Inventory
Overview
The inventory provides a list overview of sites, devices, modules, interfaces, and users discovered within the network.
Sites
The site inventory provides an overview of discovered sites, the number
of devices and users present at the site, and enables the generation of
site-specific reports and diagrams. Sites are automatically calculated
based on the administrative domain boundaries, such as carrier networks
and other unmanaged infrastructure. A single, unmanaged traceroute
hop
is not considered a site boundary, so unmanaged infrastructure is
reconstructed from the probes. The specific method of site boundary
calculation can be changed in the settings.
An unknown site is either a collection of isolated devices or when a device forms a single-device site.
Devices
The device inventory represents all logical managed network infrastructure devices that have been discovered and analyzed. Each entry provides the following information:
- The site is the logical grouping to which device belongs to, while single-site or isolated devices belong to an unknown site.
- The routing domain is the contiguous layer 3 routing domain to which the device belongs to.
- Switching domains are the contiguous layer 2 switching domain the device belongs to.
- "Hostname" is the short name of the device.
- Serial Number is the serial number of the device.
- Management IP is the IP address used to connect to the device.
- Management Protocol is the protocol used to connect to the device.
- Uptime is the time since the device's last boot.
- Reload reason is the reason why the device has booted.
- The vendor is the vendor of the device.
- The platform is the hardware platform of the device.
- Family is the software family of the device.
- Version is the operating system the device is running with.
- Image is the path to the operating system image file.
- Processor is the hardware CPU family name.
- Memory is the amount of RAM memory available on the device.
Modules and Part Numbers
The part numbers inventory provides information about every identifiable module through device inventories.
OS Versions
The operating system versions inventory provides an overview of the unique operating systems used in the network and their variation.
Interfaces
The interface inventory provides information about every unique network interface discovered and includes information such as state, description, speed, duplex, and media type.
Hosts
The hosts' inventory provides information about every discovered host and user utilizing network infrastructure. A host is any unique IP or MAC address, or an IP/MAC tuple, that is not part of the network infrastructure. Following rules may prevent the IP addresses from the ARP to be included in the Hosts' inventory:
- There can't be any route pointing to that interface
- No CDP/LLDP information should be coming from that IP
- The MAC shouldn't be in the OUI flagged as "Enabled for Discovery"
End of Life Milestones
EoX reports provide an overview of the announced end-of-life milestones. Network infrastructure vendors use end-of-life milestones to communicate stages of the product life cycle, allowing sufficient time to migrate to next-generation products.