Monday, January 31, 2011

GbsTask - A Task Management Utility for ITM

Introduction
In Tivoli Management Framework, there is a concept called "Task". Tasks let users to specify executable for a specific platform at the creation time. When a task is run against multiple targets ("endpoints"), the appropriate executable is transferred and executed on the remote system and the output is presented in the standard output. When executed on multiple targets, the execution is done in multi-threaded manner.

We, at Gulf Breeze, developed a Java based solution to implement the task feature in Tivoli Monitoring product and this article discusses about this solution in detail. If you are interested, please email me and I will send you a free copy.

Benefits
  • A Simple database driven tool to create/update/delete/execute tasks.
  • Tasks can be executed on individual OS agents or on ITM MSLs.
  • Tasks can be executed in a multi-threaded manner across agents of different platforms.
  • Supports SQLServer or DB2 databases to store task information.
  • Authorization information kept in a separate file and can be specified with -a switch. You don't need to specify the password in your scripts.
Limitations
  • Maximum number of threads is limited by the maximum number of "tacmd"s that can be run in parallel. Running more than this limit could cause stability issues. As of ITM 6.2.2. FP2, the maximum number of threads is 10.
  • Currently the tasks can be executed only against Windows, Linux and Unix OS agents.
Requirements

To run the "gbstask" solution, you will need the following. The solution is tested with SUN JRE 1.5 and "should" work in other implementations of Java Runtime.
  • JRE 1.5 or later. (The code will NOT work with JRE 1.4).
  • JDBC driver for your database.
  • Tacmd CLI. (The CLI is installed with an OS agent installation or ITM TEMS installation).
  • A SQL Server or DB2 database where you can create a table to contain task information.
Examples

The following command creates task called pingtask for Linux and Windows.
# Creates tasks for Linux and Windows
C:\temp>java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -c -l mylib -t pingtask -o Linux -f C:\temp\test.sh
C:\temp>java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -c -l mylib -t pingtask -o Windows -f C:\temp\test.bat
# Executes a task on specific managed systems.
$ java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -x -l mylib -t pingtask -h Primary:VMTBSM421:NT,vmitm622:LZ,Primary:VMTBSM42X:NT
# Executes a task on specific MSLs.
$ java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -x -l mylib -t pingtask -m "*NT_SYSTEM,*LINUX_SYSTEM"
# Deletes a task
$ java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -d -l mylib -t pingtask -o Windows
$ java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -d -l mylib -t pingtask -o Linux


Sample Output

$ java -jar GbsTask.jar -a db2.auth -x -l mylib -t pingtask -h Primary:VMTBSM421:NT,vmitm622:LZ,Primary:VMTBSM42X:NT
---Begin Task Output for ManagedSystem vmitm622:LZ
PING 192.168.75.21 (192.168.75.21) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.75.21: icmp_seq=1 ttl=128 time=0.276 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.75.21: icmp_seq=2 ttl=128 time=0.255 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.75.21: icmp_seq=3 ttl=128 time=0.168 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.75.21: icmp_seq=4 ttl=128 time=0.221 ms
--- 192.168.75.21 ping statistics ---
4 packets transmitted, 4 received, 0% packet loss, time 3000ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.168/0.230/0.276/0.040 ms
---End Task Output for ManagedSystem vmitm622:LZ
---Begin Task Output for ManagedSystem Primary:VMTBSM421:NT
C:\WINDOWS\system32>ping 192.168.75.21
Pinging 192.168.75.21 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Ping statistics for 192.168.75.21:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
Minimum = 0ms, Maximum = 0ms, Average = 0ms
---End Task Output for ManagedSystem Primary:VMTBSM421:NT
---Begin Task Output for ManagedSystem Primary:VMTBSM42X:NT
C:\WINDOWS\system32>ping 192.168.75.21
Pinging 192.168.75.21 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.168.75.21: bytes=32 time=1ms TTL=128
Ping statistics for 192.168.75.21:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
Minimum = 0ms, Maximum = 0ms, Average = 0ms
---End Task Output for ManagedSystem Primary:VMTBSM42X:NT

Interested?
Interested? Please email me at venkat at gulfsoft.com and will send you a free copy of this tool. You can download the documentation for this tool from the link below.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Adding a custom Java portlet to the TIP for use with WebTop, WebGUI, TBSM, etc.

REMOVED


This article has been removed because it worked for very specific versions of products, but not for the latest versions, and customers were calling Tivoli support to open PMRs when it didn't work. If you're trying to add a portlet, this is CUSTOM work, for which you should not open a PMR.

So I'll revisit this issue when I have time to test with the latest and greatest versions. Until then, if you would like the article, you can send me an email at frank dawt tate aat gulfsoft dot com.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Using Tivoli Software Package Blocks in BigFix Enterprise Server v8 – Part 2

Now that the Disconnected Command Line (DCLI) is in place, it is time to start defining the SPBs.

