BMC TrueSight Network Automation is used for entire network management, automation, backups, pushing configurations for multiple devices, compliance, and secure access of the network devices.
BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks provides valuable automation in network processes like compliance and configuration management while ensuring consistent device setups and robust security.



| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks | 2.4% |
| Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform | 10.3% |
| Microsoft Configuration Manager | 7.4% |
| Other | 79.9% |
| Type | Title | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Configuration Management | Jun 24, 2026 | Download |
| Product | Reviews, tips, and advice from real users | Jun 24, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks vs Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform | Jun 24, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks vs Microsoft Intune | Jun 24, 2026 | Download |
| Comparison | BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks vs HashiCorp Terraform | Jun 24, 2026 | Download |
| Title | Rating | Mindshare | Recommending | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microsoft Intune | 4.1 | 4.9% | 95% | 378 interviewsAdd to research |
| Microsoft Configuration Manager | 4.1 | 7.4% | 91% | 86 interviewsAdd to research |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 1 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 4 |
| Large Enterprise | 2 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 38 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 26 |
| Large Enterprise | 41 |
BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks is an effective tool for automating network processes, reducing manual labor through automation of patching and OS updates. Its compliance, configuration management, and oversight features such as change tracking and audit logs enhance control and visibility. The dashboard caters to different user needs with improved data visibility and the ability to manage configuration changes efficiently. Immediate remediation during downtimes strengthens network security while reducing engineer dependency.
What are the key features of BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks?
What are the benefits and ROI of using BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks?
Organizations in financial, government, and healthcare sectors utilize BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks for effective management of diverse network infrastructures. By automating tasks like OS upgrades and configuration changes, control management is enhanced, allowing notifications of changes and enabling A/B testing before deployment.
BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks was previously known as BMC TrueSight Automation for Networks, TrueSight Automation for Networks, TrueSight Network Automation, BladeLogic Network Automation.
SAP
| Author info | Rating | Review Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Chief Executive Officer at Kinsfolk Technology Private Limited | 4.5 | I've used BMC TrueSight Network Automation for 11 years, valuing its compliance and configuration management for network tasks. It's easy to deploy and scalable, but the UI needs improvement, and IPAM would be beneficial. I rate it 9/10. |
| AM at a computer software company with 201-500 employees | 3.5 | I find BMC TrueSight Network Automation to be an excellent configuration manager that simplifies network setup and optimization. However, it could benefit from cheaper pricing and a more straightforward deployment process. The necessary network equipment is consistently available. |
| Solution Consultant / Architect at Telstra | 4.5 | I use BMC TrueSight Network Automation for patching, OS upgrades, and managing security vulnerabilities. Its compliance management is particularly valuable. However, I wish there were automated processes for retrieving CVS to create a compliance tool. It's currently the best solution available. |
| Solution Architect at Column Software Solutions Pvt. Ltd | 2.5 | I use BMC TrueSight Network Automation to provision network devices and execute commands efficiently. The automation features handle network downtime without engineers. However, API session management needs improvement for better performance and scalability across numerous devices. |
| Lead Consultant at a tech services company with 201-500 employees | 4.0 | I find this solution valuable for automating network tasks, significantly saving time, with log audit and historical configurations being key features. It definitely needs single sign-on, but overall, I rate it 8/10. |
| Security Analyst at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees | 4.0 | I use BMC TrueSight Network Automation for automating device updates, configurations, and compliance. It greatly improves operations by handling many tasks at once, offering a unified view. More hardware support is needed, but it's a stable, highly recommended tool. |
| Solution Consultant / Architect at Telstra | 4.5 | I've used BMC TrueSight Network Automation for a decade, valuing its network security and automation for device management. Support is excellent, but it needs more features for new technologies and cloud solutions. |
| Senior Security Solution Architect at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees | 3.5 | We value the product for consistent configuration management and performance monitoring, helping us react quickly. However, TrueSight's setup has been a nightmare due to instability and poor documentation, hindering production deployment. Support is good but suffers from internal silos. |
| Senior Solutions Systems Engineer at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees | 4.0 | I use this solution for automated configuration, backup, compliance, and patching, finding its change tracking and audit capabilities highly valuable. While stable, I desire broader support for new device models and reduced effort for custom compliance configurations. |
| Network Engineer at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees | 4.0 | I use this solution for configuration backup and ensuring network compliance, saving significant time. It's rock solid, scalable, and support is responsive. My main challenge is implementing more compliance rules, which requires strong regex knowledge. |

BMC TrueSight Network Automation is used for entire network management, automation, backups, pushing configurations for multiple devices, compliance, and secure access of the network devices.
