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SPAM Client Installation - HOWTO PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 05 May 2006 18:57
SPAM  
SPAM Client Installation - HOWTO
  1. download the SPAM client 
  2. gunzip the downloaded package
  3. Install the .bff package either through SMIT (a), or command line (b)
      • a. `smitty install`
      • b.  `installp -aYd package_file_name.bff all`
  4. edit the client configuration file to include the appropriate server, and whether the client should push to the server.
      • `vi /opt/spam2/config/spam2.conf`
      • edit the "cvsroot" configuration line to reflect a valid CVS repository
        1. i.e. "cvsroot = :pserver:root@localhost:2403/opt/spam2/cvs/ServerChanges"
      • edit the "cvsPush" line to equal "1", "on", or "true"
        1. i.e. "cvsPush = 1"
  5. execute the client command manually to verify successful configuration
      • `/opt/spam2/spam2`

This is just a quick HOWTO, so if you experience problems with these steps feel free to contact us directly.

Last Updated on Thursday, 11 May 2006 05:08
 
What is SPAM? PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 04 May 2006 19:50

SPAM

SPAM (Systematic Program for Analytics and Monitoring) is an IBM ServerProven application used for operating system compliance.  SPAM was built specifically for UNIX to collect and store all operating system level attributes.

 SPAM is made up of the following modules: Changes, Comparisons (using Server-2-Server comparison technology), and Extraction.

SPAM considers that all OS level attributes fall into one of the following categories:

 volume groups logical volumes
 physical volumes paging space
 file systems NFS
 packages system files
 devices network
 print queues tunables
 system attributes users
 NIM groups
 processes RSCT

Based on these logical groups, SPAM is able to execute tasks against the collected data that may be otherwise difficult.  Some of the functions available through the application are comparisons between operating systems, and extraction of attributes from operating systems.

Changes are stored per host based on the above logical groups.  Each change is recorded, and available for historical reporting.  Changes that occur within a single OS image are tracked, and comparable.  Easy to read colored output provides a simple, but sophisticated view into individual changes.

Comparisons are based on an OS-to-OS data compare, that reports all differences.  Included with the application are some obvious exclusions that will always register as differences (such as serial numbers, etc.), but exclusions can also be included at runtime.  The comparison output provides a comprehensive report of differences as they relate to the logical groups listed above.

Extractions are based on a complete data parse relevant to the logical groups above.  Strings, or regular expression is used to extract keys, or values from the stored OS attributes.  The application includes some commonly used regular expressions (such as firmware, network media speed, etc.), but expressions can be customized at runtime.  The extraction output provides a consistently comprehensive report of the requested data.

Some additional functionality planned for SPAM:  expand the 1-to-1 limitation of the comparison, and execute a compliance reconcilation that would apply a configuration back to a system if desired.

Sincall Technologies is an IBM Business Partner focused on founding software upon leading edge technology.

Currently SPAM runs on, and is Server Proven for, AIX.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 May 2006 08:15
 
SPAM v2.2 released PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 22 September 2005 18:00

SPAM v2.2 released (certified for AIX 5.2 & 5.3)

Some new features include:

  • Web interface for server-side configuration, reports, compares, and extractions (beta)
  • Better collection and storing of system routing table
  • Collection of hdisk LTG size
  • Better comparison exclusions
  • Ability to compare systems located on different SPAM servers (remote compare)

5.3 specific additions
  • Usage of fixmgr
  • Collection of LVMO information
  • Collection of SUMA configuration

Please register for access to the downloads area.
 
SPAM v2.1.1 released PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 29 January 2005 18:00

SPAM v2.1.1 has been released for AIX 5.1 & 5.2.

v2.1.1 has the following new features:

1)   Increased debug level
2)   EMC powerpath and ESS device querying
3)   Platform specific hardware information
4)   NFS export and mount details
5)   RPMs now included in LPP report
6)   Greater eFix detail
7)   IPSEC filters now included in Ethernet report
8)   New NIM report for Network Install Manager configuration
9)   Expanded print queue detail
10)  SRC Subsystems now included in Process report
11)  New SysFile report for common system configuration files
12)  Multiple additions to common system attributes in System report
13)  Update to User and Group collection to handle long names
14)  Updated some collector CVS path issues
15)  Updated comparer with command-line override for mail recipients
16)  Updated comparer's report to contain host links

 

Please check the Downloads section for the new Client/Server packages.

 
SPAM v2.1 released PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 08 November 2004 18:00

SPAM v2.1 has been tested and packaged for AIX v5.2. 
(a client/server build for AIX v5.1, will be available soon)

v2.1 has the following new features:

1)  new user module to collect user and group information
2)  new "modules" parameter in spam2.conf.  This allows the configuration to specify what is collected.
3)  collection ouputs to XML, in addition to plain text.
4)  new "mailToSunday" parameter in spam2rpt.conf.  This allows a list of email addresses to only receive the weekly reports.
5)  new spam2comp that utilizes XML output, providing significantly better comparisons

 

Please check the Downloads section for the new Client/Server packages.

Last Updated on Thursday, 04 May 2006 21:33
 
SPAM v2 - Quick Start PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 08 November 2004 18:00
If you're interested in a SPAM proof-of-concept, check out the SPAM v2 Client & Server quick start guides located in the FAQ section.
 
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