How about P.M. tool like this http://code.google.com/p/xymon/ ?
tj
On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 10:56 AM, Henrik Størner <henrik at hswn.dk> wrote:
On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 10:27:41AM -0500, TJ Yang wrote:
On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 9:44 AM, Tom Georgoulias <tomg at mcclatchyinteractive.com> wrote:
On 07/02/2010 05:47 AM, Neil Franken wrote:
Xymon is just one part of the equation for me. I see a lot of potential for Xymon in the Windows world but the BBWin client is well a very quiet project as well. I am not sure yet if we would maybe fork the code or create a new client. At this point I would suggest that maybe we look at a Java based client for xymon so we can run on a huge variety of platforms with one client. Anyway the whole client is a whole different ball game.
I would not be in favor of a java based client, the current design is much better on unix systems. It's one of the reasons xymon works well.
I can understand why Neil has this idea, it flashed in brain before. Why not write once and run every where ?
One very simple reason: The client needs to know about the specifics of the operating system it is running on - that's the whole purpose of having a client! Java tries very hard to isolate the underlying OS from the apps running inside the JVM, which runs counter to this.
In other words - when you want to report on metrics specific to the OS, it doesn't really make sense to use an OS-agnostic tool.
Another reason is that the client shouldn't require a lot of additional software besides what comes with the OS. And the output from the OS-specific tools will be well known to the admins who are going to use the data from Xymon.
Regards, Henrik
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