Difference between system resources in GUI and CLI

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Difference between system resources in GUI and CLI

L4 Transporter

Hello,


What is the difference between the System Resources in the GUI and the CLI? The CPU percentages are different.

 

 

1.png2.png

1 accepted solution

Accepted Solutions

As you found on the page you linked, the VM-200 only supports 2 vCPUs. Anything added beyond the first two go to the management. Core 1 is management, core 2 is dataplane, and cores 3-8 are management in your environment.

 

I don't think there's a Throughput OID. You should be able to just walk the OIDs with your SNMP manager. You might get a better answer by posting a new thread since the subject of this thread doesn't mention SNMP.

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3 REPLIES 3

Cyber Elite
Cyber Elite

hi @Farzana

 

you're looking at a PA-200 or -220 that have a shared (hardware) 'plane' for both management- and data-, so the cpu usage is calculated instead of measured

on larger platforms these numbers will be extracted from separated hardware

Tom Piens
PANgurus - Strata specialist; config reviews, policy optimization

Thank you @reaper.

 

We are using VM-200. Does that mean the firewall is not utilizing the CPU cores that we assign to the Hyper-V? For example, we've assigned 8 cores to the Hyper-V and in the chrome extension picks up that it has 8 cores assign to it.

 

 In that case, does the management plane and the dataplane share all 8 or is it like one core for the dataplane and the rest for the management plane according to the website? (https://www.paloaltonetworks.com/documentation/80/virtualization/virtualization/about-the-vm-series-...)

 

I was also looking for a MIB OID to monitor the throughput of the firewall. The maximum I could see was 660Mbps. Could you please advise me the OID for the throughput monitor?

 

Throughput.jpg

As you found on the page you linked, the VM-200 only supports 2 vCPUs. Anything added beyond the first two go to the management. Core 1 is management, core 2 is dataplane, and cores 3-8 are management in your environment.

 

I don't think there's a Throughput OID. You should be able to just walk the OIDs with your SNMP manager. You might get a better answer by posting a new thread since the subject of this thread doesn't mention SNMP.

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