Monday, November 05, 2007

Monitoring the network (and more) with OpenNMS

A thread on Pubtech about SNMP management prompted me to do a little searching on IT infrastructure monitoring and notification. Intermapper has been around for a while, but I didn't feel like hassling with trial serial numbers to try it out since it is commercial software. I did find a great project called OpenNMS. This is open source, free software, and it does a lot. It has been under development for several years and has been implemented in a number of large-scale IT shops. The newest versions have a ton of useful features, and there is a great web front end for managing the app. On the flip side, it was very difficult for me to install set up. Some of that I brought upon myself. I chose to install it on an Ubuntu server, which didn't have anyone to keep the opennms packages up-to-date like the RedHat folks do. I also chose to use the development version because it was said to be feature rich and stable, but I couldn't find precompiled installation packages for Ubuntu. So I downloaded the sources and compiled it myself. Since I had very little experience with that process, it took me a few tries to get all the dependencies worked out. I was ultimately successful, and it runs great. I notice that as of the 1.3.8 release there are packages available for Debian based distributions. Should make installation much easier.

The next hurdle was collecting SNMP data on some of our broadcast equipment. To add the correct SNMP OID's, I had to edit some XML files by hand, which, because of my lack of experience with the software, took a few tries to get right. I also had to edit other text files to build reports visualizing the new data that was being gathered. But, in the end, it still works great, and I can monitor data on generic network equipment as well as some special purpose hardware, like EbNo on our ContentDepot receivers, RSSI on our wireless link to the transmitter and more.

Even better, OpenNMS can send email, page, text message, even IM, if a value gets out of range. This makes it useful for getting notification if there is snow in the sat dish or interference to the wireless link or even if the transmitter shuts down. It can even be integrated into trouble ticket management software, like BestPractical RT. I really like this software and am looking forward to rolling it out for production use.

My next experiment will be to use the HTTP collection agent to pull data from our Burk ARC16 running Autopilot. I have never liked their data storage and reporting functions, so I think it would be neat to integrate the metrics like that into a system-wide monitoring app like OpenNMS. Now that I think of it, I could even turn status alarms into OpenNMS events. Back to work I go.

2 comments:

John McMellen said...

A user has posted a very good review of OpenNMS at http://technocrat.watson-wilson.ca/blosxom/computer/onmsreview.html

This article is a good overview of the system and how it works as of version 1.3.9. I highly recommend reading it if you want to learn a little more about the software before trying it.

Sushant sapra said...

i am new to linux (have intalled ubuntu) and i want to work on OpenNMS.

Please guide me. I want to make a IP adds monitoring software.

From where can i download the OpenNMS software and how to start. please post some links and your valuable guidance.

Thanking You
sushant sapra