Open Source Network Management Beats IBM and HP 100
mjhuot writes "Last week SearchNetworking.com announced their Product Leadership Awards for 2007. It was a pleasant surprise to see an open source project, OpenNMS, win the Gold in their Network and IT Management Platforms category. OpenNMS beat out the established players of Hewlett-Packard's OpenView and IBM's Tivoli. This was based on a user survey of all IT solutions, not just open source; it demonstrates that open source software is indeed making inroads into the enterprise."
Services, training and support nicely organized (Score:5, Interesting)
I think this is a model that more many other Open Source products would have a lot to gain from following.
One obvious benefit of this is that it allows the developers to get paid for working with the product, that way making it possible for some developers to spend more time with the product and they will be in very much direct contact with the users of the product, not only reading about the bugs in a Bugzilla. It allows for some the lead developers to really be devoted to the product which is a really big asset to any Open Source project where money can not be made from selling the program itself.
Another good thing about this is that it gives the companies who have to choose between products confidence that they can put some trust in that this project is not going to stop being developed because some key developer for some reason is leaving the project.
Of course some care have to be put into not making sure that model does not lead to one big costumer in the services, training and support department does not get to lead the development of the product, which could have negative side effects, but really I don't think the risk of this is too big, the worst that could happen from this is that the project gets forked, with one fork keeping on working for the "company version" of the product while the rest of the project goes in another direction, but if just the services, training and support groups follows the second group then whatever company can hire people to work on the company version of the product. It just means more good Open Source code and good jobs for OS developers, the GNU license should make sure that a company can not take the code and make it into a closed source project.
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Re:Services, training and support nicely organized (Score:4, Funny)
Why would someone who sells costumes [thecostumer.com] have anything to do with software development? I'm confused.
I develop software for a living, but I've never been required to wear any particular costume.
costumer:=customer in parent, sorry (Score:4, Informative)
In my post costumer should be customer.
Re:costumer:=customer in parent, sorry (Score:4, Funny)
I don't know why I was modded flamebait; it was supposed to be funny.
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Not true. I bet you're wearing a button-down shirt and slacks right now!
But it is OK, as long as you are not wearing a particularly violent or gruesome costume (Silk tie; sport jacket, etc).
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You have a point though: I'm not allowed to wear shorts (I was at my last job though), particularly inappropriate clothing (swimsuits, etc.), and I might get in trouble if I wore a competitor's t-shirt.
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Yup. It sounds like the guy in charge (Tarus Balog; what an awesome name) knows how to run an open source business.
Coincidentally,
"inroads into the enterprise"...duh. (Score:1, Insightful)
I can't get too... (Score:5, Funny)
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I explicitly stated that one really has nothing to do with the other, but I guess reading the comment is too much work. People who cannot tell the difference between "yours" and "your's" automatically lose credibility with me, but the idiots who can't read a comment before replying have none to lose.
See if you can follow this logic: a corporation (or other entity) that hires (or otherwise employs) incompetents in one area is likely to do so in another.
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Re:I can't get too... (Score:5, Informative)
Losing money... (Score:1, Troll)
If OpenNMS wants to play with the big boys, they will have to beef things up a bit. Once you can withstand being slashdotted, then we'll talk.
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Let's see if I understood properly.
Do you really imply that in order to develop a suitable network management solution you must pay big cash to your bandwith provider or else your product must be shit?
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My hospital system has an "IT department" of over 500 people, 18 of which are Network Engineers. Our IS budget is in the hundreds of millions annually. Our network infrastructure consists of over 8500 network nodes alone, supporting over 20,000 users. While we try to stay away from bleeding edge, we are known to be among the first to implement new technologies as they stabilize.
Sure, our NMS
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You don't talk to managers much, I see.
You understand the difference. Most of people here understand the difference. PHBs don't understand the difference.
If you showed that to 95% of the non-technical managers who control puchase orders, they'd say, "If they can't keep their own website up, how can they be making a useful program to help
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My manager and I show each other everything. I saw the article, I sent it up to him. If he had any interest, he would tell me to check into it. It's as simple as that.
I'm glad you have such a nice, pleasant personality. I'm sure it gets you far in life. And I'm sure you're such a happy person.
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I bet they didn't just decide to check it out today and it happens to be down. When I checked, page was slashdotted. Who knows if they even host their own project or it is on sourceforge or similar.
I hadn't heard of the this project but it could be very useful in my network. I will definitely check it out tomorrow when the servers cool down. Luckily, I can tell the difference between their website and their product. I will make my own decision on th
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guess it worked [opennms.org]
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At console, your server was very slow, and very hard to work with; I was unable to determine why SSH failed to respond to remote connections. Your server is under a lot of stress, the last load average I was able to get:
load average: 162.58, 171.32, 149.41
Heh.
This server is
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Yes OpenNMS has been slash-dotted (Score:2)
Is it worth getting to? (rant warning) (Score:2)
BUT... they advertise an "enterprise grade" product. Too bad they don't have an "enterprise grade" web page.
I cannot stand to go to a website's main page, and find nothing useful on it.
