Then specify the Proxy Agent which is the server you want to use to actually do the monitoring. In my lab, I’ve used the VMM Server but you can choose any server in your environment.

Review the summary and validate.

Go to the Monitoring tab and look for the "Windows Azure” node in the top left list.

6- Monitoring in SCOM 2012

After a while you will be able to see your azure application under the Windows Azure node. Be patient, it takes some time ! In my case, it took about 8 minutes.

Initially the application will appear as not monitored and then the empty green circle will change to a green circle with a green check mark.

View the results of the performance counters

Now we are ready to look at the performance counters themselves. You have to go to the "Performance” node still under the Monitoring tab.

Once the application has been discovered, Operation Manager will pull the data every 300 seconds. Again, be patient and the counters will appear in the bottom of the performance graph as you can see bellow.

7- Monitor Network

 

From here you can create you own dashboard and / or publish it on Sharepoint if you want to give access to those graph to some people who do not have the SCOM console installed.

Enjoy the power and elasticity of Azure to deploy your applications with the control and insights brought to you by System Center Operation Manager 2012.

List of useful additional resources and blogs to read more about this topic :

 

5/3/2012 8:30:00 AM 5/3/2012 9:30:00 AM

 

How to monitor your Windows Azure application with System Center 2012

Wed, 02 May 2012 08:30:00 GMT By Le Blog de Damien CARO

Windows Azure is the PAAS (Platform As A Service) from Microsoft that literally allow any developer to start building its code an make it run on Internet in matter of minutes. This capability to host and run application in a short time has generated a lot of interest in the developer community.

An application deployed on Windows Azure immediately benefits from the power of the service and the capability to pay for the exact use of the platform. However, when the application goes into production, it should be monitored for the same purpose a traditional application shall be monitored : is my system running well ?

But there is at least one reason that is very specific to the cloud : am I paying the right price for my subscription ?

In this article we will see how System Center Operation Manager 2012 can help in this regards and how to implement it :   

  • Right sizing my Azure subscription
  • How to configure Azure application to be monitored by System Center Operation Manager 2012 ?
  • How to configure System Center Operation Manager 2012 to monitor my Azure Application ?

 

Right Sizing my Azure Subscription

Not like a traditional application, right sizing the Azure instances you will use is very important because it determined the price you will pay to host your application. For example, Windows Azure offers the following choices (as of May 1st 2012) :

  • Extra Small (768 MB of memory, Shared CPU, 19 480 MB of storage for Web Roles and 5 Mbps allocated Bandwidth) : 10,64 €/month
  • Small
  • Medium
  • Large
  • Extra Large : (14 GB of memory, 8 Cores, 2 087 960 MB of storage for Web Roles and 800 Mbps allocated Bandwidth) : 510,63 €/month

Also keep in mind that in order to be supported regarding the SLA of Windows Azure, you need at least two instances.

You can read all the details about Azure pricing on this page : http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/pricing/details/ (you can also access the Azure Pricing Calculator  that allows you to calculate the exact pricing of your application based on your predicted usage)

As you can see, the sizing of your instances running your application has an impact not only on what the application can deliver but also the associated price. Azure is all about elasticity, therefore, you may want to evolve from an extra small instance to a medium or an extra large depending on the success of the application and the number of users using it. Maybe also several instances of your application to be resilient to upgrades or failures.

So the question is how do you ensure you have deployed the right size instance and the right number of them ? The answer is through monitoring. Let’ see how you can implement monitoring.

 

Configuring an Azure application to be monitored by SCOM 2012

System Center 2012 brings a series of components that allow the operation an monitoring of cloud applications (or a service as it should be called in the cloud computing words).

When you deploy an application to Azure, by default, monitoring is not enabled, it has to be enabled either in the code of the application itself or by whoever manages the Azure subscription (usually the IT Pro or the IT department). Implementing monitoring actually means that we will launch a diagnostic monitor instance and that instance will collect the data and at the interval you want. The collected data will be copied to an Azure Table :

  • WADPerformanceCountersTable for the performance counters
  • WADWindowsEventLogsTable for the windows event logs.

You can look at those tables in Visual Studio with the Azure SDK (you can download here : http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/develop/downloads/ ). 

 

 image

Let see how monitoring can be implemented.