The most valuable feature of BMC TrueSight Network Automation is compliance management, configuration backup, and configuration management.
BMC TrueSight Network Automation can improve by having a better UI. The overall quality of the UI could be better.
In an upcoming release, it would be beneficial to add IPAM.
I rated the solution a nine because it is easy to use and deploy and supports multiple devices.
I have been using BMC TrueSight Network Automation for approximately 11 years.
BMC TrueSight Network Automation is a scalable solution.
The scalability of BMC TrueSight Network Automation is good.
We have more than 10 people using this solution in our organization.
I have used the support from BMC TrueSight Network Automation
I rate the support from BMC TrueSight Network Automation a four out of five.
Positive
The initial setup of BMC TrueSight Network Automation is easy. The full deployment can take two to three months to complete.
The solution is worth the price.
Our company chose this solution because it supports multiple devices. For example, if it is Cisco, Juniper, or any other device, the solution will support it.
My advice to others is the user should be familiar with the network that the solution that is going to be used. This is a network management tool, and the network engineers or the users of the tool much know how to manage it.
The right privilege management should be done because you have to be careful that there are not any accidental changes to the network. Depending upon the roles and responsibilities, the correct access should be given which is very important.
I rate BMC TrueSight Network Automation a nine out of ten.

BMC is an excellent configuration manager. It allows you to configure your network easily and get the most out of it.
The required equipment on the network side is always available, but there are too many ways to manage the network.
The solution could have cheap pricing along with a simple deployment process.
I have been using BMC TrueSight Network Automation for ten years.
The solution is quite stable.
The solution can scale easily.
Support is good and responsive.
Neutral
The initial setup is complex. It starts with research and understanding the requirements. Then, they start deploying the configuration, followed by customization. It was straightforward. We checked it out, and everything was on track.
Deployment was done with the help of a third party.
The product is expensive.
I rate the product’s pricing a nine out of ten, where one is cheap and ten is expensive.
BMC TrueSight Network Automation transforms manual configuration tasks for network devices, which are complex and vary among different OEMs. With this tool, you can manage and control all new and old devices, ensuring they meet configuration needs. It provides updates on Cisco devices, and if any data is missing, you can generate it using a formula.
I recommend BMC TrueSight Network Automation from the network side, as it provides excellent visibility and configuration management for vulnerabilities. The implementation requirements are certainly at level two.
Overall, I rate the solution a seven out of ten.

We use the solution for patching, OS upgrades, and security vulnerability management.
The compliance management, patching, and OS upgrades are useful features.
There could be automated processes to retrieve the CVS and create a compliance tool.
The solution’s stability is good. I rate the solution’s stability a ten out of ten.
I have not actually tested it for a while. BMC has made some changes. We have around 20 users using this solution. I rate the solution’s scalability a seven or eight out of ten.
We had the premium support.
Positive
The solution is the best in the market at the moment.
The initial setup is simple. We did it by ourselves for a long back.
Overall, I rate the solution a nine out of ten.

We use the solution to provision the network devices and execute some commands.
The solution has the best automation features that immediately carry out remediation in case of network downtime. It doesn't require the help of network engineers.
When we make an API call, a new session opens each time. It negatively impacts performance. There must be a single session throughout multiple API calls for smooth functioning. In addition, it becomes tedious to scale for many devices. We have to use two to three servers in case of 50,000 or more devices. There should be a plug-and-play feature to allocate servers and directly add or remove devices.
The solution could be more stable. It has performance issues. We need to have our strings for adding a non-supported device. Even after that, it doesn't reflect. We need to restart the service many times as it has a complicated UI.
It is complicated to scale the solution as we need to add a load balancer. It would be better if they provided an in-built feature for it.
