After you read this document, you can better understand Capacity
Advisor by experimenting, considering different configurations and
workload placement, and by trying them out in what-if scenarios. A
scenario identifies the workload demand profile that creates your experimental simulations.
When you do workload analysis on systems, you view graphs and reports that represent CPU or memory
utilization by time. For example, Figure 2–2 shows a graph of
CPU utilization for a single system over a one-month period.
Similarly, Figure 2–3 shows CPU utilization for a second
system over the same period.
Comparing these two graphs shows that workload peaks on the
two systems do not occur simultaneously. Also, on node01, CPU utilization
has a peak of about 7 CPUs, while that for node02 has a peak of almost
8 CPUs. This suggests an opportunity to consider whether you can use
both systems together to satisfy the needs of both workloads, while
reducing the number of CPUs.
Figure 2–4 shows the result of using a Capacity Advisor
what-if scenario to combine the workloads on both systems.
From the graph, it is evident that the peak of the combined
workloads is only 12 CPUs because workload peaks on both systems
are not simultaneous. Therefore, you do not need 15 CPUs to meet this
workload demand during the utilization period.