User friendly is a relative term. Forcing the use of a GUI is slow and not friendly to me. But I understand today's computer professionals have no concept of low level work, or understanding the inner workings of a computer or program.
It's inevitable that everything be point and click.
Whatever gui that we come up with I hope it has either bulk entry page, or a parser/upload function from a flat file.
Paul Root - Senior Engineer Managed Services Systems - CenturyLink
-----Original Message----- From: xymon-bounces at xymon.com [mailto:xymon-bounces at xymon.com] On Behalf Of Ulric Eriksson Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 9:43 AM To: xymon at xymon.com Subject: Re: [Xymon] Hand editing config files
Henrik Størner skrev 2012-06-13 23:04:
And it has made me consider the idea of using a database for storing at least some of the configuration - first of all the hosts.cfg configuration of hosts, IP-adresses and network tests. This would make some things simpler, others a bit more complex - "xymongrep", for instance - but would also make it a lot easier to provide a GUI for managing what hosts are being monitored.
Having users hand-edit text files makes Xymon a non-starter for many organizations. And as you mentioned, even someone who is familiar with Xymon makes mistakes. Storing the configuration in a database and creating a user friendly management interface is definitely the right way to go.
The whole thing can be bolted on to the existing code base with no changes to anything else. Just have the configuration system generate text configuration files in the same syntax as today and anybody who is able and willing to create the files manually can continue to do so.
FWIW, I think the lack of proper client/server functionality makes Sqlite unsuitable for the purpose.
Ulric
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