The solution's technical support could be better.
Neutral
The solution's initial setup is straightforward for Windows systems. The process involves requesting inputs and executing the script.
The solution is more costly than the other competitors, like HP automation products. It charges more for the features and support services. Although, its support needs improvement. We prefer open-source solutions if they provide all accesses and credentials for configuration.
I rate the solution a five out of ten. Presently, there are minimal features and APIs released for it. There should be AI features for monitoring the network. It would be easier to find out the time taken for features to run on different devices.

The primary use case is for whatever the network engineer task does manually, switching routers and pushing configuration onto those devices, then doing the OS upgrade.
If you do not have the product, then you will do all those items manually, which is time-consuming. That is where the network automation comes in, which helps you if you have sites to deploy, OS, and you can operate within a single click and push those within ten minutes. Some of those configurations have thousands of sites that need to deploy the configuration, so you could just prepare one tablet and push that through TSNA, the network automation. This saves time and effort.
The log audit and historical configuration are where you can find out who made the change, what change has been made, or what time that change has been made. This will give the archive of the configuration, which customers can compare, and the historical content. The customer can always keep track, what is their current configuration, and whether that matches their standard of compliance.
They need to have a single sign-on. If they have a single sign-on, that will be great because then the user does not need to log in every time. I would like to see the configuration compliance rules change to be more like Ionix.
I have been using BMC TrueSight Network Automation for more than five years now.
The stability depends on the client to make the correct planning. If they have a different plan of what they need verses reality then issues can arise.
Overall, I am happy with technical support but they could improve their response time when it comes to finding out the root cause quickly. This may require more technical people who understand the product better.
If you have the correct information that needs to be filled in, then it is straightforward. Whenever there is a window, you will fill in the correct information, and the next window comes.
There is definitely value for money based on the features and the value that the product provides, even if it is going to be a bit expensive.
I would rate BMC TrueSight Network Automation an eight out of ten.
We use this product for general task automation, including things like updating our Cisco devices. For example, rolling out patches is something that is automated.
The top three processes that we have automated are upgrading the operating system of physical devices, changing configurations, and security compliance analysis reporting.
TrueSight provides us with a unified view to define and monitor our workflows, which is important to us because it helps when it comes to automating things. It makes it easy to browse and navigate our workflows.
This product has helped us because we can now do many tasks at once. Rather than copy one file to one device, we can do an entire group at one time. It has dramatically improved the way our organization functions.
The most valuable feature is being able to automate the pushing of OS updates and configurations.
The reporting and analysis tools are helpful.
The product should be expanded to include more hardware, beyond Cisco and Juniper devices.
I have been using BMC TrueSight Network Automation for between four and five years, and the company has been using it for even longer.
We have jobs running every night and the stability is pretty good.
This is a highly scalable product. However, at the moment, we don't have plans to expand our usage. We have more than ten employees who are using it, each deploying automations, and everybody has administrative access.
I would rate their technical support a seven out of ten.
They are pretty quick and have good technical knowledge.
The product was implemented before I joined the company.
My company works directly with BMC and they are very good.
While learning how to use this product, I did not view any of the how-to videos available via the web interface. Instead, I was able to learn while on the job.
The biggest lesson that I have learned from using this product is that it is pretty good at automating processes, and it is quick to do so. I have learned a lot with respect to growing out security compliance, having standard templates, and unifying the configuration of Cisco devices.
In summary, this is a good tool that does what we want at the moment, and it has had a very positive impact on our business. I strongly recommend it.
I would rate this solution an eight out of ten.

Compliance and Security vulnerability management of network devices
Reduced manual efforts in managing the devices, made changes on thousands of devices automatically. automate repititive processes using templates and policies.
The network security of BMC TrueSight Network Automation has been the best feature.
I believe there could be new features in terms of the latest technology. I also think that more adapters could be added for the new cloud solutions. It needs to improve with the market. But, It has new features added this year and performance improvements.
I have been working with BMC TrueSight Network Automation fo ten years.
Scalability has been good. There has been some significant improvement, but it could be better.
Technical support has been excellent.
The pricing has been alright.