At a high level the steps are:

  1. Create a site for Tivoli Software Packages and set the relevance
  2. Use the Software Distribution Wizard to import the SPB
  3. Modify the new task to use the correct syntax (wdinstsp)

I will not cover the creation of SPBs in this blog as if you are interested in using BF for SPBs you are probably already familiar with them.


Create Tivoli Software Packages Site

For this example, I found that it is best to create a specific site for the SPBs so that we can also set the subscriptions using relevance to check for the existence of the DCLI.

  1. Navigate to the Systems Lifecycle domain
  2. Navigate to All Systems Lifecycle > Sites
  3. Right click in the List Panel and select “Create Custom Site…”
  4. Set the name to “Tivoli Software Packages”. Press the OK button
  5. Click on the “Computer Subscriptions” tab
  6. Select the “Computers which match the condition below”
    1. Set the property to “Relevance Expression”
    2. Set the operator to “is true”
    3. Press the “Edit Relevance…” button and enter the text exists file "C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat". Press OK
  7. Press the Create button and enter your password

Use the Software Distribution Wizard to import the SPB

For this example, I am using a simple software package that deploys the Orca.msi. This was created using the Software Package Editor with the MSI Wizard.

I have also been doing some work on using the Sha1.exe (http://support.bigfix.com/fixlet) and BfArchive.8.0.0.exe (http://support.bigfix.com/cgi-bin/kbdirect.pl?id=452) which will allow for the use of the sha1 keys.


Using the Wizard to create the task

  1. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > All Systems Lifecycle Wizards
  2. Click on Windows Software Distribution Wizard
  3. Replace the with Orca and press the Next button
  4. Select the File option and browse to the SPB file. Press Next
  5. Set the desired platforms. Press Next
  6. Set the target relevance to us the Registry Key: "HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\Uninstall\{63A68338-16A3-4763-8478-A45F91A61E7A}". Press Next
  7. Leave the command line alone for now as this will be modified later. Press Next
  8. Review the summary and press Finish


Manually modify the task to use the wdinstsp command

  1. Set the “Create in site” to “Tivoli Software Packages”
  2. Click on the Actions tab
    1. Replace the “wait __Download\orca.spb” with the following lines

appendfile call "c:\program files\tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat"

appendfile wdinstsp.exe -f __Download\orca.spb

copy __appendfile __Download\orca_install.bat

wait __Download\orca_install.bat

  1. Click the Relevance tab and verify the value. For this example, the value was (name of it = "WinXP" OR (name of it = "Win2003" AND NOT x64 of it)) of operating system AND (not exists key "HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall {63A68338-16A3-4763-8478-A45F91A61E7A}" of native registry)
  2. Click on the Properties tab and set the source to “Software Distribution SPB”. This is done just to create a separate folder for viewing “By Source”
  3. Press the OK button and enter the password


Now that the task has been created, it is just a matter of taking action and deploying like any other task.


This takes care of the setup for deploying software packages blocks using BigFix. There are a few other items that would need to be added this to make it really production ready, but I cannot give away everything ;)


If you have any questions/comments, feel free to comment on this blog or email me at martin dot carnegie at gulfsoft dot com.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Using Tivoli Software Package Blocks in BigFix Enterprise Server v8 - Part 1

After doing some work with BigFix, I started investigating methods of implementing the use of SPBs into BigFix. After a little bit of trial, I have developed a fairly simplistic way to achieve this.

At a high level, the steps are
1. Create a standalone copy of the disconnected command line (DCLI from now on)
2. Create a task to deploy the DCLI
3. Create baseline to deploy DCLI to desired targets
4. Create tasks to deploy SPBs and executed with the DCLI


Create a standalone copy of the DCLI
The DCLI is a facility provided with TCM to allow package builders the ability to test SPBs locally on a test system. This is used to make sure that a package is behaving as desired without having to import into TCM and use the framework to install. By using the DCLI, a package builder is able to make changes to a package and “redeploy” in a relatively quick manner. Once a package installs with the desired effect via the DCLI, it is then imported into TCM for further testing. For products such as TPM, TPMfSW and the now defunct TPMDSD/TEM, this standalone method was what was being used.

