Chocolate Town Redux

I’m back in Hershey, PA this week. The last time I was here I saw the “Kiss Kar”,

so I thought it was ironic that while driving down the road last week in my small town of Pittsboro, NC I came across the Oscar Mayer “Wienermobile“.

Are there any cars like this that I’m missing? The Antique Automobile Club of America is having their Fall Meet this week so I’m sure to see some interesting rides before I leave.

In OpenNMS news, we are one coding bug away from 1.5.97, the 1.6.0 release candidate. We should be releasing next week so that 1.6.0 is still on target for the end of October. w00t.

Europe 2008: Busted flat in Baton Rouge Menthonnex-en-Bornes

Well, my body finally gave up on me. After 8 days and a total of 37 hours of sleep, I just crashed at Alex’s house yesterday.

I was beat and running a fever, so I took 500mg of Bayer aspirin and went to sleep. I’m still not 100%, but today is the last day I have with clients until Friday, so I hope to be able to get back to normal over the next couple of days.

Welcome India!

Well, that didn’t take long. While we have been working with companies in India for some time, The OpenNMS Group just signed up our first commercial client in that country.

I’m writing this from CPH airport in Denmark after a wonderful weekend in Norway, so perhaps one of those two countries will join the other 16 soon.

[Norway trip update coming as soon as I can get it all down]

Welcome Malta!

The OpenNMS Group has added a new country to our list of clients. A company in Malta has purchased support. They join the USA, Canada, Mexico, Singapore, Japan, Australia, Israel, Denmark, France, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, Italy and Trinidad.

Who will be number 16?

(grin)

Bubba's Insurance Chooses OpenNMS Enterprise Edition®

NETWORK WEEK MAGAZINE – by Dennis Dubious

The dark horse open source management platform OpenNMS has definitely shot to the front of the pack with its recently announced Enterprise Edition® and unprecedented 1 vigintillionth download, so we decided to check it out.

Finding the offices of the OpenNMS Group wasn’t so easy. First you have to find Pittsboro, North Carolina, and once in this small town, the local Post Office. The OpenNMS building is behind the Post Office across a small bridge spanning some moat-like ponds.

view of OpenNMS office building

We met with Tarus Balog, CEO, Poobah Emeritus and Knight Exemplar of the OpenNMS Group, and we asked if he could name any of his clients that actually use OpenNMS.

“We have numerous and prestigious clients, far too numerous and prestigious to name,” said Balog. When pressed he told us to hop in the truck and he took us to visit Bubba’s Insurance.

Bubba’s Insurance is the largest business in central, eastern Bynum, North Carolina. Bubba Estill, the sole proprietor, wasn’t at his office, but we caught up with him fishing off of Robeson Creek.

When asked about OpenNMS, Estill replied, “OpenMNS? Never heard of it.” When pressed, he looked at Balog, who winked and then he continued, “Oh, that? Yeah, I like it a lot. I got me a good deal on it too. I knowed that this feller needed customers so I had ’em. Surfing for porn has never been faster”.

With that Estill went back to his fishing, pretty much refusing to answer questions about the size of his network or the type of equipment he used, although when asked what type of router he has he replied “Ryobi”.

Balog looked pleased with the interview, but we wanted more. When pressed to name a customer that someone might of actually have heard of, he told us that they had a number of customers that were well known, but he couldn’t tell us who there are. However, he suggested a game of charades where we could guess their names.

After ten minutes of wild gesticulations devolving into grunting noises (somewhat in violation of the spirit of the game) we left after he started to disrobe.

We did manage to find one OpenNMS user from a company that is a household name in the US. Christopher Rodman spoke to us under the condition that we wouldn’t reveal the name of his employer.

“We’ve been using OpenNMS for a number of years,” Rodman said, “and we are quite happy with it. Since a lot of our business comes from the Internet these days, it is important that we are able to take those orders, and OpenNMS insures that our network is running at 100%”.

When asked why he didn’t publicly disclose his company’s use of OpenNMS, Rodman told us, “Well, quite frankly we’ve never been asked. I suppose it could be done, but we’d have to get approval from the higher ups and it’s just more of a hassle. You know, it’s kinda nice that they don’t brag about us on their website, etc. because it makes us feel more like a partner than some kind of ‘show dog’ to be trotted out and displayed. Also, we’re not sure we want to be associated with that Balog guy. Have you ever seen him play charades?”

It seems that OpenNMS has at least one loyal user, and this reporter can only wonder how successful the project could be without its somewhat eccentric administrator. In any case, it is a project to keep an eye on, but be ready to quickly look away.

RTC Improvements

As OpenNMS is enterprise-grade, the goal is to be able to monitor tens of thousands of devices. While I can’t speak for the community as a whole, at the OpenNMS Group we have a couple of clients in the 40,000 device range on a single server.

We are working with one of them in Geneva, and we ran into a problem. With 40K+ nodes and 29 categories, the Real Time Console (RTC) was taking almost 4 hours to start. David and Matt went to work on optimizing the code, and they were able to show some improvement:

Previous RTC code init time: 3 hours 47 minutes

Current RTC code init time: 1 minute 19 seconds

w00t!

This is in HEAD now, but I am going to see about porting it back to stable.