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Azure Monitor autoscaling common metrics

Azure Monitor autoscaling allows you to scale the number of running instances in or out, based on telemetry data or metrics. Scaling can be based on any metric, even metrics from a different resource. For example, scale a Virtual Machine Scale Set based on the amount of traffic on a firewall.

This article describes metrics that are commonly used to trigger scale events.

Azure autoscale supports many resource types. For more information about supported resources, see autoscale supported resources.

For all resources, you can get a list of the available metrics using the PowerShell or Azure CLI

Get-AzMetricDefinition -ResourceId <resource_id> 
az monitor metrics list-definitions --resource <resource_id>

Compute metrics for Resource Manager-based VMs

By default, Azure Resource Manager-based virtual machines and Virtual Machine Scale Sets emit basic (host-level) metrics. In addition, when you configure diagnostics data collection for an Azure VM and Virtual Machine Scale Sets, the Azure Diagnostics extension also emits guest-OS performance counters. These counters are commonly known as "guest-OS metrics." You use all these metrics in autoscale rules.

If you're using Virtual Machine Scale Sets and you don't see a particular metric listed, it's likely disabled in your Diagnostics extension.

If a particular metric isn't being sampled or transferred at the frequency you want, you can update the diagnostics configuration.

If either preceding case is true, see Use PowerShell to enable Azure Diagnostics in a virtual machine running Windows to configure and update your Azure VM Diagnostics extension to enable the metric. The article also includes a sample diagnostics configuration file.

Host metrics for Resource Manager-based Windows and Linux VMs

The following host-level metrics are emitted by default for Azure VM and Virtual Machine Scale Sets in both Windows and Linux instances. These metrics describe your Azure VM but are collected from the Azure VM host rather than via agent installed on the guest VM. You can use these metrics in autoscaling rules.

Guest OS metrics for Resource Manager-based Windows VMs

When you create a VM in Azure, diagnostics is enabled by using the Diagnostics extension. The Diagnostics extension emits a set of metrics taken from inside of the VM. This means you can autoscale using metrics that aren't emitted by default.

You can create an alert for the following metrics:

Metric name Unit
\Processor(_Total)% Processor Time Percent
\Processor(_Total)% Privileged Time Percent
\Processor(_Total)% User Time Percent
\Processor Information(_Total)\Processor Frequency Count
\System\Processes Count
\Process(_Total)\Thread Count Count
\Process(_Total)\Handle Count Count
\Memory% Committed Bytes In Use Percent
\Memory\Available Bytes Bytes
\Memory\Committed Bytes Bytes
\Memory\Commit Limit Bytes
\Memory\Pool Paged Bytes Bytes
\Memory\Pool Nonpaged Bytes Bytes
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)% Disk Time Percent
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)% Disk Read Time Percent
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)% Disk Write Time Percent
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Transfers/sec CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Reads/sec CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Writes/sec CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Bytes/sec BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Read Bytes/sec BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Disk Write Bytes/sec BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Avg. Disk Queue Length Count
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Avg. Disk Read Queue Length Count
\PhysicalDisk(_Total)\Avg. Disk Write Queue Length Count
\LogicalDisk(_Total)% Free Space Percent
\LogicalDisk(_Total)\Free Megabytes Count

Guest OS metrics Linux VMs

When you create a VM in Azure, diagnostics is enabled by default by using the Diagnostics extension.

You can create an alert for the following metrics:

