Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Iron inventory
Advise how you can take inventory of iron during installation and subsequent operation.
I think that in the advanced version, a barcode scanner is needed when assembling iron in order to know where and what and the base with keeping track of the components in it.
In a simpler version - linux agent, which gives a detailed report on the components used. Or a dmesg data parser.
What do you recommend?
Thanks in advance!
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Depends on opportunities, infrastructure and wishes. Those. what you are going to inventory. Will it be only computers or also network equipment. Will there be PCs running only Windows or other OSes (lincus, poppy). What t.s. depth you are going to inventory. Should there be a notification and reporting system. Well, and important: do you want to make a completely free solution or are you ready to use commercial products?
You see, these are the questions that arose immediately.
In other words, if you want to build a competent system, then, at a minimum, outline the scope of the project and its budget.
I used IT Inventory - I was satisfied. There is everything you need, a free version for 200 records of each type.
I especially liked the manual inventory (with a barcode scanner), the ability to print ready-made transfer/issuance acts, etc.
When there was a need, they used the CheckCfg complex . Convenient interface, data collection agents for both windows and linux.
Based on the Active Directory inventory, I wrote my bike a set of scripts, then it went to csv -> Excel -> Visio
From known bugs, WinXP gives out the Core iX processor line as Pentium III Xeon via WMI, until I noticed the motherboard model.
in the real world, of course, it can be developed before the linux inventory.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question