I would rate BMC TrueSight Network Automation a nine out of ten and I would recommend it.
We use it for monitoring our management infrastructure. We also use it for pinging some customer workstations, customer sites, and devices.
I'll talk about BPPM here. Having the performance monitoring in place allows us to be able to react if our systems are having either disk, memory, or CPU performance bottlenecks or issues. It also allows us to react if there are up/down monitoring issues or it's approaching a situation where a threshold will be breached.
For the network automation tool, from a security perspective, the real focus for us has been to maintain the configurations of our router switches, network devices, etc., and to be able to deploy them in a consistent fashion. If consistency equals security then it's helped it from a security point of view. But outside of that it's not something that I would consider to be a security tool, per se.
We use it for configuration management. The big thing for us is that we cannot afford to lose our configurations across our different environments. For example, we have configurations in our Dev environments which, once they're vetted, go up to staging. Once they're vetted there, they go into a DR space and from there into production. So having consistency in our deployment practices, first of all leads to cleaner implementations and, most importantly, it ensures that if something bad happens we can actually recover quickly.
Previously, when we had outages, people were scrambling along trying to find what the configurations were. We would have to get a new device in because the old device crapped out. We would put in the device and we would all pray very hard that the new configuration was the same as what was there previously, because sometimes we couldn't be totally sure. Prayer is a wonderful thing but it's not suitable for business SLAs.
It has absolutely helped our organization to use skilled personnel for more productive tasks because now we have the data that people need so that they can do their jobs better and more efficiently. With good data come good decisions. With no data you get haphazard results.
Finally, because it's alerting us when certain things happen, it allows us to put our processes in place to be able to deal with whatever the issue is at hand and that actually allows for more collaboration.
The dashboard is very useful to us as is the Presentation Server interface, in terms of policy creation and configuration and use of the tool.
There's a much cleaner approach to the dashboards now in TrueSight versus what they had previously. Previously it was more cumbersome to be able to display the data that is required to do our jobs. Different people have different functions, and as a part of those functions, they need to look at different types of data. My managers are interested in things like, the number of tickets that are open. How long did it take to address an incident? How long did it take to close an incident? Things like that with SLAs. Whereas the support people want to just know that the incident has come in and to be able to look at it and correlate that data with other data to determine what the actual problem is. Depending on who's looking at the data, they need to configure that data in different ways, and the dashboards help us to do that better than what was previously available.
There probably needs to be a little bit more collaboration between the Entuity teams and the BBNA teams. For our endpoint device monitoring we typically use a tool called Entuity. We buy it through BMC. TrueSight or BPPM typically does performance monitoring for servers, but for endpoint devices, such as routers, switches, etc., we typically use Entuity. The network automation tool keeps these configurations for us, keeps them all tight and clean, and makes sure things are synced up. But there's a lot of room for improvement in expanding the functionality of BBNA to work a little bit more tightly with Entuity. Right now they're still very siloed in terms of the toolsets. There might be some opportunities to grow that partnership.
In terms of additional features, I'm wondering if they should be looking at integration with some other toolsets, such as Ansible on the Red Hat side, or other scripting capabilities on the Windows side. A little bit more thought could be put toward using those tools. We also use Atrium Orchestrator in-house. It's a run-book automation tool. Having more out-of-the-box orchestration examples in AO to leverage BBNA and TrueSight would be really good to see.
I came in Monday morning and my TSIM servers were both down. I'm working with support to understand why.
We've built out the product to meet the number of servers that we have to monitor in our managed security space - the stack that we deal with - so we've already gone through the scaling process. Because the high-availability feature hasn't been working, it's performed quite poorly.
A lot of the support is quite good. They really want to help. There are two different teams in support right now. There's a whole team dedicated to TrueSight, specifically. Sometimes, when I put in a ticket to support, there's another team and that other team is totally dedicated to something called the PATROL Agent. That is an agent you deploy in boxes, agents which can talk to TrueSight and feed it information. In our case, we care about TrueSight, we don't really care about the PATROL Agent. I don't want to say the PATROL Agent is an afterthought, but it is a part of TrueSight, not the other way around. But many times this other team wants us to fuss around with the PATROL Agent and we don't really want to fuss with it. We only want to deal with TrueSight and things to do with monitoring. If TrueSight says we need to install an extra agent somewhere, then that's what we do.
