HP aims to bring adaptive enterprise capabilities to the console by developing and acquiring products that provide these capabilities. For example, at the OpenView console, you view the discrete technologies that make up an application as a single business service. You can drill down in the service view to see problem areas. You can tell OpenView to perform automated actions in certain error situations, such as creating a Help desk ticket or starting a service, or specify a manual action, such as opening a Microsoft Knowledge Base article or annotating a solution to the problem in an internal knowledge base.
IBM's Tivoli
IBM has integrated 25 years of systems management knowledge and processes into an array of solutions under the Tivoli umbrella. Like the other big four NSM vendors' products, IBM's Tivoli can either operate as a standalone product or integrate into Tivoli's centralized console.
Tivoli consists of four product groups organized according to their functionality: security, storage, performance and availability, and configuration and operations. These categories encompass many solutions, ranging from essentials, such as IBM Tivoli Monitoring, to more specialized products, such as Tivoli e-Marketplace Manager. IBM also offers a Change and Configuration Management (CCM) toolIBM Tivoli Configuration and Operationsthat distributes software, manages the change and control of IT assets, automates workflow, and lets you remotely control systems.
Like the other big four vendors, IBM has tailored its products to help organizations align their NSM infrastructure with business objectives. IBM has also successfully promoted its autonomic computing initiative, which the company defines as using technology to manage technology so as to reduce the cost and complexity of owning and operating computers. IBM's ultimate goal with Tivoli is to enable an IT infrastructure that's self-configuring, self-healing, self-optimizing, and self-protecting.
Third-Party Assistance
Although Microsoft has significantly enhanced SMS, the product still has room for improvement. Many third-party add-ons are available that add capabilities to SMS or improve existing features. Following is a quick guided tour through third-party SMS add-ons. Table 1 provides a detailed listing of SMS and MOM add-on products.
1E offers four SMS add-ons: SMSWakeUp, SMSNomad, Patch Management Pack, and RightClick Deployment. SMSWakeUp automatically turns on one or more networked PCs to facilitate off-hours SMS activities (e.g., software and patch distribution, inventory). SMSNomad provides features such as intelligent bandwidth allocation and restartable downloads that facilitate the distribution of software across low-bandwidth links. Patch Deployment Pack combines SMSWakeUp and another 1E product, Night Watchman, and lets you perform reboots remotely. RightClick Deployment is an automated Windows XP migration solution.
Aelita Software's Aelita SnapReports for Microsoft SMS is an SMS-specific reporting tool that lets you create meaningful reports from SMS repository data more quickly than with the SMS tools. Altiris, a longtime SMS collaborator, offers several tools that integrate with SMS to extend its reach to Apple Computer's Macintosh, Linux, Palm Computing's Palm OS, Research in Motion's (RIM's) BlackBerry, and UNIX. The Altiris Web Administrator for Microsoft SMS provides SMS Console functionality in a Web interface, including remote control and reporting. The Altiris Mobile Client for SMS leverages your SMS infrastructure and provides specialized management capabilities for mobile clients. Finally, Altiris's UNIX Client for SMS lets you use SMS to manage UNIX systems.
CompuThoughts' SMSworks improves your control over SMS's software-installation process by managing installation privileges and allows more granular control over application settings during installations. Gravity Square's Advanced Scheduler for SMS integrates with SMS to better control when software packages are distributed, minimizing interruption of managed systems while they're in use. ManageSoft's Microsoft SMS connector integrates with and extends SMS by enhancing inventory data and making remote and mobile device management more robust. NetIQ's AppManager for Microsoft Systems Management Server monitors and manages SMS's core services and performance metrics to ensure that your SMS system is healthy and runs at peak efficiency.
PS'SOFT's QP: SMS License Compliance helps you manage installed software and maintain license compliance. Tally Systems' PowerCensus enhances SMS's inventory process by providing more accurate hardware and software recognition capabilities. Vintela Management eXtensions (VMX) lets you use the SMS interface to perform system discovery, hardware and software inventory, and software delivery to non-Windows platforms. XcelleNet's Afaria SMS Integration Suite extends SMS's ability to manage PCs, laptops, tablets, handheld devices, and smart phones.
Microsoft's plan for MOM is to provide tools for managing Microsoft's server and application infrastructure and let third parties create tools for managing other operations management areas through management packs. Many vendorsamong them Actional, AmberPoint, and Service Integrityhave created management packs for managing Web services. CA has joined the effort with its Unicenter Web Services Management Pack for Microsoft Operations Manager, which integrates with MOM UI information that Unicenter Web Services Distributed Management, Unicenter Management for .Net Framework, and other CA products related to Web services management collect.
Dell and HP have created management packs for their hardware offerings. Similarly, VERITAS Software made its VERITAS NetBackup application more manageable by creating the Veritas Management Pack for MOM, and Citrix Systems created the MetaFrame XP Management Pack for Microsoft Operations Manager 2000. Full Armor released FAZAM Auditing for MOM to automate and simplify auditing of changes to Group Policy environments. NetIQ has Extended Management Pack (XMP) modules, and eXc Software has management packs that extend the reach of MOM to platforms such as IBM's iSeries, Linux, Novell NetWare, and UNIX. NetIQ also offers XMP modules to connect MOM to other management platforms, such as Tivoli and Micromuse's Netcool. NetPro Computing has released management packs for extending MOM's monitoring and management of AD, Novell eDirectory, and various flavors of DNS.
Prev. page
1
2
[3]
4
next page