Metric name Unit
\Memory\AvailableMemory Bytes
\Memory\PercentAvailableMemory Percent
\Memory\UsedMemory Bytes
\Memory\PercentUsedMemory Percent
\Memory\PercentUsedByCache Percent
\Memory\PagesPerSec CountPerSecond
\Memory\PagesReadPerSec CountPerSecond
\Memory\PagesWrittenPerSec CountPerSecond
\Memory\AvailableSwap Bytes
\Memory\PercentAvailableSwap Percent
\Memory\UsedSwap Bytes
\Memory\PercentUsedSwap Percent
\Processor\PercentIdleTime Percent
\Processor\PercentUserTime Percent
\Processor\PercentNiceTime Percent
\Processor\PercentPrivilegedTime Percent
\Processor\PercentInterruptTime Percent
\Processor\PercentDPCTime Percent
\Processor\PercentProcessorTime Percent
\Processor\PercentIOWaitTime Percent
\PhysicalDisk\BytesPerSecond BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\ReadBytesPerSecond BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\WriteBytesPerSecond BytesPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\TransfersPerSecond CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\ReadsPerSecond CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\WritesPerSecond CountPerSecond
\PhysicalDisk\AverageReadTime Seconds
\PhysicalDisk\AverageWriteTime Seconds
\PhysicalDisk\AverageTransferTime Seconds
\PhysicalDisk\AverageDiskQueueLength Count
\NetworkInterface\BytesTransmitted Bytes
\NetworkInterface\BytesReceived Bytes
\NetworkInterface\PacketsTransmitted Count
\NetworkInterface\PacketsReceived Count
\NetworkInterface\BytesTotal Bytes
\NetworkInterface\TotalRxErrors Count
\NetworkInterface\TotalTxErrors Count
\NetworkInterface\TotalCollisions Count

Commonly used App Service (server farm) metrics

You can also perform autoscale based on common web server metrics such as the HTTP queue length. Its metric name is HttpQueueLength. The following section lists available server farm (App Service) metrics.

Web Apps metrics

For Web Apps, you can alert on or scale by these metrics.

Metric name Unit
CpuPercentage Percent
MemoryPercentage Percent
DiskQueueLength Count
HttpQueueLength Count
BytesReceived Bytes
BytesSent Bytes

Commonly used Storage metrics

You can scale by Azure Storage queue length, which is the number of messages in the Storage queue. Storage queue length is a special metric, and the threshold is the number of messages per instance. For example, if there are two instances and if the threshold is set to 100, scaling occurs when the total number of messages in the queue is 200. That amount can be 100 messages per instance, 120 plus 80, or any other combination that adds up to 200 or more.

Configure this setting in the Azure portal in the Settings pane. For Virtual Machine Scale Sets, you can update the autoscale setting in the Resource Manager template to use metricName as ApproximateMessageCount and pass the ID of the storage queue as metricResourceUri.

For example, with a Classic Storage account, the autoscale setting metricTrigger would include:

"metricName": "ApproximateMessageCount",
"metricNamespace": "",
"metricResourceUri": "/subscriptions/SUBSCRIPTION_ID/resourceGroups/RES_GROUP_NAME/providers/Microsoft.ClassicStorage/storageAccounts/STORAGE_ACCOUNT_NAME/services/queue/queues/QUEUE_NAME"

For a (non-classic) Storage account, the metricTrigger setting would include:

"metricName": "ApproximateMessageCount",
"metricNamespace": "",
"metricResourceUri": "/subscriptions/SUBSCRIPTION_ID/resourceGroups/RES_GROUP_NAME/providers/Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/STORAGE_ACCOUNT_NAME/services/queue/queues/QUEUE_NAME"

Commonly used Service Bus metrics

You can scale by Azure Service Bus queue length, which is the number of messages in the Service Bus queue. Service Bus queue length is a special metric, and the threshold is the number of messages per instance. For example, if there are two instances, and if the threshold is set to 100, scaling occurs when the total number of messages in the queue is 200. That amount can be 100 messages per instance, 120 plus 80, or any other combination that adds up to 200 or more.

For Virtual Machine Scale Sets, you can update the autoscale setting in the Resource Manager template to use metricName as ActiveMessageCount and pass the ID of the Service Bus Queue as metricResourceUri.

"metricName": "ActiveMessageCount",
"metricNamespace": "",
"metricResourceUri": "/subscriptions/SUBSCRIPTION_ID/resourceGroups/RES_GROUP_NAME/providers/Microsoft.ServiceBus/namespaces/SB_NAMESPACE/queues/QUEUE_NAME"

Note

For Service Bus, the resource group concept doesn't exist. Azure Resource Manager creates a default resource group per region. The resource group is usually in the Default-ServiceBus-[region] format. Examples are Default-ServiceBus-EastUS, Default-ServiceBus-WestUS, and Default-ServiceBus-AustraliaEast.