How to Monitor Elastic Load Balance in Huawei Cloud
Site24x7 offers monitoring support for Huawei Cloud's Elastic Load Balance (ELB) service. Monitoring the performance and health of your Huawei ELB, which distributes incoming traffic across multiple backend servers to ensure high availability and fault tolerance.
Use cases
- Ensure application availability: Monitor connections per second and inbound bandwidth to identify sudden traffic surges.
- Detect drops: Track dropped connections and blocked traffic to identify network issues or security rules blocking legitimate requests.
- Capacity planning: Analyze active connections and L4 connection usage to understand how much load the ELB is handling.
Setup and configuration
ELB resources are auto-discovered and monitored during the Huawei Cloud integration. To enable monitoring, follow these steps:
- Navigate to Cloud > Huawei > Add Huawei Monitor. Learn how to add a Huawei Cloud monitor.
- While adding or editing a Huawei Cloud monitor, select ELB from the Service/Resource Types drop-down menu and click Save.
- Go to Cloud > Huawei. Then, select the created Huawei monitor.
- Click ELB to view the performance metrics.
Supported metrics
ELB Data Table
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Dropped Connections | The total number of client connections that were rejected or terminated by the load balancer before completion. | Count |
| Dropped Packets | The total number of network packets discarded by the load balancer during transmission. | Count |
| Dropped Traffic | The amount of traffic dropped by the load balancer instead of being forwarded to backend servers. | Bits/sec (bps) |
| IP Group Blocked Packets | The number of packets blocked because they matched rules in configured IP block or security groups. | Count |
| IP Group Blocked Traffic | The total volume of traffic blocked by IP group rules or security policies. | Bits/sec (bps) |
| L4 Connection Usage | Percentage of L4 connection capacity currently used by the load balancer. | Percentage |
| L4 Inbound BPS Usage | Percentage of L4 incoming traffic rate processed by the load balancer. | Percentage |
| L4 New Connection Per Second Usage | Percentage of L4 new client connections established with the load balancer per second. | Percentage |
| L4 Outbound BPS Usage | Percentage of L4 outgoing traffic rate sent from the load balancer. | Percentage |
| Connections Per Second | The total number of client connections handled by the load balancer every second. | Count |
| Server Requests Per Second | The number of requests forwarded from the load balancer to backend servers per second. | Count/sec |
| LVS Requests Per Second | The number of requests processed by the load balancing engine (Linux Virtual Server) per second. | Count/sec |
| Client Requests Per Second | The number of incoming requests received from clients by the load balancer per second. | Count/sec |
| Inbound Bandwidth | The total incoming network bandwidth consumed by traffic entering the load balancer. | Bits/sec (bps) |
| Outbound Bandwidth | The total outgoing network bandwidth used for traffic leaving the load balancer to clients or back-end servers. | Bits/sec (bps) |
| Active Connections | The number of currently active client connections maintained by the load balancer. | Count |
| Inactive Connections | The number of inactive client connections by the load balancer. | Count |
| New Connections Per Second | The number of new client connections established with the load balancer per second. | Count |
| Inbound Packets Per Second | The number of packets received by the load balancer from the client per second. | Count |
| Outbound Packets Per Second | The number of packets sent from the load balancer to clients per second. | Count |
| Inbound Bytes Per Second | The total number of incoming traffic received by the load balancer per second. | Bytes/second |
| Outbound Bytes Per Second | The total number of outgoing traffic transmitted by the load balancer per second. | Bytes/second |
| Abnormal Servers | The number of back-end servers that are currently marked as unhealthy or error. | Count |
| Healthy Servers | The number of back-end servers that are normally operating and available to handle traffic. | Count |
Dropped and Blocked Traffic
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Dropped Connections | A chart trend of client connections that were rejected by the load balancer before completion. | Count/second |
| Dropped Packets | A chart trend of network packets discarded by the load balancer during transmission. | Count/second |
| Dropped Traffic | A chart trend of traffic dropped by the load balancer instead of being forwarded to back-end servers. | Bytes/second (bps) |
| IP Group Blocked Packets | A chart trend of traffic blocked by IP group rules or security policies. | Bytes/second (bps) |
| IP Group Blocked Traffic | A chart trend traffic blocked by IP group rules or security policies. | Bits/second (bps) |
L4 Capacity Usage
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| L4 Connection Usage | A chart trend of L4 connection capacity currently used by the load balancer. | Count/second |
| L4 Inbound BPS Usage | A chart trend of L4 incoming traffic rate processed by the load balancer. | Count/second |
| L4 New Connection Per Second Usage | A chart trend of L4 new client connections established with the load balancer per second. | Count/second |
| L4 Outbound BPS Usage | A chart trend of L4 outgoing traffic rate sent from the load balancer. | Count/second |
Bandwidth Transfer
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Inbound Bandwidth | A chart trend of L4 connection capacity currently used by the load balancer. | Bytes/second |
| Outbound Bandwidth | A chart trend of the total incoming network bandwidth consumed by traffic entering the load balancer. | Bytes/second |
| Inbound Bytes Per Second | A chart trend of the total number of incoming traffic received by the load balancer per second. | Bytes/second |
| Outbound Bytes Per Second | A chart trend of the total number of outgoing traffic transmitted by the load balancer every second. | Bytes/second |
Request/Response Rates
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Server Requests Per Second | A chart trend of the number of requests forwarded from the load balancer to back-end servers per second. | Count/second |
| LVS Requests Per Second | A chart trend of the number of requests processed by the load balancing engine (Linux Virtual Server) per second. | Count/second |
| Client Requests Per Second | A chart trend of the number of incoming requests received from clients by the load balancer per second. | Count/second |
Packet and Connection Rates
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Connections Per Second | A chart trend of the total number of client connections handled by the load balancer every second. | Count/second |
| New Connections Per Second | A chart trend of the number of new client connections established with the load balancer per second. | Count/second |
| Inbound Packets Per Second | A chart trend of the number of packets received by the load balancer from the client per second. | Count/second |
| Outbound Packets Per Second | A chart trend of the number of packets sent from the load balancer to clients per second. | Count/second |
Connection and Server Health
Metric name |
Description |
Unit |
| Active Connections | A chart trend of the number of currently active client connections maintained by the load balancer. | Count/second |
| Inactive Connections | A chart trend of the number of inactive client connections by the load balancer. | Count/second |
| Abnormal Servers | A chart trend of the number of back-end servers that are currently marked unhealthy or error. | Count/second |
| Healthy Servers | A chart trend of the number of back-end servers that are normally operating and available to handle traffic. | Count/second |
Threshold configuration
You can configure thresholds and alerts for all ELB metrics to detect performance degradation proactively or connection issues.
- Go to Admin > Configuration Profiles > Threshold and Availability.
- Create or edit your Threshold Profile for ELB.
- Assign the profile to the respective monitors to trigger alerts.
IT Automation
Use Site24x7's IT Automation to resolve common issues with ELB performance:
- Go to Admin > IT Automation Templates. Then, click Add Automation Templates.
- Create an automation rule by selecting the automation Type (e.g., Server reboot, clear queue).
- Map the created rules to the ELB, for automatic execution during alerts.
Configuration rules
Use Configuration Rules to simplify bulk setup across ELB instances. Automatically assign Threshold Profiles, Notification Profiles, Tags, and Monitor Groups when new monitors are discovered.