From a support perspective, it's almost like there are two silos at BMC for the monitoring software. One is dedicated to Patrol and the other is dedicated to TrueSight. Because we're really a TrueSight shop that uses Patrol, all of our tickets should automatically go to the TrueSight support people. However, we keep getting routed to the Patrol people, and I don't feel that the Patrol people fully get what we need to do in our environment. They don't seem to cross-pollinate. The Patrol people don't really know anything about TrueSight, and the TrueSight people know a little bit about Patrol. If your ticket gets over to the patrol people, then good luck. That's very frustrating from a support perspective.
The people are very nice, they're competent. Some of them are incredibly excellent. And others, they try their best, but...
I can't say enough about the sales teams. They are excellent and the pre- and post-sales support are incredible, they are some of the smartest people I know. Phenomenal people. That's very much a strong point. They are amazing people. They're very busy, but when you get them involved, it's great working with them. Fantastic
It's not about the technology, it's about the relationships. When you get really good people to work with and to deal with from a sales perspective, it becomes less about selling and more about, "Look, I have this problem, what do you have that can actually help me meet my business objectives?" It really is comforting to be able to call up somebody at any time and say, "Look, this is what's going on," and see what they have to say to help you out. That, to me, is really pretty cool.
Our sales guy, Ralph Filippelli, is just an absolutely amazing guy. He's constantly in our corner and I feel that I can call him up anytime and say, "I have this business problem" or "I've got these contracts coming in, I need some help here." He's happy to do whatever he can and I'm happy to give him the business.
BPPM came in not long after I came into the organization. Prior to that, they were using some open-source tools that were cobbled together to try to create the same functionality, and it was spotty monitoring at best.
For the BBNA product specifically, we were using HPE's product which became Micro Focus Network Automation. We switched because we were already using some BMC tools, and we thought that it would be a great opportunity, from an integration standpoint, to standardize on a toolset from BMC.
Regarding TrueSight, the setup has been a nightmare. We followed the instructions. Sometimes, things wouldn't work at all as they were documented. We would contact support and they'd say, "Oh yeah, this is a known issue." And then we'd have to implement these changes with obscure switches and other things just to run the software to install. In other cases, certain software just didn't seem to work at all.
We've been working with BMC support in various ways such as to allow for the high-availability components for the TSIMs to work together. There have been issues there. We've seen randomness in how other pieces of the software work. Integration with the Presentation Server and the TSIMs has been a challenge. The ports that are required for HA to be utilized were not clearly documented anywhere. In fact, they still aren't documented online anywhere, even though we managed to pull it out of some of their support people. That's another issue from a documentation standpoint.
From an installation perspective, there were inconsistencies between different versions. In the 11.x stream that we deployed, versus 10.7, there were major differences. Sometimes they weren't reflected in the 11.x documentation.
We have not gone into production with TrueSight. We've deployed it, but it's not working. And we've had BMC support and other people involved. We've had people come to visit us and see the issues that we've experienced. I've spent another 20K on experts in the TrueSight tool to help us to optimize the configurations that we've deployed. But we haven't been able to utilize those people because we don't have a stable product.
One of the big issues has also been the integration of TrueSight with the Remedy/ITSM stack. That's slowing us down in being able to go fully into production with it. We've got the core software installed, but it's not doing its job fully. There are issues that we need to remedy prior to being able to fully utilize it in production.
For BPPM we did hire a third-party consultant. But for the TrueSight deployment, it's all been BMC personnel.
We have about five folks involved in different levels of the deployment. They're working with integration on the ITSM side. From that perspective, they've been working on different sides of the fence to get things working together.
Network Automation has replaced our HPNA. The cost of the product was a little bit cheaper than what we paid for the HP product, which is now Micro Focus. The return on investment is not huge, but our trust in working with the vendor is big because with the changeover and HPE selling off those assets to Micro Focus, we had concerns about the stability or longevity of the network automation tools.
