[98724] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Network Inventory Tool

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jason LeBlanc)
Thu Aug 16 09:46:45 2007

Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2007 09:36:02 -0400
From: Jason LeBlanc <jml@packetpimp.org>
To: James Fogg <James@jdfogg.com>
CC: Wguisa71 <wguisa71-nanog@yahoo.com.br>, NANOG <nanog@merit.edu>
In-Reply-To: <4EE5D8CA323707439EF291AC9244BD9A256F9A@sbs.jdfogg.com>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


I would second this.  We're evaling it right now, takes a little getting 
used to but the capabilities are pretty impressive.  There is a pretty 
steep cost to play initially.  Once the first chunk of existing devices 
are licensed adding more isn't as painful, at least thats how I'm 
selling it within my org.  This is far more than an inventory tool, the 
config management is where it really is impressive.

James Fogg wrote:
>> 	From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On
>>     
> Behalf Of Wguisa71
>   
>> 	Sent: Monday, August 13, 2007 11:31 PM
>> 	To: NANOG
>> 	Subject: Network Inventory Tool
>> 	
>> 	
>> 	Guys,
>> 	 
>> 	Does anyone known some tool for network documentation with:
>> 	 
>> 	- inventory (cards, serial numbers, manufactor...)
>> 	- documentation (configurations, software version control, etc)
>> 	- topology building (L2, L3.. connections, layer control, ...)
>> 	 
>> 	All-in-one solution and It don't need to be free. I'm just
>>     
> looking
>   
>> 	for some thing to control the equipments we have like routers
>> 	from some sort of suppliers, etc...
>> 	 
>> 	Marcio
>>     
> 	 
>
> Opsware Network Automation System does an excellent job. Not free. It
> also handles configuration management, software management, compliance,
> configuration policy management and other needs.	 
>
>   


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