[89495] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Network graphics tools

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Michael.Dillon@btradianz.com)
Wed Mar 22 05:03:20 2006

In-Reply-To: <20060321184442.GL5908@jkdt.thrashyour.com>
To: nanog@merit.edu
From: Michael.Dillon@btradianz.com
Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 10:06:01 +0000
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


> If you're doing diagrams for internal use and know the chances of them
> being used with external parties is slim-to-none, go ahead, play with
> toys like dia. 

Rather strong opinion...

> PDFs are almost 100% acceptable, with a few losers left who won't
> install a reader.

Hey, wait a minute!
DIA can export as Postscript and ghostscript can turn those
into PDFs. Therefore, you have contradicted your earlier 
assertion.

By the way, there are other possibilities with DIA as 
well.  It is scriptable with Python so you can do useful things
like validate a diagram against the network. 
http://www.gnome.org/projects/dia/python.html

There is also diacanvas2 which allows you to integrate the
DIA drawing canvas into your application.
http://diacanvas.sourceforge.net/

With diacanvas and python, you make an interactive network
diagram and bundle it into a Windows .exe file to distribute
to the sales force so they can do stuff like zoom in and out.

Fact is, that the availability of reasonably featured and
stable Open Source software has mushroomed over the past few years.

--Michael Dillon


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