There's a fee for the licenses themselves, per contract, and then we have a yearly licensing fee that's many thousands of dollars. But that's not just for TrueSight, that's also for support for ITSM, Atrium Orchestrator, BBNA, and other BMC tools in the environment. We have to support more than just TrueSight in that space. It's a package deal from a support perspective. From a licensing perspective, when we get a contract in we size the contract, do quotes from the contract, and then we engage BMC to say, “This is how many additional licenses we're going to need as a function of that contract.” Then we do the numbers thing. But we've actually dumped a lot of money. I think recently it was about $174,000. But again, it depends on the contract, it depends on what we're dealing with. It's been many thousands of dollars.
We looked at various tools. For example, we looked at CA, which was bought out by another company. We looked at some CA monitoring tools because they're being used out of our head office, but we found that the Entuity/BMC solution was preferable for various reasons.
My advice would be to holistically look, at a macro level, at all the tools you're using in your environment. If you're already using some BMC tools, there's a compelling argument to using TrueSight because of the opportunities for integration of those products.
The biggest lesson that we've learned using Network Automation is that change is painful. We were using HPNA for a long time, and we had built toolsets around that. Some products have functionality that's better than others, and it's a matter of tracking that and making sure that you understand the toolset prior to deployment.
We have deployed TrueSight in our Dev, Staging, and Prod environments but we're not using it fully yet. We're still using BPPM in production at this time.
Regarding the solution's capabilities in analyzing and fixing security vulnerabilities through patching or configuration changes, we don't have that tool suite deployed. TrueSight isn't really meant for that from a security perspective. It's really performance-monitoring that we're leveraging at this time. We didn't buy any of the add-on pieces for security monitoring.
We're a managed security services shop. Our clientele is mostly government-based. We keep getting contracts. We've got five bids underway right now. As the bids expand and we win more business, we deploy into the environment. As we deploy into the environment, we have a need for more licensing. That's typically how we've handled things in the past. We are growing the service and growing the business based on the number of contracts that we get in-house. The more contracts we win, the more business BMC gets, and everyone's happy at the end of the day.
I would rate Network Automation at seven out of ten. It's a good product, it's relatively stable, but we have seen some issues, stability-wise, with the server. We have to stay on top of that, make sure we're monitoring it, to make sure it's doing what it's supposed to do. The interface is a little clunky at times, but it works well for what it does. From a configuration management perspective, it's excellent. It really does a good job there.
As I said, I'd like to see tighter integration with Entuity. Because Entuity is doing that monitoring already for the endpoint devices, I'd like to see a little more collaboration between those teams. That would allow me to give higher marks.
I use it for configuration, backup, compliance, patching, and for control management. If a change has been made on a device, then it triggers notifications about who, what, and when has been changed on the network devices.
I work in three different companies. One is for the financial company, then the other one is for the government that we are in. I do A/B testing before deployment, where the network devices should be upgraded first, then deployed via the standard configuration with compliance. There are a different number of devices in each company. I also work with a healthcare company on their network configurations and compliance.
When it comes to job status or for completing a compliance audit, it is good. Because it has a transcript where you can see what are the commands that have been executed on the device, it's quite helpful, especially the details from device inventory capabilities, as well as the reporting.
if you are working on Cisco Smart, then inventory is quite important in the RNA of things, because it goes by the massive details of what is in the information, even in the Cisco Board. So, if you are tied up with Cisco, you can pull back this information fast by doing RNA. This is most probably the helpful security example for an organization, since it is tied up with your contract and based on your RNA. If you want to have a support for Cisco, then it's valid that you can provide this information to Cisco or your support. Because the licenses are tied up with the RNA. The DNA can also provide this information. If it is a model has its serial number, then it is helpful.
If the network operator can check drifts by using the DNA tool dashboard, then it lessens the burden.
It has improved the collaboration between our organization's IT operations and security teams based on the compliance reports that have been implemented.
From my experience, the most valuable features are the configuration changes. Also, compliance is important, because we have worked with a bank. Then, in some of the government agencies that I have work on, the server upgrade of SSD deployment.
Backup and restore configurations are helpful for a number of network devices, as you can automate them, then know what changes have been done, who made the changes, etc. So, it's quite helpful in the network management area.
