+1 for Opsview.�

I have a�reasonable�amount of�experience�with it of late, It ticks most of the boxes mentioned here. For those of you who�aren't�aware - it's basically Nagios on steroids. Full commercial support is�available or there is a community edition with almost all of the features in the commercially supported version. It has a data warehouse built in, supports multiple distributed monitoring points, SNMP Traps can be handled via passive checks, a neat web interface, android client, built in reports and a REST API that works really well. �

The commercially supported version also integrates with RANCID, Jasper reports and has a service desk connector (integrates with RT and such).

http://www.opsview.com/community/compare-opsview

Oh they have a module for puppet too :)


On 30 August 2011 22:28, Geraint Jones <geraint@c10kconsulting.com> wrote:
OpsView.

That is all.

From: Jonathan Brewer <jon.brewer@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2011 22:18:02 +1200
To: <nznog@list.waikato.ac.nz>
Subject: [nznog] Nagios vs. OpenNMS vs. SomethingElse

Hi Folks,

If you had it all to do over again, what would you use for network monitoring: Nagios, OpenNMS, or something else entirely?

I care about availaility, latency, loss, jitter, and trap handling for interface up/down, loss of power, etc. Sensible behavior in situations where parent routers/links are flapping is also important.

I would very much appreciate input from folks monitoring 1000+ network elements.

Cheers,

Jon

-------------------------------------
+64 27 502 8230
http://about.me/jonbrewer
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