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    Systems Manageability Part 7 - Log Management and Analysis
    by kishi on August 07, 2007

    This blog includes open-source technology directed primarily at host-based logging, log file rotation and log file analysis. Many of these tools are very common free and open-source software tools that are distributed and preconfigured with most of the major Linux systems, including major vendors such as RedHat and Novell. ... more

    • Tuesday, August 07, 2007
    • in: Community
    • kishi
    Systems Manageability Part 6: Patch Management and Online Updates
    by kishi on June 29, 2007

    This is blog number six in the Systems Manageability Series. Patch Management and Maintenance focuses on those solutions available to deploy and install software update on Linux systems, with a primary focus on Novell based Linux systems...... more

    Systems Manageability Part Five: Monitoring
    by kishi on June 21, 2007

    This is Part 5, continuation of the series of 8 blogs I’m doing on Systems Manageability. In this specific blog, I will focus on and explain the third part of the “ontology” which is “Monitoring”...... more

    • Thursday, June 21, 2007
    • in: Community
    • kishi
    Systems Manageability Part 4: Systems Configuration
    by kishi on May 25, 2007

    System Configuration and Management encompasses all tasks related to the configuration of a host in a standardized and (when possible) centralized way. Many projects in this category provide a common configuration interface, either command-line or GUI-based, designed to ease typical administrative tasks. Other projects, specifically Cfengine, provide a higher level policy-based system to provide... more

    Systems Manageability Part 3 - Provisioning and Deployment
    by kishi on May 03, 2007

    Deployment and Provisioning as we understand it, encompasses all tasks related to the initial installation of an operating system on remote system, as well as post-installation of software on a remote system. Much of these toolsets are geared toward automated system provisioning and cloning. There’s lots of different tools out there that can be used but we have focused on the most popular ones, namely... more

    Systems Manageability – Part 2: Scope, Methodology and Ontology
    by kishi on April 06, 2007

    In my last blog called “Why Manageability Matters” I talked about why we chose to work on “Systems Manageability” as a whole and get a grassroots understanding of it within the context of Linux and Open Source space. In this blog, I’m going to address the Methodology and Ontology of the Systems Manageability project. This will shed immediate light on how we approach, design and implement projects in... more

    Systems Manageability - Part 1: Why Manageability Matters
    by kishi on March 21, 2007

    This is the 19th year I have spent in the Information Technology business, out of which more than 15 were spent designing and implementing IT environments of various scopes, platforms and sizes. Among several similarities and differences between each implementation, a few constants always emerged, and my favorite of all: Systems Manageability...... more

    Infrastructure Management and Strategic Design: Part 4 – Service Management Frameworks
    by jcannon on August 01, 2006

    Today, the IT departments offering and managing various IT Services might find themselves in what I would call a “pressure-cooker”. They are faced with a multitude of tasks and added pressure to maintain daily operations while driving efficacy, managing the growing complexity of Service Offerings and most importantly, doing so while keeping pace with the industry best practices. This has been one of... more

    • Tuesday, August 01, 2006
    • in: Community
    • jcannon
    Infrastructure Management and Strategic Design: Part 3
    by jcannon on July 11, 2006

    A simple question that has always perplexed me is how software and hardware OEM’s across the world simulate heterogeneous environments under lab conditions. I have witnessed several different approaches, practices and stages of this adaptation and each one of them is unique and correct in its right and merit. I guess, that leaves the “big” question which remains unanswered i.e., how do you bring a... more

    • Tuesday, July 11, 2006
    • in: Community
    • jcannon
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