ArcGIS Architecture Series: Tools of an Architect

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04-01-2019 10:36 AM
JacobBoyle412
Esri Contributor

The Architecture Practice team in Professional Services is pleased to announce a new series leading up to the Esri User Conference.  We will be highlighting various tools and best practices for ArcGIS Enterprise implementation and tuning.

System design and architecture can some times feel daunting.  As an ArcGIS Enterprise or ArcGIS Server administrator, you may occasionally be faced with decisions for how to best optimize the services within your site for performance, reduce wait-times, and eliminate service down times.

Note: The contents presented above are recommendations that will typically improve performance for many scenarios. However, in some cases, these recommendations may not produce better performance results, in which case, additional performance testing and system configuration modifications may be needed.

Implementing ArcGISArcGIS MonitorArcGIS EnterpriseGeodatabase

Jacob is a Sr. Solution Architect for Esri Professional Services and loves conservation planning, woodworking, LEGO, and his dogs.
22 Replies
MarkChilcott
Occasional Contributor III

Hi David,

In relation to ArcGIS Monitor - does this create stats down to the layer level, or just to the service level?

Cheers,

Mark

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DavidHoy
Esri Contributor

Hi Mark,
layer level stats are captured if the client requested at that level rather than at the service level.
So, for requests at layer level for a feature enabled map service, the calls are captured in the server logs.

The other trap is that, because Hosted Services are not serviced by an ArcSOC.exe, they do not get logged in the ArcGIS Server logs.
To get stats for Hosted Services, you need to query the Web Adaptor or Load Balancer/Reverse Proxy logs

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DavidHoy
Esri Contributor

and Monitor will show what you configure it to retrieve from the available inputs

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