Citrix Web HTTP Request Methods
Using the Citrix Web Devices test, administrators can detect a bandwidth contention on the monitored ADC appliance. To further investigate this anomaly, administrators may want to drill down to the individual request methods used in the HTTP requests to the appliance and understand how much bandwidth each method consumes. These method-level insights can help isolate the exact method that could be eating into the bandwidth resources available to the ADC. The Citrix Web HTTP Request Methods test provides these useful method-level insights. This test auto-discovers the HTTP request methods in use and reports the number of requests received and bandwidth used per method. In the process, the test points to the most popular and the most bandwidth-intensive HTTP request methods.
Target of the test : An AppFlow-enabled ADC Appliance
Agent deploying the test : A remote agent
Outputs of the test : One set of results for every HTTP request method in use
Parameter | Description |
Test period |
How often should the test be executed. It is recommended that you set the test period to 5 minutes. This is because, the eG AppFlow Collector is capable of capturing and aggregating AppFlow data related to the last 5 minutes only. |
Host |
The host for which the test is to be configured. |
Cluster IPs |
This parameter applies only if the ADC appliance being monitored is part of a ADC cluster. In this case, configure this parameter with a comma-separated list of IP addresses of all other nodes in that cluster. If the monitored ADC appliance is down/unreachable, then the eG AppFlow Collector uses the Cluster IPs configuration to figure out which other node in the cluster it should connect to for pulling AppFlow statistics. Typically, the collector attempts to connect to every IP address that is configured against Cluster IPs, in the same sequence in which they are specified. Metrics are pulled from the first cluster node that the collector successfully establishes a connection with. |
Enable Logs |
This flag is set to No by default. This means that, by default, the eG agent does not create AppFlow logs. You can set this flag to Yes to enable AppFlow logging. If this is done, then the eG agent automatically writes the raw AppFlow records it reads from the collector into individual CSV files. These CSV files are stored in the <EG_AGENT_INSTALL_DIR>\NetFlow\data\<IP_of_Monitored_ADC>\webappflow\actual_csv folder on the eG agent host. These CSV files provide administrators with granular insights into the web appflows, thereby enabling effective troubleshooting. Note: By default, the eG agent creates a maximum of 10 CSV files in the actual_csv folder. Beyond this point, the older CSV files will be automatically deleted by the eG agent to accommodate new files with current data. Likewise, a single CSV file can by default contain a maximum of 99999 records only. If the records to be written exceed this default value, then the eG agent automatically creates another CSV file to write the data. If required, you can overwrite these default settings. For this, do the following:
|
Measurement | Description | Measurement Unit | Interpretation |
---|---|---|---|
Hits |
Indicates the number of requests received by the ADC appliance using this HTTP request method. |
Number |
Compare the value of this measure across methods to know which method is the most popular. |
Bandwidth |
Indicates the total amount of data received by the appliance using this HTTP request method. |
KB |
Compare the value of this measure across methods to know which HTTP request method is consuming bandwidth excessively. |