Enable performance monitoring with code

This option requires some code to be implemented. If, like me you are not an experimented developer and are just trying with a sample ASP.Net application, you can add the following code in the webrole.cs source file (in Visual Studio, start a new “Cloud” project in C# and paste the following code :

public override bool OnStart()
{
// Create the instance of the diagnostic monitor 
System.Diagnostics.Trace.Listeners.Add(new Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener());

var dmconfig = DiagnosticMonitor.GetDefaultInitialConfiguration();
var cloudStorageAccount =
    CloudStorageAccount.Parse(RoleEnvironment.GetConfigurationSettingValue("Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Plugins.Diagnostics.ConnectionString"));

// Specify how often you want the perfcounters to be replicated, in this case it is every
dmconfig.PerformanceCounters.ScheduledTransferPeriod = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(15.0);
            
TimeSpan perfSampleRate = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(30.0);
// Add perf counters
dmconfig.PerformanceCounters.DataSources.Add(
    new PerformanceCounterConfiguration()
    {
        CounterSpecifier = @"\Processor(_Total)\% Processor Time",
        SampleRate = perfSampleRate
    });
dmconfig.PerformanceCounters.DataSources.Add(
    new PerformanceCounterConfiguration()
    {
        CounterSpecifier = @"\Network Interface(*)\Bytes Received/sec",
        SampleRate = perfSampleRate
    });

// We now need to start the instance of diagnostic monitor 
DiagnosticMonitor.Start(cloudStorageAccount, dmconfig);

}

This code will start logging the %Processor Time and the Bytes Received/sec performance counters in the WADPerformanceCountersTable table. Look at the table in Visual Studio to see if the counter values appear. It may take some time, be patient !

 

Enable performance monitoring without code

The above method may not be always implemented. Sometime for the cost associated with it or simply because it was not in the initial design of the application. So in this case, you can activate application monitoring without having to change the code of the application. This is very useful in the case, for example, you simply want to perform specific analysis over a specific period of time.

In that case, you need to use some tools. I’m using two of them:

Once you have installed either one of the two tools, you can start activating the diagnostics for your Azure application.

Do it yourself mode

With powershell you need to run few cmdlets in order to activate the diagnostic monitor. I recommend reading the following article about this : http://www.davidaiken.com/2011/10/18/how-to-easily-enable-windows-azure-diagnostics-remotely/ 

If you simply want to enable CPU monitoring for example, you can follow those steps :

  1. Create a storage account and deploy a webrole instance
  2. Ensure you have a management certificate in place
  3. Install the powershell cmdlets for Windows Azure
  4. Run powershell and import the WAPPSCmdlets module
  5. Specify the following variable for your environment :
    $storageAccountName = "name_of_storage"  (to replace with your storage account name)
    $storageAccountKey = "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
    $deploymentSlot = "Production"
    $serviceName = "name_of_service"  (to replace with your service name)
    $subscriptionId = "xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx"

    Tip: if you don’t know you service name, it is what you see in your management console under “DNS Prefix”. In my case, it is dcaro.

     image

  6. Get the management certificate of your subscription :
    $mgmtCert = Get-Item cert:\CurrentUser\My\5A58EEF405332E5AE40894D4666B067F60D44217
  7. You can verify if you have all setup correctly by running the following cmdlet:
    Get-HostedService -SubscriptionId $subscriptionId -Certificate $mgmtCert -ServiceName name_of_service
  8. Before continuing, you need the deployment ID that you’ll put in a variable :
    $did = (Get-Deployment -ServiceName dcaro -Certificate $mgmtCert -SubscriptionId $subscriptionId 
    -Slot Production).DeploymentId
  9. You also need the roles list of your deployment :
    $roles = (Get-Deployment -ServiceName dcaro -Certificate $mgmtCert -SubscriptionId $subscriptionId 
    -Slot Production).RoleInstanceList
  10. Now you can start setting up the performance counters you want to monitor for your deployment :

    First, create a variable that will sample the %Processor Time every minute. You have to change it according to the counter you want to monitor :
    $cpuperfcounter = new-object Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounterConfiguration
    $cpuperfcounter.CounterSpecifier = "\Processor(_Total)\% Processor Time"
    $cpuperfcounter.SampleRate = new-object TimeSpan(0,1,0)
    Then, you set the monitoring of the counter
    $roles | foreach {Set-PerformanceCounter -PerformanceCounters $web_perf_counters -RoleName $_.RoleName 
    -InstanceId $_.InstanceName -BufferQuotaInMB 10 -TransferPeriod 15
    -StorageAccountName $StorageAccountName -StorageAccountKey $StorageAccountKey -DeploymentId $did }
  11. You can check if the configuration is correct :
    $roles | foreach {(Get-DiagnosticConfiguration -DeploymentId $did -StorageAccountName $storageAccountName 
    -StorageAccountKey $storageAccountKey -RoleName $_.RoleName
    -InstanceId $_.InstanceName -BufferName PerformanceCounters).datasources } | fl

    The above has been wrapped for readability but is is actually one line.
    In my environment, I get the like :

    SampleRate       : 00:01:00
    CounterSpecifier : \Processor(*)\% Processor Time

    Of course, depending on your setting made in step 10. 
This procedure can of course be scripted or you can use a partner solution.

