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A virtual probe for branch office network monitoring

A virtual probe for branch office network monitoring

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 16 Mar 2010 For: Network World Canada Creator

NetScout has created a software probe for enterprises using Cisco’s ISR routers which it says gives full LAN/WAN visibility and saves money. Two industry analysts say it’s a good idea

Some branch offices have had to suffer the indignity of having a lower standard of network service than head offices. In part that’s because it can be expensive to put appliances at the edge of the network to monitor feeds for managing service delivery.

NetScout Systems Inc. believes it has a solution: a virtual probe. However, for the time being it’s a solution only available for enterprises using Cisco Systems Inc.s’ ISR branch routers.

The Westford, Mass., company’s Integrated Agent is a virtualized version of its hardware-based nGenius Probes technology that performs packet-flow monitoring and analysis to give end-to-end visibility of applications and services going through local area and wide area networks.

Initially it has been tailored for the ISR 2800, 3800 and the G2 2900 and 3900 routers. The solution also needs the routers’ optional service module, which has a Linux-based hosting environment called AXP on which third party applications can run.

Also needed is NetScout’s Performance Manager software, which gathers data for reports.

The savings over deploying a hardware probe at branch offices is considerable, says Steven Shalita, NetScout’s vice-president of marketing.

“The value is huge for both (NetScout and Cisco) customer bases,” he said. “Because of our size of customers, many have already deployed Cisco routers, they can just drop this into their existing environment.”

The Integrated Agent is based on a capability NetScout first introduced last October with its Virtual Agent for giving packet flow visibility into virtual servers.

While Cisco offers NetFlow and other monitoring tools, these are more about router performance, Shalita said. The Integrated Agent leverages NetFlow’s Common Data Model architecture to give a unified view of applications are behaving and network resources are being used, he said.

“The ones that benefit most are the enterprises looking to consolidate resources from remote branches or offices to corporate data centers,” Bob Laliberte, an analyst with the Enterprise Strategy Group, said in an e-mail interview.

The key to success is in delivering the services from the centralized data centers to the remote locations with adequate performance, he wrote.  By integrating NetScout, organizations can monitor that performance from the data center to remote locations and users. By virtualizing the probe technology, NetScout enables third party devices to provide additional functionality without increasing the physical footprint at remote locations. “This is especially critical at those remote locations where organizations are trying to keep the infrastructure to a minimum,” he said.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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