Uredi

Deli z drugimi prek


Troubleshoot Azure Monitor autoscale

Azure Monitor autoscale helps you to have the right amount of resources running to handle the load on your application. It enables you to add resources to handle increases in load and also save money by removing resources that are sitting idle. You can scale based on a schedule, a fixed date-time, or a resource metric you choose. For more information, see Autoscale overview.

The autoscale service provides metrics and logs to help you understand what scale actions occurred and the evaluation of the conditions that led to those actions. You can find answers to questions like:

  • Why did my service scale-out or scale-in?
  • Why did my service not scale?
  • Why did an autoscale action fail?
  • Why is an autoscale action taking time to scale?

Flex Virtual Machine Scale Sets

Autoscale scaling actions are delayed up to several hours after a manual scaling action is applied to a Flex Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachineScaleSets (VMSS) resource for a specific set of Virtual Machine operations.
For example, Azure VM CLI Delete, or Azure VM Rest API Delete where the operation is performed on an individual VM.

In these cases, the autoscale service isn't aware of the individual VM operations.

To avoid this scenario, use the same operation, but at Virtual Machine Scale Set level. For example, Azure VMSS CLI Delete instance, or Azure VMSS Rest API Delete Instance. Autoscale detects the instance count change in the Virtual Machine Scale Set and performs the appropriate scaling actions.

Autoscale metrics

Autoscale provides you with four metrics to understand its operation:

  • Observed Metric Value: The value of the metric you chose to take the scale action on, as seen or computed by the autoscale engine. Because a single autoscale setting can have multiple rules and therefore multiple metric sources, you can filter by using "metric source" as a dimension.
  • Metric Threshold: The threshold you set to take the scale action. Because a single autoscale setting can have multiple rules and therefore multiple metric sources, you can filter by using "metric rule" as a dimension.
  • Observed Capacity: The active number of instances of the target resource as seen by the autoscale engine.
  • Scale Actions Initiated: The number of scale out and scale-in actions initiated by the autoscale engine. You can filter by scale-out versus scale-in actions.

You can use the metrics explorer to chart the preceding metrics all in one place. The chart should show the:

  • Actual metric.
  • Metric as seen/computed by autoscale engine.
  • Threshold for a scale action.
  • Change in capacity.

Example 1: Analyze an autoscale rule

An autoscale setting for a virtual machine scale set:

  • Scales out when the average CPU percentage of a set is greater than 70% for 10 minutes.
  • Scales in when the CPU percentage of the set is less than 5% for more than 10 minutes.

Let's review the metrics from the autoscale service.

The following chart shows a Percentage CPU metric for a virtual machine scale set.

Screenshot that shows a virtual machine scale set percentage CPU example.

The next chart shows the Observed Metric Value metric for an autoscale setting.

Screenshot that shows another virtual machine scale set percentage CPU example.

The final chart shows the Metric Threshold and Observed Capacity metrics. The Metric Threshold metric at the top for the scale-out rule is 70. The Observed Capacity metric at the bottom shows the number of active instances, which is currently 3.

Screenshot that shows Metric Threshold and Observed Capacity.

Note

You can filter Metric Threshold by the metric trigger rule dimension scale-out (increase) rule to see the scale-out threshold and by the scale-in rule (decrease).

Example 2: Advanced autoscaling for a virtual machine scale set

An autoscale setting allows a virtual machine scale set resource to scale out based on its own Outbound Flows metric. The Divide metric by instance count option for the metric threshold is selected.

The scale action rule is if the value of Outbound Flow per instance is greater than 10, the autoscale service should scale out by 1 instance.

In this case, the autoscale engine's observed metric value is calculated as the actual metric value divided by the number of instances. If the observed metric value is less than the threshold, no scale-out action is initiated.

The following screenshots show two metric charts.

The Avg Outbound Flows chart shows the value of the Outbound Flows metric. The actual value is 6.

Screenshot that shows the Average Outbound Flows page with an example of a virtual machine scale set autoscale metrics chart.

The following chart shows a few values:

  • The Observed Metric Value metric in the middle is 3 because there are 2 active instances, and 6 divided by 2 is 3.
  • The Observed Capacity metric at the bottom shows the instance count seen by an autoscale engine.
  • The Metric Threshold metric at the top is set to 10. Screenshot that shows a virtual machine scale set autoscale metrics charts example.

If there are multiple scale action rules, you can use splitting or the add filter option in the metrics explorer chart to look at a metric by a specific source or rule. For more information on splitting a metric chart, see Advanced features of metric charts - splitting.

