161 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1912
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Title: HPR1912: OpenNMS at All Things Open Conference
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1912/hpr1912.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 11:04:18
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---
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This is HPR episode 1912 entitled Open NMS at All Things Open Conference and is part of the series
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in-to-news.
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It is hosted by Klaatu and is about 8 minutes long.
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The summer is.
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Klaatu talks to the Open NMS project at the All Things Open Conference.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15.
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That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hi everyone, this is Klaatu and I'm at the All Things Open Conference standing in front
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of the Open NMS booth with Jessie.
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So, Jessie, assuming I knew nothing about Open NMS, what is Open NMS?
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Open NMS is open source network management platform.
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Okay, so let's just say that I've got a simple network just to make it simple for an example.
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So if I've got a web server and maybe a file share, so I've got people going out to the internet,
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I've got obviously internal traffic and then I've got files being shared.
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So if Open NMS was introduced onto that network, it would just basically monitor all of that traffic.
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Is that correct?
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It definitely could.
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Yes.
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Good monitor, the storage it could monitor any sort of performance data.
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So how much storage you have left to you mean or the performance of it?
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Yes.
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Both things.
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Cool.
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So how, I mean, looks like there's a graphical interface there.
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So is that, is that the typical front end or is it scripted?
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I mean, how does the admin use it?
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Well, there are a couple ways.
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You can use the web UI, which we would normally have up, but we're down on laptops.
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You could see the pretty pictures.
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Yeah.
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You could also use our new app that one of our people has developed.
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It's called Compass.
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It's on our iPad right there.
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And through that app, you can see a dashboard.
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You can see there's a little donut chart of outages.
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And if you swipe left, there's appending problems.
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You can also see alerts.
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And you can investigate individual notes, which is pretty cool.
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And you can see statistics collected on each node individually.
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And you can even render graphs within the app, which is pretty cool.
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Is this totally unique?
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It sounds really unique to me.
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I believe that there are a lot of commercial monitoring suites available.
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There are a couple open source ones.
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I know that Zavix is a really awesome open source version.
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This is, I mean, open NMS.
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It's completely open source as well.
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I mean, it's not open core or whatever.
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No, absolutely not open core.
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Like, we have, there's a certain company that likes to do that.
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So we did actually split our products into two.
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This past year, but we're following the Red Hat model.
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So we have open NMS Horizon, which is analogous to Fedora Linux.
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So Rapid Release Cycle, all the latest and greatest features that have either been contributed or developed in-house.
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And we kind of use it as a testing environment for the features that we would like to put into Meridian.
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So open NMS Meridian is our more stable, slower release cycle version of open NMS,
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which is still 100% open source.
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Basically, you pay subscription per server.
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And that gives you access to the Meridian repo.
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Per server being monitored or per server that open NMS is installed on.
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Per server that open NMS is installed on.
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So as many devices as you can monitor with that server, go for it.
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If you need more than one, it would just be more than one subscription.
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That's another way that differentiates us from a lot of the commercial options.
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Meridian also comes with a lot of configurations built in.
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So a great analogy for open NMS is kind of like thinking about it like spreadsheet program.
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So you open it, it's a blank slate.
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You can, it's very powerful and it can do a lot of things.
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However, you kind of need to tell it what to do.
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And you need to put some input into that.
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Discover networks of whatever network you have.
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Find the devices on there or services or applications.
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And start collecting data on them.
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Whatever data is exposed.
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We can generate reports from them.
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You can start getting notifications which are highly customizable.
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Pretty graphs that you can show them to see how well you're doing or how poorly the hardware is doing.
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And how you really need a bigger budget.
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Meridian comes with a lot of configurations that we have developed through years of doing support.
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We've been around for 15 years.
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So we've done a lot of consulting. We've done a lot of support.
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And we can really see what people use open NMS for.
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And those configurations come out of the box and that can be hours and hours of work.
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Yeah, so it's actually not that hard to get started with it pretty much.
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You can get it and use one of your templates to start out with maybe and then develop your own customizations.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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We also do consulting and support.
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So we have one of our most popular support programs is called Greenlight.
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And basically we send somebody out.
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It's only a couple days.
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We install open NMS on your network or whatever you would like.
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And we get it going.
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Set it up. Everything should be good.
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And as long as you have somebody to update it, what it needs updating and watch it and you're good to go.
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So in terms of like what it's actually viewing, it sounds kind of like a pretty high sort of a broad overview of your network.
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Is it good for individual like machines?
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Would it help you diagnose problems with people's workstations?
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Or is that not really what it's for?
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I don't think it's really what it's for.
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Like I said, you could see like, oh, are they topping out on RAM all the time?
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Or like are they running out of storage?
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As long as those things are collectible from that device.
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Yeah.
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Wow, that's pretty amazing actually.
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I mean, I'm pretty new to the whole, you know, serious monitoring stuff.
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So I don't know a whole lot about it.
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But it looks really nice.
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I don't want to say anything bad about Nagios.
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But this feels like really complete and kind of like sort of out of the box.
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Is it similar at all to Nagios or is it completely different?
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That's a really great question.
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So that is actually usually what I say.
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In comparison to Nagios, Nagios is really built as more of a script running platform.
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Meaning what, sorry.
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What do you mean?
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So you have Nagios and you basically feed it a whole bunch of scripts to run.
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And you tell it, I want you to do these things.
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Yeah.
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Whereas exactly what you said open an MS kind of has those things out of the box.
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Okay.
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However, it is also highly extensible.
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So if you wanted to create your custom scripting, you totally could.
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What are you scripting in open NMS?
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Another difference between open NMS and Nagios is open NMS is much more scalable.
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I know that Nagios isn't a lot in the way of doing more scalability.
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But our clients run anywhere from hundreds of nodes to hundreds of thousands of nodes.
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So it can handle that pretty well.
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It sounds amazing.
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It sounds really cool.
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I'm probably going to check it out just to have a play with it really.
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I don't really need it up my current job.
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But it sounds really amazing.
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So thank you very much for all the info.
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Awesome.
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Thanks so much.
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And you can always check out what we have a demo on our website.
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demo.open NMS.org.
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Great.
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And as for our username and password, just demo demo.
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So great.
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Thank you very much.
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You've been listening to Heka Public Radio at Heka Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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Heka Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicom Computer Club,
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and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
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or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the creative comments,
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attribution, share a life, 3.0 license.
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