Interestingly awesome! Thank you, I will give it a try.
Cesar A. Meaning is NOT in words, but inside people! Dr. Myles Munroe. > On Apr 7, 2015, at 12:33 AM, Henrik Andersen <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi! > > You can't enable maintenance mode for a specific alert, but these > alternatives will maybe something for you: > > 1. Enable maintenance mode for the AppPool object. > 2. Copy the monitor in question and add schedule functionality for it. > Something like that > https://nocentdocent.wordpress.com/2010/09/17/process-monitoring-during-business-hours-attempt-1/ > 3. Use either a 3-party product or create your own (powershell) functionality > to schedule an override to disable monitoring for the required interval. > I've seen this: > http://www.steffeninf.ch/de/scom-manager-2-0-_content---1--1161--227.html > have some functionality for that. > > /Henrik > > > -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- > Fra: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] > På vegne af CESAR.ABREG0 > Sendt: 7. april 2015 01:10 > Til: [email protected] > Emne: [msmom] Maintenance mode on a monitor or alert name. > > Hello, > > I've been searching of a way to set one monitor in maintenance mode for a > period of time, like 2 hours. I know this can be set on a object for all > alerts to be suppressed but not sure if it is possible to set a monitor or > alert in MM. > > There are some jobs that recycle IIS pools on a set of server once a week, > SCOM sees it as a problem, alerts and the alert creates an incident. We would > like to avoid these alerts for that period. > > Any help or direction is appreciated. > > Cesar A. > Meaning is NOT in words, but inside people! Dr. Myles Munroe. > > > > > > >
