Wednesday, September 15, 2010

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------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ It's time for another This Week in OpenNMS. I will be skipping next week's, as I'll be too busy sunning myself in the caribbean and hanging out with a bunch of rockin' bands on Ships and Dip V. Ahhhhh.... Project Updates --------------- - Stable: Current Release is 1.6.2 1.6.2 seems to be holding up nicely, although there have been some reports of issues with JMX thresholding that need to be investigated more deeply still. If you're having issues and can add some details to bug #2512, it would be appreciated: http://bugzilla.opennms.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2512 - Unstable: Current Release is 1.7.0 Trunk is still moving crazy fast, so hopefully we'll be getting another 1.7 release out there soon when a few things settle down, so people can help test. In the meantime, feel free to try the nightly snapshots (if it's not on a production system, of course). - Trunk: Acknowledgement Daemon Dave continues to make progress on Ackd in between crazy days at the TeleManagement Forum's Team Action Week (more on that later). Hopefully it will be ready for folks to test it out in the next few weeks. - Trunk: Inventory Daemon Fresh off the heady high of getting WMI support in trunk, Matt Raykowski has started work on on inventory daemon, which intends to provide a more flexible interface to systems asset and inventory information than our current (anemic) asset system. - Trunk: Provisiond Provisiond continues to progress towards something usable. Matt's been working on finishing the scanning code, and Matt and I both have spent some time this week making an optimized SNMP table tracker which will let us perform operations on collected SNMP data as it comes in, so scans of nodes with large numbers of interfaces will happen in a more timely manner. I also finished up this week a RESTful API to the Provisiond importer, which will let you edit and create model-import and foreign sources. The web UI is next, and will use this API for creating provisiond's configuration. - Trunk: RANCID Support Guglielmo continues to flesh out the RANCID API. Work has begun on the OpenNMS web UI side of the implementation, and small changes are still being made to the RANCID java bindings. - Trunk: Node Page Updates Donald continued his work on making the node page more dynamic. TeleManagement Forum's Team Action Week --------------------------------------- OpenNMS, represented by OGP members Craig Gallen and David Hustace, is participating this week at the TeleManagment Forum's (TMF) Team Action Week (TAW) in Lisbon. Craig is leading the TMF Interface Program (TIP) Reference Implementation (RI) team and we will be creating open source implementations of TIP interfaces starting with Service Problem Management (SPM). The artifacts created by the reference implementation team will be libraries that can be used to develop NGOSS-compliant components in service provider applications. OpenNMS has committed to working on the Service Problem Management (SPM) interface (Alarms), Inventory, Performance Management, and Trouble Ticket implementations. For more information see the interface program page on TMF's web site: http://www.tmforum.org/InterfaceProgram/5733/home.html Upcoming Events --------------- February 2nd-6th, 2009: OpenNMS training will be available through The OpenNMS Group in Milan, Italy. February 9th-13th, 2009: OpenNMS training will be available through The OpenNMS Group at the OpenNMS training facility in Pittsboro, NC. March 14th, 2009: OpenNMS User Conference Europe 2009 will be held in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. June 14th-19th, 2009: OpenNMS Dev-Jam 2009, the annual OpenNMS developers conference, will be in Minneapolis-St. Paul this year. For more information on training, go to: http://www.opennms.com/training.html For more information on the conference, see: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/OpenNMSUCE2009 For more information on Dev-Jam, see: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/Dev-Jam_2009 If you have anything to add to the events list, or you wish to be a Dev-Jam sponsor, please let me know. Cruisin' -------- That's it for now. We'll see you again, in a couple of weeks! As always, if you have questions, comments, or angry hate-filled missives to send, let me know. -- Benjamin Reed The OpenNMS Group http://www.opennms.org/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by: SourcForge Community SourceForge wants to tell your story. http://p.sf.net/sfu/sf-spreadtheword _______________________________________________ Please read the OpenNMS Mailing List FAQ: http://www.opennms.org/wiki/index.php?page=MailingListFaq opennms-announce mailing list To *unsubscribe* or change your subscription options, see the bottom of this page: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/opennms-announce Note that all my wonderings about these kinds of pubsub configuration would probably join (I think) those of Peter Saint Andr? about blog integration (though I open this discussion to all the pubsub system even though my main example is also about blogs). You can see the discussion in the april discussions of the social list: http://mail.jabber.org/pipermail/social/2008-April/000109.html One point of this discussion was to organize the pubsub nodes for a blog. For my own, I don't think this is the right question, because I think this should be implementation specific. Not everybody will have the same needs, so the organization of the nodes may be different and efficient depending on the cases (not everyone manages publication the same way). But what is important here is not the final organization, but the "tools" providden to the implementers. Currently the only "tools" are the possibility to organize in nodes, subnodes, etc. like in the whole file system history. This is necessary, but very weak as soon as you want advanced organization, with "stuffs" (the published items, but maybe even container nodes!) belonging to several categories (so a system of category and tag), or why not the possibilities of dynamic nodes (like you can do in http) generated depending on path or options, etc. Directory architecture is nice, especially because it is close to our "material classification system" (you cannot classify a single paper in several file, unless you copy it), but does not give all the "power" which is accessible with current technologies, especially computers. -- Jehan ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Jehan's Profile: http://www.jabberforum.org/member.php?userid=16911 View this thread: http://www.jabberforum.org/showthread.php?t=95 Hi all, In the spring I wrote an article describing and analyzing some of the statistics generated by my validator Nikita the Spider . I've written a followup based on new data which covers a little more ground. Since the first article was well-received, I thought you might like to know about the followup as well. http://NikitaTheSpider.com/articles/ByTheNumbers/fall2008.html Enjoy, -- Philip http://NikitaTheSpider.com/ Whole-site HTML validation, link checking and more