Example 3: Understand autoscale events

In the autoscale setting screen, go to the Run history tab to see the most recent scale actions. The tab also shows the change in Observed Capacity over time. To find more information about all autoscale actions, including operations such as update/delete autoscale settings, view the activity log and filter by autoscale operations.

Screenshot that shows autoscale settings run history.

Autoscale resource logs

The autoscale service provides resource logs. There are two categories of logs:

  • Autoscale Evaluations: The autoscale engine records log entries for every single condition evaluation every time it does a check. The entry includes details on the observed values of the metrics, the rules evaluated, and if the evaluation resulted in a scale action or not.
  • Autoscale Scale Actions: The engine records scale action events initiated by the autoscale service and the results of those scale actions (success, failure, and how much scaling occurred as seen by the autoscale service).

As with any Azure Monitor supported service, you can use diagnostic settings to route these logs to:

  • Your Log Analytics workspace for detailed analytics.
  • Azure Event Hubs and then to non-Azure tools.
  • Your Azure Storage account for archive.

Screenshot that shows autoscale diagnostic settings.

The preceding screenshot shows the Azure portal autoscale Diagnostics settings pane. There you can select the Diagnostic/Resource Logs tab and enable log collection and routing. You can also perform the same action by using the REST API, the Azure CLI, PowerShell, and Azure Resource Manager templates for diagnostic settings by choosing the resource type as Microsoft.Insights/AutoscaleSettings.

Troubleshoot by using autoscale logs

For the best troubleshooting experience, we recommend routing your logs to Azure Monitor Logs (Log Analytics) through a workspace when you create the autoscale setting. This process is shown in the screenshot in the previous section. You can validate the evaluations and scale actions better by using Log Analytics.

After you've configured your autoscale logs to be sent to the Log Analytics workspace, you can execute the following queries to check the logs.

To get started, try this query to view the most recent autoscale evaluation logs:

AutoscaleEvaluationsLog
| limit 50

Or try the following query to view the most recent scale action logs:

AutoscaleScaleActionsLog
| limit 50

Use the following sections to answer these questions.

A scale action occurred that you didn't expect

First, execute the query for a scale action to find the scale action you're interested in. If it's the latest scale action, use the following query:

AutoscaleScaleActionsLog
| take 1

Select the CorrelationId field from the scale actions log. Use CorrelationId to find the right evaluation log. Executing the following query displays all the rules and conditions that were evaluated and led to that scale action.

AutoscaleEvaluationsLog
| where CorrelationId = "<correliationId>"

What profile caused a scale action?

A scaled action occurred, but you have overlapping rules and profiles and need to track down which one caused the action.

Find the CorrelationId of the scale action, as explained in example 1. Then execute the query on evaluation logs to learn more about the profile.

AutoscaleEvaluationsLog
| where CorrelationId = "<correliationId_Guid>"
| where ProfileSelected == true
| project ProfileEvaluationTime, Profile, ProfileSelected, EvaluationResult

The whole profile evaluation can also be understood better by using the following query:

AutoscaleEvaluationsLog
| where TimeGenerated > ago(2h)
| where OperationName contains == "profileEvaluation"
| project OperationName, Profile, ProfileEvaluationTime, ProfileSelected, EvaluationResult

A scale action didn't occur

You expected a scale action and it didn't occur. There might be no scale action events or logs.

Review the autoscale metrics if you're using a metric-based scale rule. It's possible that the Observed Metric value or Observed Capacity value aren't what you expected them to be, so the scale rule didn't fire. You would still see evaluations, but not a scale-out rule. It's also possible that the cool-down time kept a scale action from occurring.

Review the autoscale evaluation logs during the time period when you expected the scale action to occur. Review all the evaluations it did and why it decided to not trigger a scale action.

AutoscaleEvaluationsLog
| where TimeGenerated > ago(2h)
| where OperationName == "MetricEvaluation" or OperationName == "ScaleRuleEvaluation"
| project OperationName, MetricData, ObservedValue, Threshold, EstimateScaleResult

Scale action failed

There might be a case where the autoscale service took the scale action but the system decided not to scale or failed to complete the scale action. Use this query to find the failed scale actions:

AutoscaleScaleActionsLog
| where ResultType == "Failed"
| project ResultDescription

Create alert rules to get notified of autoscale actions or failures. You can also create alert rules to get notified on autoscale events.

Schema of autoscale resource logs

For more information, see Autoscale resource logs.

Next steps

Read information on autoscale best practices.