On Thu, 2005-06-09 at 07:41 +0200, Henrik Stoerner wrote:
When I pick up speed again, I haven't yet decided if I should go for the alert/acknowledge improvements that I've talked about for some time, or if I should tackle the issue of a Hobbit client and get that into a reasonable shape for the more common platforms. I have some ideas for a rather different client architecture than the current one, and the client is also *the* missing piece of the whole Hobbit puzzle - so I could be tempted to get that done. I'd like some feedback on what you find most urgent.
Personally, I'd most like to see a 'free' client (ie, GPL, without the BB license issue), and I'd also like to see *much* better SNMP support. ie, point it at a router, and it will automatically (or some tool) setup the various values to monitor (interfaces, byte counter thresholds, cpu, temperature, etc) or a switch, or firewall, or UPS, or whatever thingamabob you have lying around.
Beyond that, I would then go for more of the admin tools, like the bb-hosts editor recently being developed/released, and some other auto-discovery type tools.... This makes things easier for initial deployment/users who don't understand unix so much... But overall, if you make the right API, then other people can step in and make their own GUI tools...
Finally, what about some sort of compression/encryption protocol, so that it is possible to do more frequent test/report without using so much bandwidth? I know very little about these things, but the overhead does concern me somewhat, especially if you wanted to test every 30 seconds or something...
Regards, Adam