Hi,
does something like the SUSE/Novell ntsutils (previously called "supportconfig") or Microsoft's MPS Reports exist for CentOS or Red Hat Enterprise Linux? I mean a program that reads and exports various configurations and parameters to facilitate technical support.
Thorsten
On Feb 16, 2008 3:37 PM, Thorsten Kampe thorsten@thorstenkampe.de wrote:
Hi,
does something like the SUSE/Novell ntsutils (previously called "supportconfig") or Microsoft's MPS Reports exist for CentOS or Red Hat Enterprise Linux? I mean a program that reads and exports various configurations and parameters to facilitate technical support.
There's sosreport in centos 5.1, formerly sysreport in previous versions. It reports on a variety of things and will even package up configs so that support folks can see what the user has.
* Jim Perrin (Sat, 16 Feb 2008 15:52:02 -0500)
On Feb 16, 2008 3:37 PM, Thorsten Kampe thorsten@thorstenkampe.de wrote:
does something like the SUSE/Novell ntsutils (previously called "supportconfig") or Microsoft's MPS Reports exist for CentOS or Red Hat Enterprise Linux? I mean a program that reads and exports various configurations and parameters to facilitate technical support.
There's sosreport in centos 5.1, formerly sysreport in previous versions. It reports on a variety of things and will even package up configs so that support folks can see what the user has.
Thanks a lot...
On Sat, 16 Feb 2008, Thorsten Kampe wrote:
does something like the SUSE/Novell ntsutils (previously called "supportconfig") or Microsoft's MPS Reports exist for CentOS or Red Hat Enterprise Linux? I mean a program that reads and exports various configurations and parameters to facilitate technical support.
The 'sysreport' aka 'sos' package does this to some extent; as SuSE and Microsoft each use a unifying tool (YAST2, and the .msc <old memories, I forget?> tools) to manage a central registry and then to 'flow' the configurations out so services and applications, the concept is more applicable on those platforms for a reporting add on; simply 'tarring' /etc/ catches the essential configuration files on RH derived systems.
-- Russ Herrold