Using an already packaged solution

As I’ve indicated above, we have a partner that has developed a solution that does the scripting for you automatically and makes the configuration 
of the performance counters in Azure as simple as using perform. Bellow a screenshot of the configuration of my Azure deployment.
image

Summary

We have configured one instance of Windows Azure to collect some performance counters without modifying the application code. The performance data will be collected by the Azure Diagnostic Monitor and moved at the interval you’ve specified to a table called WADPerformanceCounters. You can access this table in Visual Studio or with the Azure Diagnostic Manager or any tools you have that can read and Azure Table.

Once you have done the configuration, be patient and monitor the diagnostic table. If nothing appear in the table after twice the interval you have indicated, you can start wondering what is wrong in your configuration. Start with something simple before going with a large number of counters. The troubleshooting of the configuration will be easier.

Next Step

We have finished configuring Azure to enable the monitoring of the application. The next step is to configure SCOM to connect to Azure, collect the data that are present in the table and show them in a dashboard.

We will walk through those steps in this article (will be live tomorrow): http://blogs.technet.com/b/dcaro/archive/2012/05/03/how-to-monitor-your-windows-azure-application-with-system-center-2012-part-2.aspx 

5/2/2012 8:30:00 AM 5/2/2012 9:30:00 AM

 

Guided hands-on labs of the Private Cloud IT Camps

Wed, 25 Apr 2012 08:30:00 GMT By Le Blog de Damien CARO

If you have attended an IT Camp on Private Cloud, you may have been able to perform some hands-on labs but depending on the length of the IT Camp and the venue where the Camp is hosted, it is not always possible to have everyone play and ‘touch” the components of the Private Cloud.

That’s why I’m very happy to let you know that you can perform guided labs for the Private Cloud. The guided labs does not gives you access to a full environment where you can do what you want, they only allow to perform pre-defined steps. But at the end of the day when you do a lab, this is more or less what we end-up doing.

You can register at this address : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/evalcenter/hh913012 and play with the 14 labs that are available now !

If you have not done so, I can only encourage you to come to the closest IT Camp to your home town !

Happy Private Cloud !

 

4/25/2012 8:30:00 AM 4/25/2012 9:30:00 AM

 

Support of Windows Server “8” by System Center 2012

Thu, 15 Mar 2012 09:30:00 GMT By Le Blog de Damien CARO

SysCnt12_h_rgb

I wanted to share with you a recent news about the availability of the CTP (Consumer Technology Preview) of System Center 2012 that support Windows Server “8”. This announcement was made on the System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012 blog :http://blogs.technet.com/b/scvmm/archive/2012/03/10/system-center-2012-ctp-for-windows-server-8-beta-support-now-available.aspx.

The support of Windows Server “8” by System Center 2012 brings improvements and adds functionalities in the following areas:

Data Protection Manager

  • Backup performances have been improved for VMs that are on a Cluster Shared Volume (CSV) 2.0.
  • Backup of VMs on SMB v2.2 shares
  • Protect de-duplicate enabled file share volumes. You can read more about the de-duplication feature of Windows Server “8” in this article : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831354.aspx 

Virtual Machine Manager

  • Network virtualization support: This updated release of SCVMM will now understand and leverage the new network isolation feature from Windows Server “8”. By using and piloting this feature, VMs that are on the same host can now be isolated from each others from the network perspective. You can read more on this new capability of Windows Server “8” on this Technet article: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831395.aspx 
  • File share to store Virtual Machines: Windows Server “8” support a new protocol for file shares : SMB v2.2. The support of this protocol allows Windows Server to run VMs that are on a “standard” file share. This CTP of SCVMM supports the deployment of Virtual Machines on a file share that is hosted on a standalone host or a cluster running Windows Server “8”. You can learn more on SMB v2.2 here : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831795.aspx and here http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831399.aspx
  • Support of the VHDX format: The new Hyper-V in Windows Server “8” support a new format for virtual hard disks. This format allows to have a disk of a size up to 64 TB ! In addition, this format brings resiliency to power failures and improves the performances on disks with large sector. You can learn more on the new VHDX format here : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831446.aspx 
  • Live Migration with no shared storage: In Windows Server “8”, we can now live migrate a virtual machine from one host to another with no interruption of service although the two hosts do not share the same storage. This capability is supported and managed by this CTP of System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012. You can learn more on the new Live Migration here : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831435.aspx 
  • Storage Migration: This feature introduced with Windows Server “8” allows the administrator to move the storage of a Virtual Machine while this VM is running on the host without interrupting this VM. This feature is now supported and understood by this CTP of SCVMM 2012. You can learn more on this feature here : http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831656.aspx 

As you can see, this CTP of System Center 2012 brings a lot of the new and cool features introduced by Windows Server “8” !

