On Wed, Feb 26, 2003 at 11:29:47AM -0500, Jeff Weisberg wrote:
| > (traditionally) but they can normally monitor the heck | > out of 'decent' sized networks (less than 500 components | > was my last experience with OVW atleast, tivoli and CA | > we never got working correctly with less than 1 metric | > butt ton of LOE to keep it running) | | What are the options and recommendations for networks > 500 | components?
back when I had a 'network > 500 components', I could never find any monitoring software that did what I wanted. so I wrote my own. over the years it's been through some re-writes, gathered features, (lost features), and become open-source. written by an ISP for an ISP[1].
find it here: http://argus.tcp4me.com
<shameless plug> On the same here. I have slowly been writing over the years (and allowing to evolve) software i have called 'sysmon' that does network monitoring for ISPs by an ISP. It can see that there are network dependencies, that if a host is unpingable that perhaps the pop3 server is actually not worth the cpu time for testing. If you have a spare 486/pentium lying around with an ethernet card, you can monitor a fairly large network with it as well. http://sysmon.org/ - jared ps. all the data needed for fancy graphics is stored internally and somewhat accessible via a currently pseudo-undocumented xml interface. someone just needs to write some gui kludge to represent it all. -- Jared Mauch | pgp key available via finger from jared@puck.nether.net clue++; | http://puck.nether.net/~jared/ My statements are only mine.