In order to create a standalone version, you will first need to have the Software Package Editor as this contains the binaries required for the DCLI. You will also need the Tivoli Endpoint installed (this is a requirement for the SPE anyway) as this will have a couple DLLs that are also required. Once you have the SPE installed, follow the instructions below to create the image

1. Create a directory called C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn
2. Copy the directory C:\Program Files\Tivoli\swdis\speditor\w32-ix86 to the directory created in step 1. Note that the swdis directory may be installed in a different directory.
3. Edit the file C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat and set it to the following:
set INTERP=w32-ix86 set speditor_dir=C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes set speditor_lib_path=C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\..\lib set speditor_bin_path=C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\..\bin set Path=%speditor_dir%;%speditor_lib_path%;%speditor_bin_path%;

4. Copy the following files from C:\Program Files\Tivoli\lcf\bin\w32-ix86\mrt to c:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\lib. Note: this list was created based on some testing of simple packages. There maybe more of these DLLs required.
a. Libcpl60.dll
b. Libdes60.dll
c. Libguid60.dll
d. Libmem60.dll
e. Libmrt60.dll
5. Optional: cleanup extra binaries that are not required for the DCLI
a. In the C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes directory, remove all files except swdis_env.bat
b. Remove the C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\msg_cat directory

This will be the working copy of the DCLI that will be used to import into BigFix. I have found other methods that can be used to import, such as using Winzip, but for now let’s stay with the importing of files and folders built into BigFix.

Create a task to deploy the DCLI


In the previous section the files that are required for the DCLI were identified and made ready for importing into BigFix. Now these tools need to be imported into BigFix and made ready for deployment.

In this section we will take the image created of the DCLI and build a Task out of it. This task will be under the Systems Lifecycle domain and then create a baseline to apply the Task to all computers.

1. Copy the DCLI files to the BES Server. For this example, they have been copied to C:\CID\disconn
2. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > Wizards > All Wizards > Windows Software Distribution Wizard
3. Set the application name to Tivoli Disconnected Command Line. Press Next
4. Choose the “Folder” option and browse to (or type) C:\CID\disconn. Check the “Include Subfolders”. Press Next
5. Choose the operating systems that are desired for support. This should work for any platform that TCM supports in Windows, but this was only tested on Windows XP and 2003.
6. Set the target relevance to use the File option and set to C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat.
7. In the “Full command line”, leave it with the setup.exe for now, this will be modified later.
8. Review the summary and press “Finish”

The wizard is now complete and the task will be displayed. From here, we need to make some custom modifications to extract the files/dirs and put them in C:\Program Files\Tivoli

1. In the Create Task dialog, select the Actions tab
2. Make the following changes:
a. Remove the line: wait __Download\setup.exe
b. Add the line: dos mkdir "C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn"
c. Add the line: dos move /y __Download\w32-ix86 "C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn"
3. Press the Edit button beside the Include custom success criteria”
4. Select “…the following relevance clause evaluates to false” and enter the string not exist file "C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat". Press OK
5. Set the “Create in site:” to Master Action Site, and set the “Create in domain” to Systems Lifecycle. Note: the site could be made to something else, but for this example, we will just use the default. Press the OK button and enter the key password

The task is now created for deploying the Tivoli Disconnected Command Line to targets. Now that this is created, the next step is to deploy this task to the desired computers.


Deploying DCLI to targets

The task has now been created, what next? Well, we need it to get out to the targets so that we can then deploy SPBs. For this example, I will not be using any real complex targeting, I just want to get it out. Targeting is another discussion all together (which we kind of hit on when we go to deploy the SPBs). For my lab, my target computers all start with the name “win2kcli”, so what this example will do is create a site to do just that. Then create a baseline to target all the computers that are subscribed to the site and apply the DCLI as a policy.

Create custom site
1. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > All Systems Lifecycle > Sites > Custom. Right click in the List Panel and select Create Custom Site
2. In the Create Custom Site dialog, enter “All WIN2KCLI Computers”. Press OK
3. This will create the new site and display it in the List Panel. From here the subscription needs to be set. Select the “Computers which match the condition below”
a. Set the property to “Relevance Expression”
b. Set the operator to “is true”
c. Press the “Edit Relevance…” button and enter the text computer name as lowercase contains "win2kcli". Press OK
4. Press the “Save changes” button and enter password.

Now that the custom site is created, target computers will start appearing under the site’s “Subscribed Computers”

Create Custom Group
In order to target for the baseline, a computer group needs to be created. This group will be assigned the same relevance as the site.

1. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > All Systems Lifecycle > Sites > Custom > All WIN2KCLI Computers > Computer Groups
2. Right click in the List Panel and select “Create Automatic Computer Group”
3. Set the Name: All WIN2KCLI Computers CG
4. Create in site: All WIN2KCLI Computers
5. Create in domain: Systems Lifecycle
6. Set the relevance field to “Relevance Expression”
7. Set the condition to “is true”
8. Press the “Edit Relevance…” button
a. Enter: computer name as lowercase contains "win2kcli"
9. Press the Create button and enter your password

Create Baseline
The site has been created and the subscriptions set, now the baseline policy needs to be set to deploy the DCLI.

1. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > All Systems Lifecycle > Sites > Custom > All WIN2KCLI Computers
2. Right click in the List Panel and select “Create New Baseline…”
3. Set the Name to “Deploy DCLI”
4. Set the Description to “Deploy Tivoli Disconnected Command Line”
5. Click on the Components tab (image create_baseline_2.jpg)
a. Set the Group Name to DCLI and press Save Group Name
b. Click on the “add components to group” link and press the Tasks tab
c. Navigate to All Tasks > By Source > Software Distribution Wizard and select Software Distribution – Deploy: Tivoli Disconnected Command Line and press OK
6. Click on the Relevance tab and select “Computers which match all of the relevance clauses below”. Set the clause to: not exist file "C:\Program Files\Tivoli\disconn\w32-ix86\classes\swdis_env.bat".
7. Set the Create in site to All WIN2KCLI Computers
8. Press the OK key and enter password

Activate Baseline
With the new baseline created, it now needs to be activated. Since we need to be on all the computers we need to set this as a policy.

1. Navigate to Systems Lifecycle > All Systems Lifecycle > Sites > Custom > All WIN2KCLI Computers > Baselines
2. Select the “Deploy DCLI” baseline
3. Press the “Take Action” button
4. In the “Preset” field, set it to Policy
5. On the Target tab, select the option “All computers with the property values selected in the tree below
6. Expand to All Computers > By Group and select All WIN2KCLI Computers
7. Press the OK button and enter the password

This takes care of the DCLI. This is currently a proof of concept and I need to do some more testing to verify that I have set the various properties/groups/etc. If you have any comments/suggestions, please post a comment on this blog.

For the next blog entry, we will take a SPB and import it into BigFix. Stay tuned, it will be posted in a couple days.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

ITNM 3.8 NMAPScan Agent

Recent updates to IBM Tivoli Network Manager 3.8 introduced a new discovery agent that utilizes Nmap (Network Mapper) to provide some extra details about devices without SNMP access or certain types of end nodes. The extra information includes operating system type based on nmap’s OS fingerprinting capability along with port and service information.

This sounds great, but there are some serious drawbacks…

A. It’s slow. It’s a typical ITNM perl based agent that handles parallelism by spawning more instances of nmap to scan individual hosts rather than utilizing the large volume scanning capabilities inherent to nmap.

B. The required version of nmap is 4.85 and most enterprise *nix platforms are still shipping 4.0-4.11 so chances are you will need to acquire a recent version from the Nmap project page (http://nmap.org).

C. You can’t just turn the agent on. After you get an appropriate version of nmap installed you have to edit $NCHOME/ precision/disco/agents/perlAgents/ NMAPScan.pl to uncomment and set the path to nmap :

my $nmapBinary = '/usr/bin/nmap';

D. Running ITNM as setuid root does not work with the default nmap arguments. If you do not want your ITNM processes running as root you will need to adjust the scan settings in NMAPScan.pl or chown root ncp_disco_perl_agent then chmod u+s ncp_disco_perl_agent and then modify root’s environment so that the ITNM perl is used rather than the system perl. Or you could just run as root.

E. The OS type value is really just a guess. Sometimes it is a little off. For example CentOS 5 indentified as Gentoo.

F. Did I mention that it is slow?

Here are some screen shots of examples of the information collected.

So what would be a good use of the NMAPScan agent? For starters it would help classifying NoSNMPAccess devices.

Consider this AOC file that defines the class Linux_NoSNMPAccess:

//*************************************************************

//

// File : Linux_NoSNMPAccess.aoc

//

//*************************************************************

active object 'Linux_NoSNMPAccess'

{

super_class = 'NoSNMPAccess';

instantiate_rule = "ExtraInfo->m_OSType LIKE '.*Linux.*'";

visual_icon = 'NoSNMPAccess';

};

With this solution it is possible to create buckets to dump your devices into to provide the ability to at a minimum do ping polling via a class filter without pinging stuff you could care less about.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Adding web pages to WebTop/TBSM/ITNM

You can add any web page you want to be protected by WebTop/TBSM by putting that file under the directory:


INSTALL_DIR/tip/profiles/TIPProfile/systemApps/isclite.ear/Webtop.war/

accessed via:

https://hostname:16316/ibm/console/webtop/filename

Now, where it gets pretty exciting is that WebTop 2.2 and above are hosted on WebSphere, a full-fledged app server, and it supports JSP pages (which basically let you write server-side Java code to do anything you want, PLUS output HTML). An example JSP file can be found here:

http://www.java2s.com/Code/Java/JSP/Printtherequestheadersandthesessionattributes.htm

Just put that file into the above directory and you'll see all of the session and request information available to your JSP.

Have fun.