Using the AI Ops Wizard
Use the AI Ops Wizard to set up an AI Ops rule. The wizard will take you through the steps required to configure a rule.
When you have completed one step, click Next to proceed to the next one.
If a step or option is mandatory it is flagged with an asterisk (*). Once a step is complete it is marked with a green tick, except the Welcome and Summary steps.
Step 1 Welcome
This step provides an overview of the steps for setting up your AI Ops. You can clear Show Welcome at startup to skip this step on creating new AI Ops rules or editing existing rules.
Step 2 Title and Description
Step 3 Data Set
In this step, select and define the activity you want to analyze:
Step 4 Selection Criteria
In this step, select the values and operators to build your AI Ops rule using the rules builder in ASM.
When setting up your AI Ops, you can use a wide range of Call or Request attributes as the criteria for the rule, including criteria for IPK, Workflow, Availability, CMDB, and SLM. The values you can use are filtered by the Screen Set selected in Step 3 Data Set, as well as by your security role.
To start your statement, click the question mark in the editing box.
Select a criterion, such as Call Priority if you are analyzing call data. On selecting a criterion, the operator and corresponding value fields appear in the rules builder panel.
Select an operator (that is, equal (=), less than (<), greater than (>)) from the list.
The operators you can pick depend on the item you selected.
The items you can select on the right-hand side of the operator are filtered to show relevant fields of the same data type as the selected field. If an item is not available for selection, it is shown in italics allowing you to expand the next tier in a multi-tier list to choose an item from a lower tier.
To add another criterion, select the And, Or, or Not buttons.
You can group your criteria using the Group button. This will insert parentheses around the selected part of a statement. Those criteria contained within the parentheses are evaluated first and the result then processed as part of the entire statement. Otherwise, Not statements will be evaluated before And, and And before Or. To ungroup a group, simply select the criterion and click Ungroup.
To delete a criterion, select the criterion and click Delete.
Step 5 Grouping Criteria
This optional step allows you to run the analysis for each member of a “group” (that is, all the items you add to the grouping criteria). Using grouping criteria means that an AI Ops rule will trigger a call or request if the threshold in the rule is met for any of the “members” in this group.
If you use a multi-select list as a Grouping Criteria, the rule will group the analysis by any item in the list. For example if the threshold for the rule is 10 calls, and you add a User multi-select list as the grouping criteria, then, a new call/event may be triggered if the threshold in the rule is reached for any User in the list.
Scenario for using Grouping Criteria The Problem Manager configures an automated AI Ops rule to log a call whenever more than 5 high priority outage calls are logged against critical servers. She applies a Grouping Criteria = CI. This means that the rule will log a new call if 5 high priority outage calls are logged against any critical server within the group, and also allows multiple calls to be logged within each run of the rule (per group item if applicable). If the Problem Manager had not applied the Grouping Criteria, then the rule would log a call if more than 5 high priority outage calls were logged against the whole group of critical servers. |end|
Make your selection and click Add to List to add the value.
Repeat to add another value.
Fields containing unique data are unsuitable to use as grouping criteria, since they would result in a group with only one item, undermining the purpose of grouping analyzed data. Furthermore grouping on such values can have an adverse effect on performance. Some unique fields are unavailable for grouping, these include: ‘Call No’, ‘Request No’, text area fields such as the call description, and date/time fields.
Step 6 Schedule
In this step, schedule the time frame for your analysis, that is, when and how often the rule should run.
How often you want the rule to run depends on how important the information being analyzed is. If you are seeking to identify a major incident then a shorter running time is desirable. Analysis of changes might be run over a much longer time period. If you have a lot of analyses within short running times, consider the impact this will have on the performance of the application.
Complete the details:
Step 7 Logging Output
In this step, select the output of your analysis, that is, the event (call or request) that will be triggered if the rule finds activity that reaches the threshold you have set.
Complete the details:
Step 8 Summary
In this step, review the rule setup you have specified in the previous steps.
Click Back to review an earlier step.
Click Cancel to close the wizard without adding the rule. On clicking Cancel, you will be able to save the rule. If no information has been added, a blank entry will be added with a rule title of “Incomplete”.
When you are done, click Finish.
On the AI Ops Rules window, ensure that you activate the rule by selecting the checkbox in the Active column.