BMC Software's CMDB 'Must Haves' Advance Best Practices
April 27 2006 - 10:20AM
PR Newswire (US)
Essential Steps to Evolve an Enterprise IT Infrastructure Toward
Business Service Management and Support of ITIL Processes HOUSTON,
April 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- BMC Software, Inc. (NYSE:BMC)
today detailed the essential components organizations must include
in their Configuration Management Database (CMDB) strategies. BMC
Software's approach to CMDB solutions propels organizations toward
organized, cost-effective management of their IT infrastructure,
significantly cutting costs of IT operations while aligning IT more
closely with the business. BMC Software, Business Service
Management (BSM) pioneer and market leader, was the first
enterprise management software vendor to release a truly federated,
open CMDB that supports the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL)
requirement of a single, enterprise data repository to ensure data
consistency and simplify integration between service management
processes. A CMDB stores information about IT infrastructure
components such as servers, storage devices, desktops and other
computing devices, including data on their configurations. The
BMC(R) Atrium(TM) CMDB manages data on IT assets, applications,
business processes, people, and services -- and tracks the dynamic
relationships among these components in a changing IT environment.
"Change and configuration management is a foundation element of
Business Service Management," said Tom Bishop, CTO at BMC Software.
"Today, approximately 2,000 customers have access to BMC Atrium
CMDB solutions. We have leveraged this experience and our
technology leadership to provide the critical components customers
need to follow to achieve the benefits of the CMDB and BSM." BMC
has detailed the following requirements for achieving CMDB solution
best practices: Provide a scalable and maintainable source of
record for IT by utilizing a Federated Data Model. Following a
federated approach, a CMDB should only store Configuration Items
(CI) and their relationships within the CMDB. CIs are entities that
have configurable attributes, and include more than just
infrastructure components -- such as servers, desktops, and routers
-- but also include logical items such as services, processes, and
people. The CMDB must be able to capture both physical and logical
elements of the environment as well and store and manage the
relationships between these items and how they relate to business
services. Other data related to CIs such as change requests,
service level agreements, incidents and impact, is all data that
should be stored outside of the CMDB and link to it through
federation. This is the most efficient way to share configuration
data without the high setup and maintenance costs associated with
the pure centralized approach. Use configurable business rules and
reconciliation policies to merge data into a single, reliable
dataset. To ensure accurate reconciliation of configurations, a
CMDB must have an efficient, repeatable mechanism to merge data
from multiple discovery sources using business rules and logic to
determine which data sources take precedence over others as well as
how and when to merge data. In addition, the reconciliation process
must provide the ability to compare the reconciled data with the
CMDB, to determine if configurations discovered within the
environment remain in their desired, approved states. If
configurations change unexpectedly through unplanned changes, the
reconciliation process workflow will notify users or trigger events
to start a process of determining what changed without approval.
Provide IT process users with a graphical interface to visualize
the federated CMDB environment. While the CMDB provides the
capabilities to store and manage information within the IT
infrastructure, the true value of a CMDB lies with the ability of
IT process users to leverage gathered data in a meaningful way. To
address this, a CMDB must provide a graphical interface that allows
users to search for and view CIs and their relationships, and
instantly link to federated data stored in external repositories.
Focus on integrations and the surrounding eco-system. A CMDB is
only as valuable as the eco-system that integrates with the
solution. With this known, organizations must recognize the
importance of out-of-the-box solutions that integrate with a CMDB,
such as service desk, asset management and change management. A
CMDB based on a specific technology, such as application mapping,
will be less effective when tracking the dynamic relationships
among IT components. About BMC Software BMC Software, Inc. is a
leading provider of enterprise management solutions that empower
companies to manage IT from a business perspective. Delivering
Business Service Management, BMC Software solutions span enterprise
systems, applications, database and service management. Founded in
1980, BMC Software has offices worldwide and fiscal 2005 revenues
of more than $1.46 billion. For more information, visit
http://www.bmc.com/ . BMC Software, the BMC Software logos, and all
other BMC Software product or service names are registered
trademarks or trademarks of BMC Software, Inc. All other trademarks
or registered trademarks belong to their respective companies.
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http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: BMC Software, Inc. CONTACT:
Tamara Doney of BMC Software, Inc., +1-916-645-6233, or
+1-916-223-1668, or ; or Nathan Michel of Porter Novelli,
+1-617-897-8244, or , for BMC Software, Inc. Web site:
http://www.bmc.com/
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