course overview
Overview
This course is the best starting point to learn about the SAP HANA Monitoring and Performance Tools.
In this course you will learn about emergency trouble shooting the SAP HANA database using the SAP HANA cockpit 2.0 SP10. You will also learn how to use the SAP HANA traces to investigate for expensive SQL statements that might cause SAP HANA database performance problems in the areas of memory, CPU and disk I/O. You will also learn how to setup SAP HANA Workload Management and SAP HANA Capture and Replay tools to perform proactive monitoring and performance safeguarding.
This course is based on software release:
If you wish to “deep-dive” on specific subjects, this course can be combined with the other courses in the SAP HANA Curriculum, for example HA201 High Availability and Disaster Tolerance Administration, HA240 Authorizations, Scenarios and Security Requirements and HA250 Database Migration using DMO.
Audience
Skills Gained
This course will prepare you to:
Prerequisites
Essential
Recommended
The supply of this course by DDLS is governed by the booking terms and conditions. Please read the terms and conditions carefully before enrolling in this course, as enrolment in the course is conditional on acceptance of these terms and conditions.
Outline
Emergency Analysis and Troubleshooting using SAP HANA cockpit 2.0 SP10
If you need training for 3 or more people, you should ask us about onsite training. Putting aside the obvious location benefit, content can be customised to better meet your business objectives and more can be covered than in a public classroom. Its a cost effective option. One on one training can be delivered too, at reasonable rates.
Submit an enquiry from any page on this site, and let us know you are interested in the requirements box, or simply mention it when we contact you.
All $ prices are in USD unless it’s a NZ or AU date
SPVC = Self Paced Virtual Class
LVC = Live Virtual Class
Our clients have included prestigious national organisations such as Oxford University Press, multi-national private corporations such as JP Morgan and HSBC, as well as public sector institutions such as the Department of Defence and the Department of Health.