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The product does not rely on a software agent that must run on hosts it is monitoring, so that data can be pushed back to a central server. "Supported" means that an agent may be used, but is not mandatory. An SNMP daemon does not count as an agent. SNMP Able to retrieve and report on SNMP statistics. Syslog Able to receive and report on ...
In typical uses of SNMP, one or more administrative computers called managers have the task of monitoring or managing a group of hosts or devices on a computer network. Each managed system executes a software component called an agent that reports information via SNMP to the manager. An SNMP-managed network consists of three key components:
JManager: An open-source SNMP manager, written in Java. Capable of importing MIBs, support for IPv6. qtmib: An open source graphical MIB browser written in C++. It is built as a front-end for Net-SNMP. iReasoning MIB Browser: A graphical MIB browser, written in Java. Load MIB files and issue SNMP requests, available on Windows, OS X and Linux.
Net-SNMP is housed on SourceForge and is usually in the top 100 projects in the SourceForge ranking system. It was the March 2005 SourceForge Project of the Month. [1] It is very widely distributed and comes included with many operating systems including most distributions of Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, and OS X.
Java-based tool to deploy and configure applications distributed across multiple machines. There is no central server; you can deploy a .SF configuration file to any node and have it distributed to peer nodes according to the distribution information contained inside the deployment descriptor itself.
HP OpenView is the former name for a Hewlett-Packard product family that consisted of network and systems management products. In 2007, HP OpenView was rebranded as HP BTO (Business Technology Optimization) Software when it became part of the HP Software Division.
Network management allows IT professionals to monitor network components within large network area. Access methods include the SNMP, command-line interface (CLI), custom XML, CMIP, Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), Transaction Language 1 (TL1), CORBA, NETCONF, RESTCONF and the Java Management Extensions (JMX).
The Java Platform, Standard Edition ships with one connector, the RMI connector, which uses the Java Remote Method Protocol that is part of the Java remote method invocation API. This is the connector which most management applications use. Protocol adapters provide a management view of the JMX agent through a given protocol.