From: Tarus B. <ta...@op...> - 2006-06-08 14:45:10
|
Gang: It is with great pleasure that I get to announce the availability of OpenNMS 1.2.8, the next release in the stable branch of OpenNMS. There are a lot of nifty features in this release, but in keeping with the philosophy of the production version of OpenNMS, they should not impact any of the current functionality. What will impact the current functionality is a number of bug fixes that should make OpenNMS even more stable. Most of the new features were back-ported from the development branch. Probably the biggest news is support for Nagios plug-ins, both through the Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE) and the Net-Saint Client (NSClient) for Windows. We get the question "how do you compare to Nagios" at pretty much every conference we attend, so we are happy to be able to provide access to the great work Ethan Galstad and his team have done with that application. Remember, while in some cases we may compete with Nagios, they are not our enemies, and if anything they drive us to build a better product. Speaking of other open source projects, if you like the RRD "zoom" feature in Cacti, we've implemented it in OpenNMS (specifically, "Bonsai: A more user friendly zoom function for Cacti", by Eric Steffen - Eric, if you read this, drop me a note and I'll send you an OpenNMS shirt). Now when you look at a graph or a collection of graphs for a device, you should see that the graph is a link (it will probably have a blue border around it). Click on the graph and it will bring up a new page. Now you can click and drag your mouse over an area of the graph and it will "zoom" in. You can repeat the process. To zoom out, just hit the "back" button on your browser. Thanks to the folks at Cacti for the code we borrowed for most of this. We also now support Tomcat version 5. Some of you, especially those on SuSE or Debian, can now use the version of Tomcat that ships with your distribution. Personally, I have had a hard time trying to install Tomcat5 from RPMs, so I usually stick with Tomcat4, but we now support both. It's all about choice (grin). We also support some new parameters in events and notifications. % assetdescr% will include the description and %assetcomment% will include the comment field. %logmsg% did not actually work, so we fixed that. Finally, there is now a way to monitor ISDN backup links (or other links) that are in a "bad" state when they respond to a ping, and are "good" when they are down. We added an option to the IcmpMonitor to invert the response. For more details, see the release notes here: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/Official_Documentation In other news, we are having our yearly developer's conference in Minnesota at the end of July. It's a week long code-fest that should move us closer to OpenNMS 2.0. For information see: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/DevJam2006 I will also be teaching a one day seminar on Monday, August 14th in San Francisco. This is the day before LinuxWorld Expo, although we are not planning on having a booth this year. Drop me a note if you are interested and I'll let you know when the details are finalized. Finally, if you haven't gotten enough of me running my mouth in these e-mails or in support, check out the blogs: http://blogs.opennms.org and thank you once again for your support of OpenNMS. -T P.S. Like OpenNMS? Send us a card: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/WallOfCards Really like OpenNMS? Check out the wishlist: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/WishList ----- Tarus Balog The OpenNMS Group, Inc. Main : +1 919 533 0160 Fax: +1 503-961-7746 Direct: +1 919 647 4749 Skype: tarusb Key Fingerprint: 8945 8521 9771 FEC9 5481 512B FECA 11D2 FD82 B45C |