At a bare minimum, there should be a paragraph or two telling me what the thing really is, with an obvious link for an overview, technical specs, etc. Instead, I'm left guessing. Maybe I can go to "documentation" and fi
acceptance speech (Score:4, Funny)
Wow, thank you thank you. I can't believe I'm up here. To be even nominated in this category along with such greats as HP OpenView and IBM Tivoli was honor enough. I need to thank so many people. First the programmers, without you none of this could have happened. My project managers brozow, dhustace, and tarus, you've been so great. How can I forget sourceforge for hosting out project? Wow, we've worked so hard on this for so long, to finally be recognized is so wonderful. I can't forget my parents, thanks mom and dad. And Richard Stallman, without you, none of this open-source stuff would have taken off thanks. It's been so hard, but I think you really like me, you really do like me.
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Wow, thank you thank you. I can't believe I'm up here. To be even nominated in this category along with such greats as HP OpenView and IBM Tivoli was honor enough. I need to thank so many people. First the programmers, without you none of this could have happened. My project managers brozow, dhustace, and tarus, you've been so great. How can I forget sourceforge for hosting out project?
.. Line noise starts to increase
... No, wait, this has to be said! Wow, we've worked so hard on this for
Other alternatives (Score:3, Informative)
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Munin (Score:3, Informative)
So, as long as we are there, let me mention my favorite : Munin [linpro.no].
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Deployed OpenNMS at my last job (Score:1, Informative)
Anyone actually known OpenNMS? (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to work for Tivoli and I know a little something about their system. It's CORBA-based, talks to a variety of databases (at the time I worked there, it supported DB2, Oracle, MSSQL, Sybase, and Informix) and supports many different types of Unix, plus NT and (last I looked) OS/2.
Tivoli's system does, well, everything. It can do software inventories (with a fairly intelligent scan) and distribute software packages to groups of hosts that have been flagged as lacking specific packages, for example.
As far as I can tell from everything I've read, OpenNMS only does monitoring and notification. And that's it. End of story. So how again does this even qualify to win this category? Does it actually do a lot more than people say it does? I'd love to see the official webpage, but it's down (MediaWiki rox121!1!1!!!)
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I also appreciate the blissful ignorance these people choose to live in. I certainly don't want to have to get a real job either.
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As complex as networks are now (for example, I support EL3/4,Sol 2.5.1 -> 10, NT4,W2k,2003), any product you deploy will be difficult for folks to deal with. Obviously many a product will function fine if everything on your networks were identical. But where's the fun in that?
Not to poo-poo OpenNMS, and I've never used it personally so I guess I really don't have a right t
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I think my point is that network monitoring is not network management. It's only one piece thereof. For all its faults (and they were many when I worked there and are probably even more by now) Tivoli is a complete package.
Maybe nobody should win; certainly from what I've heard of OpenView and Unicenter TNG, Tiv
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I have a feeling the carbon based unit was the problem. Too many folks do not have these issues. It's a product that folks have to actually think about before using. If you don't want to think and plan your infrastructure support mechanics, then why would you be in Enterprise Management anyway?
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I really miss NetView.
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OpenNMS is a great development and more competition is only going to force everyone to improve. Having said that OpenNMS competes only with IBM Tivoli Netview which is pretty much the most entry level network management tool in the whole portfolio. For truly kickass network management you should check out Tivoli Netcool.
There are tons of products under the Tivoli brand that range from backup, archival of filesytems, applicatio
Slashdotted! (Score:1)
Props, but hold on... (Score:2)
opennms vs HPOV NNM vs IBM Netview (Score:1)
Compare opennms functionallity with HP Openview NNM and IBM Tivoli Netview.
Btw, Netview and HPOV NNM is almost same product when ibm bought an old license and forked.
The dangers of open source! (Score:3, Funny)
FLOSS Weekly Interview (Score:2)
Not the first time (Score:1)
* Userful DiscoverStation 4.0
* IBM Tivoli Intelligent Orchestrator
* Novell ZENworks 7 Linux Management
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I bet that Microsoft products also fare very well at the PDC too.
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What's the benefit over ZenOSS (Score:2)
Ideally I'd have a solution which offered the SNMP support and out of the box functionality of something like ZenOSS, while at the same time being dead easy to extend t
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It makes Nagios configuration/backups very easy. My only gripe it's that it only comes packaged in rpm (well, it is open source, so I guess you could roll your own) but it's a self contained rpm. Every dependency is there except for Mysql 5 and it can import your current nagios config files.
It doesn't play nice with SELinux, tho.
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OpenNMS has world-class SNMP support, and configuring it literally could not be simpler. Tell OpenNMS what IP address ranges to discover and what community strings (or SNMPv3 USM users and passphrases) to use. Once the nodes finish scanning, SNMP data collection automagically begins for MIB objects that the system knows about. After a couple of data collection cycles, you'll have beautiful graphs of all this data.
When SNMP is not an option, there are still many options for both monitoring ("are all the
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What is stopping you from creating your own SNMP agents ? Unless you some some esoteric piece of hardware, it is fairly easy to create one.
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A few things:
1. I'm the IT manager in a company which develops embedded networked devices. We've got all sorts of weird and wonderful stuff.
2. The same thing which stops me putting Net-SNMP onto a server on a non-firewalled connection. SNMPv1 offers very poor security, and ZenOSS doesn't support SNMPv3 security.
3. I trust a network probe to confirm that a service is