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OCS Professional
Ocsinventory-Agent is an agent for ocsinventory NG. It supports Linux, Solaris and AIX. *BSD support is in progress.
- Perl 5.8 minimum- Digest::MD5
- XML::Simple
- Net::IP optional, it is only needed to compute the network information
- LWP
- Mac::SysProfile 0.0.5 : this module is need on MacOSX to collect the device informations.
- To get SSL communications working (for packages deployment or HTTPS communications to OCS server), you need these modules:
- Crypt::SSLeay if you use LWP prior to version 6
- LWP::Protocol::https if you use LWP version 6 or more
- Net::CUPS is used to detect the printer
- Net::SNMP to scan network devices using SNMP
- To enhance SNMP feature with custom networks scans, you need these modules:
- Net::Netmask
- Net::Ping or Nmap::Parser
- Data::UUID is used to create a unique id for every machine
- Parse::EDID is used to inventory monitor and will replace monitor-edid from Mandriva.
- dmidecode on Linux and *BSD (i386, amd64, ia64) => dmidecode is required to read the BIOS stats.
- lspci on Linux and *BSD (pciutils package) => lspci is required to list PCI devices.
- sneep on Solaris/sparc, you must install sneep and record the Serial Number with it (download it from http://www.sun.com/download/products.xml?id=4304155a)
- To get the serial number of the screen you will need one of these tools:
- monitor-edid from Mandriva is needed to fetch the monitor. A package is available in Fedora repository. information http://wiki.mandriva.com/en/Tools/monitor-edid
- get-edid from the read-edid package
- ipmitool if you want to collect information about IPMI
- Nmap (v3.90 or superior) to scan network devices for Ipdiscover
- Proc::Daemon Daemon mode
- Proc::PID::File brings the pid file support if Proc::Daemon is installed
- nvidia::ml brings you some informations on Nvidia Graphic Cards such as memory size, cpu speed, bios version and driver version.
- Compress::Zlib
The following module is needed if you plan to prepare a tarball or install directly from the Bazaar devel branch. (See SOURCES below.):
- Module::Install
Once the archive is unpacked, use these commands:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make install
If you want to turn off the interactive post install script, just do (instead of perl Makefile.PL)
PERL_AUTOINSTALL=1 perl Makefile.PL
You can also run the agent from the tarball directory. In this case, use the --devlib
flag to load the library from the local directory.
You need to launch the agent with root privilege. For debugging you can try to launch it with the -l
flag:
Ex: ocsinventory-agent -l /tmp --debug
It's also possible to run directly from the tarball directory:
sudo ./ocsinventory-agent --devlib --server http://foo/ocsinventory
Solaris:
- Sun Studio seems to be needed to build the dependency.
- The generated Makefile needs gmake to be exectuted
- The default installation will install the binary in /usr/perl5/5.XXXXX/bin, set your $PATH variable according to that.
Crontab:
- If you use crontab to launch the agent you'll probably have to redefine the PATH. For example, just add something like:
PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin
At the beginning of the cron file.
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch:
git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Add your changes:
git add folder/file1.php
- Commit your changes:
git commit -m 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request !
OCS Inventory is GPLv2 licensed
The memconf script is maintained by Tom Schmidt http://www.4schmidts.com/memconf.html Copyright © 1996-2017 Tom Schmidt
memconf is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Ocsinventory::Agent::Backend::Virtualization::Vmsystem uses code from imvirt:
Authors: Thomas Liske liske@ibh.de
Copyright Holder: 2008 (C) IBH IT-Service GmbH [http://www.ibh.de/]
License: This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.