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Linux Software

BBC Increases Usage of Linux 23

JediGeek writes "The BBC signed a deal to use BMC Software's Patrol product suite to manage computers running Linux. The BBC said it would use BMC's Patrol for the next five years to improve the availability, performance and recoverability of its core applications and data. The article can be found at Yahoo "
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BBC increase usage of Linux

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  • Now, if only the American broadcasting companies would take note. But I guess they're a bit slow on the draw...
  • The headline refers to "Linux Patrol" but the article implies that it is an application suite that supports a wide variety of platforms.

    Is anyone familiar with Patrol?
  • Anybody know if BMC is releasing a Linux Patrol port for general consumption?
    This would be very tempting. I have even thought about sending my resume to BMC
    but never knew they had any interest in Linux....
    #include "disclaim.h"
    "All the best people in life seem to like LINUX." - Steve Wozniak
  • Well Patrol is a nifty little application/process monitoring system which has been around since the big machine and off late it has made a good impact on clusters and smaller networks.

    the beauty of the systems monitoring market is that they all have been working with one another very nicely on the OS and Applications level without many people knowing what is going on.
  • Well i am Patrol Consultant, and have been running it in NT under VMWARE (http://www.vmware.com) in a LINUX Notebook. Frankely i have had enough reboots of the system.

    I have been pretty successful considering that i am running it under NT. Well with Patrol for LINUX goodby to NT. I am up and running and my conviction on LINUX seems to be paying off. I think i will this to my BOSS for a raise :)

    Way to go LINUX

    May the source be with us :)
  • Might I assume that by

    good to see they're improv[first post!]ing

    you mean that you consider their use of Linux and/or Linux Patrol (name?) and improvement? If so, then yes. However, a _great_ improvement would be for them to solely use Linux... IMHO anyway.

    appears you weren't the first post after all, eh?
  • I have even thought about sending my resume to BMC but never knew they had any interest in Linux....

    I haven't seen any news of linux ports for Patrol other than the BBC story, but it wouldn't be too suprising for BMC to start pushing linux ports, considering that Tivoli is making noise about supporting linux.

  • Most other Broadcasting companies don't have a web site/team as large as the BBC's. They might use Linux and you'd never hear about it.

    The BBC Online team actively encourage the replacement of NT (the default) with Linux on your workstation if it will help your productivity. Now if only I could find that Mandrake 6.0 cd I had lying around... :)

    perl -e 'print scalar reverse q(\)-: ,hacker Perl another Just)'
  • I have been pretty successful considering that i am running it under NT. Well with Patrol for LINUX goodby to NT.


    Don't get too excited ... If you are going to support KMs on both NT and *nix machines there may be a *lot* of porting issues, depending on what sort of stuff you are doing.

    Check out Enterprise Application Management with PATROL by David Spuler for some of the porting issues.

  • BBC Online are a pretty traditional Apache/Solaris/Oracle shop for most (public facing) things.

    They do, however, have some Linux in development positions and a lot of it doing things like file/print/DNS/dhcp.

    I was told only a couple of weeks ago that BBC1 would probably be off-air within a few hours of their Linux boxes getting pulled. It may not be powering their Oracle boxes yet, but that still sounds pretty mission-critical to me...

    Matthew
    - just finished a www project [bbc.co.uk] with the BBC.

  • Actually, there was a news article a while back about how MSNBC had to switch all their systems back from NT to Unix because NT just wasn't cutting it. Anyone know if that's still the case?
  • Not sure. I found it hilarious when I discovered that www.microsoft.com was being run on Solaris. Is it still?
    That kind of made me wonder... If NT is so great, why isn't Microsoft using it to run their high-traffic site? hhhmmmm?????
  • Anyway why don't u tinker around the KM and instead of shifting to the OS try working with the processes() function is PSL.

    So far I have customized 10 BMC KM to really be platform independent. None of them have a system() call

  • Right, but this is atleast a start. Si far i have converted 2 of BMC's major KM's to work across platform.

    I have removed all system() calls from the KM's and have only used PSL function to achieve it. Yeah it was a painful effort, but it was worth it. Also PSL is not really that big a programming language. It has along way to go for that. But still most of the Maintenence tasks could be taken care of.
  • Patrol is a product for managing system resources network-wide. The basic idea is that you run "Patrol Agents" on each machine you want to monitor, and each agent loads "Knowledge Modules" which tell the agent what resources to monitor, and how to monitor them.

    You connect up to each agent with a "Patrol Console", and from there you can view the status of the agent, and the resources it monitors.

    There is SNMP support built in, and agents can talk to each other.

    I'm currently writing a KM for Patrol (I dont work for BMC) and have my own opinions of coding under the Patrol "environment" *ahem*

    You can check out BMC's description of Patrol here [bmc.com]. I work for these guys [zeh.com]

  • Don't think he meant the tv broadcasting part of the operation ... :)

  • I didn't start using Linux or FreeBSD because I hate Microsoft. I did want a more stable platform, however, - I managed to crash my system during almost every session when I was trying to program in Visual Basic 5. I use Linux and FreeBSD because I find them much more interesting. They come with a slew of applications, particularly for development, (I don't have to spend days downloading tons of shareware to make my system interesting) and for all the power of having a Unix-like workstation on my desktop my modest hardware is very responsive. And I get all this for $1.99 at Cheapbytes? Hatred's not the motivation - I'm in heaven!

    :)

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

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