I cannot encourage enough to test those CTP ! Here are the download links :

As a reminder, CTP means the product is not finished and this should only be deployed in a lab or a test environment.

Happy testing !

3/15/2012 9:30:00 AM 3/15/2012 10:30:00 AM

 

Support of SQL Server 2012 with Microsoft Lync 2010

Tue, 13 Mar 2012 09:30:00 GMT By Le Blog de Damien CARO


SQL12_h_rgb
MS-Lync-Logo-Svr2010-rgb

With the recent announcement of the RTM (Release To Manufacture) of SQL Server 2012, I’ve received a lot of questions if Microsoft Lync 2010 will support running on SQL 2012.

There are some excellent reasons for willing to use SQL 2012 with Microsoft Lync like the support of the new availability model (Always On). However, Lync 2010 is using a feature called DMO (Distributed Management Objects) that was introduced in SQL 7.0 (a long time ago !).

If you want to learn more about DMO, you can consult the following articles but is it basically a set of objects that’s allow a program to do some management of SQL : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc301940.aspx 

SQL 2012 does not support this feature anymore as it is indicated in this article : http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms131540.aspx so SQL 2012 will not be a supported platform for Lync 2010 as it is now.

Please make your SQL upgrade plans accordingly.

 

3/13/2012 9:30:00 AM 3/13/2012 10:30:00 AM

 

Guide de déploiement d’Office 365

Thu, 12 May 2011 14:40:49 GMT By Le Blog de Frederic Laubel

Le guide de déploiement technique pour Office 365 Beta est passé en version 1.2. Au programme près de 190 pages d’informations concrètes pour vous aider à migrer vers le Cloud. 5/12/2011 2:40:49 PM 5/12/2011 3:40:49 PM

 

Le Load Balancing facile et pas cher

Wed, 06 Apr 2011 10:46:16 GMT By Le Blog de Frederic Laubel

Vous connaissez certainement l’intérêt des Hardware Load Balancer (HLB) pour Exchange 2010. Pour les petites structures (PME – TPE) le principal frein à l’adoption massive pour ce type d’équipement résidait dans le coût d’acquisition et la difficulté d’implémentation. Or le marché évolue avec des prix à la baisse et une facilité d’implémentation accrue. En effet [...] 4/6/2011 10:46:16 AM 4/6/2011 11:46:16 AM

 

Outlook 2007 et l’archivage Exchange 2010: Allez y !

Wed, 22 Dec 2010 14:52:28 GMT By Le Blog de Frederic Laubel

Gooo! initialement prévu en 2011 (voir mon précédant article) le support de la boite d’archive personnel Exchange 2010 dans Outlook 2007 est maintenant une réalité : http://msexchangeteam.com/archive/2010/12/20/457238.aspx     12/22/2010 2:52:28 PM 12/22/2010 3:52:28 PM

 

Architectures de références Exchange 2010

Mon, 20 Dec 2010 11:17:04 GMT By Le Blog de Frederic Laubel

Microsoft publie plusieurs Whites Papers sur des architectures Exchange 2010 de références. Le tout est très didactique et parfaitement expliqué. Architecture simple, 500 boites aux lettres Solution: Hyper-V + Dell T610 + Windows NLB, 60 pages. Architecture complexe, 9,000 boites aux lettres Solution: Hyper-V + Dell M610 + Equalogic + F5 BIG-IP 3900, 102 pages. [...] 12/20/2010 11:17:04 AM 12/20/2010 12:17:04 PM

 

Les livres incontournables sur Exchange 2010 SP1

Mon, 13 Dec 2010 13:46:13 GMT By Le Blog de Frederic Laubel

En cette période de fin d’année propice aux cadeaux, je vous propose deux livres sur Exchange 2010 SP1, qui selon moi sont les incontournables à posséder. A commander d’urgence au Père Noël. Exchange Server 2010 Best Practices, LE livre supervisé par l’équipe Exchange : S Exchange Server 2010 Inside Out, de Tony Redmond : 12/13/2010 1:46:13 PM 12/13/2010 2:46:13 PM

 

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