tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590049888603730046.post6778954699855578805..comments2024-03-23T01:52:16.625-05:00Comments on Dougie's Enterprise Management World: SNMP MIBs and Data and Information ModelsDougie!!!http://www.blogger.com/profile/07830195240787895276noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590049888603730046.post-80156463592657655042010-07-15T03:53:43.358-05:002010-07-15T03:53:43.358-05:00Dougie,
With respect to following in this post, I...Dougie,<br /><br />With respect to following in this post, I have a small comment to make:<br /><br />>>><br />Lets say you have a simple 3 tier Web enabled application that consists of a Web Server, and application Server, and a Database. On the periphery, you have network components, firewalls, switches, etc. How valuable is just the lineage? Now, if I can overlay information elements on this ontology, it comes alive. For example, show me a graph of CPU performance on everything in the lineage. Add in memory and IO utilization. If I can overlay response times for application transactions, the picture becomes indispensable as an aid to situation awareness.<br /><br />>>><br /><br />That would be pretty powerful, agree.<br />btw, for multiple consolidated applications running on a single server (phy or virt), you can get such a consolidated resource usage picture (minus the response time and application transaction) at a very fine grained level, per application - CPU, memory, disk and network I/O. Take a look at Silverline http://silverline.librato.com<br /><br />Disclosure: I work with the Silverline team at libratosshalini@librato.comhttp://silverline.librato.comnoreply@blogger.com