1 / 18

Configuration Management A Practical Guide

Configuration Management A Practical Guide. Nofil Fawad Nofil@ngtsoft.com (408) 218-6664. Configuration Management. Benefits It is the glue that ties Service Management processes effectively Key Enabler Better Incident Management Effective Problem Management Proper Change Management

bardia
Download Presentation

Configuration Management A Practical Guide

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Configuration ManagementA Practical Guide NofilFawad Nofil@ngtsoft.com (408) 218-6664

  2. Configuration Management • Benefits • It is the glue that tiesService Management processes effectively • Key Enabler • Better Incident Management • Effective Problem Management • Proper Change Management • Efficient Event Management • Accurate Cost Management • Accurate Capacity Management • Enables Automated Release and Deployment • Asset Management (HAM, SAM) • Service Level Management • Service Request Automation

  3. Configuration Management SystemCMS (CMDB) • Effective Configuration Management requires • Configuration Management System • Contains all the Configuration Items (CIs ) • Maintains a meaningful set of attributes and relations for each CI • Seamless Integration with other SM processes • Continuously updated CMS • A well defined Service CI Model • A well defined Configuration Management Process • Tools to manage and maintain CIs • Effective Reporting Capabilities • Right sized Service Models • Process /Service Requirements to CI Mapping(Class, Attribute and Relationship)

  4. Why is it so difficult? • Developing a CMS is too Complex • No Standardized CMS Models • IT Environments are becoming increasingly complex • No one tool that does all • Requires continued analysis, development and integration

  5. CMDB Survey

  6. Service Layer Service Design Business Service Technical Service Component 1 Component 2 Component 1 Component 2 CMDB Configuration / Provisioning Layer Tools + Automation Product Catalog Service Applications Discovery Layer Tools and/or Data Sources Servers NetGear Storage fa Clients Active Directory Outlook Exchange Hardware + some attributes Applications + some attributes Base “Informal” Relationships

  7. Who Should Implement?

  8. Large Number of CIs • A reasonably large number of Cis • CI count > 2000 • A good mix of CI types > 10 • A sizable Attribute Set to use • Well defined CI to CI relationships

  9. Service Mix • Good mix of services that own the CIs • At least 3 services • Well defined service to service dependency • Well defined service impact models

  10. Management Buy In • Dedicated Config Mgmt. Process Owner • Need a Development team • Periodic assessment of gaps • Continuous CMS augmentation • Auto Discovery tools

  11. CMS Implementation Strategy

  12. Think Big • Envision the end-state • CMS will evolve overtime • Design CMDB model well • Detailed CI Relationship • Service to Dependency modeling • Well defined Service models • Use extensible CMDB models • Right toolset to collect and build cmdb

  13. Plan - Incremental • Avoid a multi year big bang approach • Implement the most used pieces of cmdb first • Select two but not more than 4 services in the initial phase • Define the Service Model first to lay the structural foundation of the cmdb • Iteratively add more CIs and end state complexity

  14. Manage • An unmanaged/un-governed CMS will lead to • Unreliable CI data • Incorrect metrics • User frustration • Inconsistent CI and Service Model • Continuous Improvement • Metrics to manage data quality • Continued Gap Analysis • Effectively integrating new services and technologies • Keeping the CMS current

  15. Summary

More Related