

The Status filter allows you to filter based on the status of an audit operation. You can get the list of all Audit Activities using the Graph API: You can select a specific activity you want to see or choose all. The Activity filter is based on the category and activity resource type selection you make. The Category filter enables you to select one of the following filters: The Service filter allows you to select from a drop-down list of the following services: You can filter the audit data on the following fields: Select an item in the list view to get more detailed information. This enables you to display additional fields or remove fields that are already displayed. You can customize the list view by clicking Columns in the toolbar.

To access the audit logs, you need to be in one of the following roles: The audit activity report is available in all editions of Azure AD. Have the names of applications been changed? Has a service principal for an application changed? What applications have been added or updated? With an application-centric view, you can get answers to questions such as: What licenses have been assigned to a group or a user? What are the groups that have been added?Īre there groups with membership changes? With a group-centric view, you can get answers to questions such as: What has an administrator done in a directory? What types of updates have been applied to users? With a user-centric view, you can get answers to questions such as: The most common views of this log are based on the following categories: With the audit logs in Azure AD, you get access to records of system activities for compliance. This article gives you an overview of the audit logs. Provisioning – Activities performed by the provisioning service, such as the creation of a group in ServiceNow or a user imported from Workday.Audit – Information about changes applied to your tenant such as users and group management or updates applied to your tenant’s resources.Sign-ins – Information about sign-ins and how your resources are used by your users.To support you with this goal, the Azure Active Directory portal gives you access to three activity logs: The information about your system’s health enables you to assess whether and how you need to respond to potential issues. Just like the Audit Trail page, you can also narrow your Session Trail information down by selecting a date range in the upper right corner.As an IT administrator, you want to know how your IT environment is doing.

You can use the search bar under the “Session Trail” section header by entering details such as a user’s email, name, session ID, or use the column titles to sort the information to your preference. Start Time: The time (in UTC) when the user was connected into a virtual machine using Frame Remoting Protocol.ĭuration: The elapsed time between the start of the session (when the user connected to a virtual machine) and the close of the session (when the user was logged out of the operating system). Hovering over the value shows the minimum, average, and maximum network latency, measured over the course of the session. Latency: The average round-trip network latency between the endpoint and the server. Hovering over the value shows the minimum, average, and maximum frame rate, measured over the course of the session. Hovering over the value shows the minimum, average, and maximum bandwidth consumed over the course of the session.įrame Rate: The average frame rate (frames per second) as reported by Frame Terminal or Frame App on the user’s endpoint. This name corresponds to the production pool name in Capacity.īandwidth: The average bandwidth consumed over the course of the Frame session. Instance Type: The name of the instance type used for that user session. User: Name of the user as provided by the identity provider. Important when discussing any issues with a user session with Nutanix Support. Microsoft Licensing Guide for Nutanix Frame.