With patching, If you have multiple devices and the same model, then you can deploy using this tool. It's quite helpful other than doing it manually. The tool will do it for you rather than you logging onto the device and doing the commands. For patching, it is helpful if the tool can assist on multiple devices with the same model or brand. Therefore, you just have to wait and require it to reboot based on the patch information.
I would like to see more device supported features, mostly on the new brands and models coming in. For any new version or model, it should be supported by the tool, especially the newest versions. For example, the newest devices, like Aruba Wireless, and routers need support from the tool.
It's stable. If you follow the prerequisites and design that has been on the architecture of the BMC documentation, then you are good to go.
The financial institution has around a thousand devices, because it's global. For this company, there are multiple network automation tools. In Singapore, there is one application server. Then, in the UK, there is another application server, and in another location, there is another server. That is the architecture of the company.
The structure is different on a case to case basis between different clients. We need to know early on how big the environment is, how many devices have to be provisioned, and the sizing of the application server. These need to be discussed in regards to requirements.
I would rate their technical support as a seven out of ten.
The initial setup is quite straightforward. As long as you know the requirements to install the application servers, then you will be fine. It takes an hour to set up, if you have already done the prerequisites. Then, you are good to go.
I have done the implementation five times. I know the tool. If you ask me the requirements for implementation of this tool, then I am confident enough to implement it.
The prerequisites include BMC documentation, which I provide to an organization because it is useful. The documentation is quite comprehensive.
The size of the deployment team depends on the size of the customer's or client's environment. For example, with the global bank, there were a quite number of people involved because of the collaboration between teams in different countries.
I have been implementing the out-of-the-box compliance piece based off CIS, for example. For customized compliance, it takes some effort to implement things. If the device configuration is quite complex, then you have to do quite number of customizations in the DNA tool for out-of-the-box compliance. These regular expressions have to be modified based on the requirements of the compliance.
It has been quite helpful for configuration management and provisioning when it comes to projects. If you don't have the backups and it's not in your setup configuration, then you just have to do it manually. It is helpful if you schedule daily or weekly archiving for your config groups. Then, you can go by what are in those configuration groups, before and after, if you make changes. So, configuration management is really helpful in network management.
On the dashboard, you can see that there is an X icon in the startup, which is different from the running configuration. So, you can see from the dashboard that there is a difference between two configurations, as well as the events being provided by the device. This can be checked on the dashboard. The tool can show drifts between your compliance from your phase two standard and running config. For that, it can be helpful on a normal configuration.
I'm not really exploring the vulnerabilities side of using the tool.
If you are looking into this type of solution, you will need to have internal and external networks. I would recommend this solution.
We use it to back up some things on our network devices and we use it to make sure that things comply with our standards.
It allows us to make sure, for instance, that all of our telnet, FTP, and SSH are sourced from a certain IP address which is part of our standards and part of best practices. It helps us makes sure that we comply with that. Before using Network Automation, there was no real way of doing compliance other than going into the devices and looking at their configurations manually. It's helped us save time.
We use it to back up configurations so the configuration management is valuable for us.
Another valuable feature is the ability to verify that the devices comply with our standards. Compliance is important because we want all of our devices to have the same, consistent configuration.
The reporting is also good. We run reports monthly to see what devices are compliant with our standards and we use the reports to correct deficiencies.
I'd like to be able to get more devices into compliance with standards, but that means running additional rule sets and that takes time.
It's been rock solid. I haven't had any problems with it.
We have a couple of thousand devices on it and it's connected to all of them. We haven't had any issues with scalability. We have about 20 people using it across our organization and they're all involved in network operations.
I'm the only one in our organization who works on maintaining the solution. We don't have any plans to increase usage.
I have contacted technical support directly. I've had no issues with their support. They're pretty responsive.
I wasn't involved in the initial setup but I upgraded from 8.7 to 8.9. It was a smooth process. It took a couple of weeks and there was no downtime. We just set up totally new servers. We tested the new servers and we cut over on a certain date.
The upgrade was done in-house. In addition to me, the guy who is responsible for the servers in our organization was involved.
My advice to someone who is looking into using it is that they need to be pretty familiar with regular expressions. That's what's used to write the rules. In terms of configuration, it can be a complicated platform. The learning curve will vary by individual.