A CA Enterprise Log Manager system can have one or more servers. Dedicating different servers to different roles optimizes performance. But, you can use any server to perform multiple roles or all roles, at your discretion. Consider the processing burden associated with each server role with regard to other relevant factors in your environment when determining how to dedicate each server you install.
The management server role is, by default, performed by the first CA Enterprise Log Manager server you install. The management server performs these major functions:
There can be only one active management server in a CA Enterprise Log Manager network of servers, but you can have a failover (inactive) management server. If you create more than one CA Enterprise Log Manager network, each must have its own active management server.
In a single-server system, the management server performs the role of a collection server. In a system of two or more servers, consider a dedicated collection server. A collection server performs these functions:
Important! When you dedicate separate servers to collection and reporting, you must configure non-interactive authentication and hourly auto archiving from the collection server to the reporting server.
Consider the event volume generated by your event sources when determining whether to dedicate servers to event collection and refinement. Also consider how many collection servers are to auto-archive their data to a single reporting server.
In a single-server system, the management server performs the role of a correlation server. In a system of two or more servers, consider a dedicated correlation server. A correlation server performs these functions:
Important! When you dedicate separate servers to correlation, you must select every collection server whose events you want to correlate when configuring the correlation service.
In a single-server or two-server system, the management server performs the role of a reporting server. In a system with many servers, consider dedicating one or more servers to reporting. A reporting server performs these functions:
If you plan to generate many complex reports and alerts on a server with high on-demand activity, consider dedicating a server to reporting.
A remote storage server, which may not be a CA Enterprise Log Manager server, performs this function:
Remote storage servers are never part of a CA Enterprise Log Manager federation. However, they deserve consideration when you plan your architecture.
Reporting servers typically act as restore point servers for the databases they once held. If your network is large, consider dedicating a CA Enterprise Log Manager server to this role. A restore point server performs these functions:
The advantage of having a dedicated restore point is that you can exclude this server from your federation to ensure that no federated reports contain old, restored data. All reports generated on the restore point server reflect only event data from the restored databases.
Dedicating a server to a certain role does not mean you cannot perform functions from it that are associated with other roles. Consider an environment with dedicated collection servers and a reporting server. If you want to schedule an alert to check for a condition on a collection server because it is time-critical that you be notified as soon as possible, you have this flexibility.
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