The fourth entry in our application performance management Rolling Review is Compuware's Vantage 10. In our APM kickoff, we explored the myriad options vendors provide to collect application performance information. No matter what data collection tack you take, Compuware is ready, offering several synthetic transaction, server, and application agents; remote agentless collection; and probe-based traffic-capture options.
In fact, the best part of Vantage is its VantageView central monitoring, alerting, and reporting capability. Through the Web-based GUI, we were able to define real-time monitoring and historical reports from across all collection mechanisms and assign them to specific roles and users. We also configured Compuware's concept of dashboards to roll up performance and availability alerts from each of the client, network, and server monitoring methods. We configured a couple of parent-child dashboards and links from them to reports we had created earlier. While this linking flexibility was powerful, we did believe that object placement and the look and feel of the dashboards were static in relation to the portal capabilities of some competitors.
The Vantage server is only supported on Windows platforms, Microsoft SQL database, and Microsoft Internet Information Server. However, Vantage server agents and remote monitoring support most versions of Unix as well as mainframes. Of course, synthetic and real transactions can be captured to and from Web applications on any platform, and the NetworkVantage probe can track any type of traffic.
The Vantage 10 release, priced starting at $50,000, adds end-to-end Web application monitoring through integration with Compuware's End User Experience and Java/.Net monitoring tools. It also adds correlation of service degradation with affected users through the company's Business Impact Monitor. With some increased application environment intelligence, including voice over IP, Oracle Forms, and WebSphere MQ, Compuware builds on its event management advancements for better event handling and integration with external systems.
As you may have surmised, because of the multiple components that make up ClientVantage, NetworkVantage, ServerVantage, ApplicationVantage, and QACenter, installation is not as straightforward as clicking a button. Before purchase, a Vantage deployment needs to be well planned, with the architecture based primarily on the expected load on each probe, agent, or collector. Compuware has professional services available to help with architecture planning before purchase.
RUNNING AND COLLECTING
Synthetic transaction monitoring is broken down into two phases. To support both business service and technically focused roles, Vantage allows business users to define monitoring of business rules through a step-by-step guide that creates applications that make up transactions. The technical role is then able to use the appropriate Compuware QACenter product to record a transaction via the GUI, and with some scripting expertise, configure it for monitoring and thresholds. All of this worked well for us, with a little support from Compuware inserting "checkpoints" into the script to track transaction progress.
The ServerVantage agent automatically discovered available counters from the server and our application. These included process availability, memory utilization, and authentication failures and file uploads. We then configured collection of a few counters, defined static threshold rules for alert generation, set up sampling intervals, and scheduled it all to run. This worked without issues, except that we found the requirement to type in process names or IDs for monitoring tedious. In other products, we've had process discovery and selection for this step.
CLAIM:
Compuware offers broad collection capabilities and an ability to aggregate data into business views. Vantage's synthetic transactions, probe-based traffic capture, server and application agents, and remote monitoring help find and fix application problems before they affect the business.
CONTEXT:
The application performance management market has evolved, but the goal remains: predicting problems before they affect customers. With Vantage, Compuware seeks to deliver every data collection approach while integrating with other systems.
CREDIBILITY:
Vantage delivers on its promise to pull monitoring methods into one consolidated view. Users can drill down for detailed transaction and traffic capture data. But, as with most APM products, finding problems still requires an application administrator.
FEATURED PRODUCT:
Compuware Vantage 10
ABOUT THIS ROLLING REVIEW:
Application performance management products are being tested at our Real-World Labs at Windward Consulting Group. We're assessing the breadth of support for existing applications, how well the product detects and reports on performance problems, how well the architecture supports distributed application performance monitoring, and more.
ALREADY TESTED:
Indicative, NetIQ, NetQoS
NEXT UP:
Nimsoft
OTHER VENDORS INVITED:
BMC, CA/Wily, Compuware, HP/Mercury, EMC/Smarts, IBM, Infovista, NetScout, Network General, Oracle, ProactiveNet, Quest Software, and Symantec
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