[hobbit] Estimating hardware needs for Hobbit server

Dean Casey dcasey at pathfire.com
Tue Jul 3 16:18:08 CEST 2007


I'm hosting Hobbit on a 420R right now, monitoring 500+ hosts - 1gb RAM
2x 450-MHz cpu's. On this server, the Hobbit server, client binaries and
data files are all NFS-mounted. In our environment, the system is
clustered but everything normally runs on one side (this box).

Nineteen of the monitored systems have the client installed, set up to
report all default data (test columns) plus two custom tests. The same
420R also runs HPOV SNMP discovery (Network Node Manager 6.1) since I
can't convince the powers that-be to drop that expensive product, even
though hobbit + devmon will do nearly all of what we use hpov for in our
environment; Veritas Cluster 4.1; a small custom-written in-house
application; two small static web sites (in addition to the Hobbit
dynamic web site); a number of small cron job perl and shell scripts;
and daily rsync jobs of /etc/aliases, a custom scripts directory, and a
couple of ".profile" files. 

The system only has 1gb of physical RAM, and uses nearly all of that all
the time (but that doesn't cause any problems on the Solaris OS). CPU
utilization is usually well under 10%, with occasional spikes to 15-18%.

In my experience a 420-R should be more than enough muscle to run
Hobbit, even in a fairly complex environment with several hundred
servers monitored.  

Dean Casey 

________________________________

From: White, Bruce [mailto:bewhite at fellowes.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 9:19 AM
To: 'hobbit at hswn.dk'
Subject: RE: [hobbit] Estimating hardware needs for Hobbit server

 

If you put hobbit on that E420R, you'll have more then enough to monitor
your environment.  I have my hobbit server on an HP- RP5400 2x540 MHz -
6 GB ram.  I'm monitoring 311 "hosts" (90 printers, 12 HPUX/Linux
machines and the windows servers).  The hobbit server has been averaging
54% idle and a .7 load over the last 4 months.  Most of the monitoring
on the windows servers is not via the hobbit client but via SNMP walking
the HP Insight manager MIB on the windows server.  So the hobbit server
is doing most of that work.

 

   .....Bruce

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Haertig, David F (Dave) [mailto:haertig at avaya.com] 
Sent: Monday, July 02, 2007 5:50 PM
To: hobbit at hswn.dk
Subject: [hobbit] Estimating hardware needs for Hobbit server

 

Hi -

 

I'm currently running my Hobbit server/Apache on Linux-based Dell
Dimension desktop with the following:

 

# grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo
MemTotal:      2075380 kB
# grep name /proc/cpuinfo
model name      : Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.40GHz
#

It's not even breathing hard.  It's just sitting there idle for the most
part.  (CPU load 0.02, physical mem used 35%, real mem 12%, nothing ever
swapped)

 

I found some older Sun hardware in the lab that I'm considering using as
a replacement, but I don't know how it's specs would compare.  I'm not
familiar with Sun/Sparc hardware all that much.  Can anyone comment on
if what I've scrounged up might be adequate?  At most, I'd expect to
eventually monitor several dozen servers, but probably no more than 100.

 

Ultra 5

Ultra 10 (350 MGz, 512 MB RAM)

E420R (2  - 450 MHz CPUs, 2 GB RAM)

 

Thanks!



----------------------------------------------------

Note: The information contained in this message may be privileged and
confidential and protected from disclosure. If the reader of this
message is not the intended recipient, or an employee or agent
responsible for delivering this message to the intended recipient, you
are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of
this communication is strictly prohibited. If you have received this
communication in error, please notify us immediately by replying to the
message and deleting it from your computer. Thank you. Fellowes, Inc.

----------------------------------------------------

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.xymon.com/pipermail/xymon/attachments/20070703/8131fdc0/attachment.html>


More information about the Xymon mailing list