Para todo el tema técnico y de diseño, este artículo me parece importante ya que resuleve dudas comunes de cara a la migración a la versión 11
Resalto a continuación las mas interesantes en mi opinión:
Consumo de memoria entre 20 y 25 MB
Un solo Endpoint manager puede manejar hasta 50,000 clientes
Con la base de datos embebida (sybase) solo 1,000
Un GUP *Gruoup update provider o punto de distribución puede tener hasta 100 clientes
Consumo de ancho de banda
El heartbeat (es decir cuando el cliente pregunta por definiciones y está al día y no se suben logs) toma entre 2 y 3 KB (kilobytes)
Políticas: varía entre 20 y 80K
Firmas de IPS y AV: varía entre 50 y 100K
Logs: son comprimidos antes de subirlos a la consola, 800 registros de log se empacan en 1KB de espacio.
Sincronización con el directorio Activo
cuando un grupo se renombra en el Directorio Activo este es renombrado en la
estructura de SEPM al momento de generase el proceso de sincronización.
No se duplica con otro nombre, es decir no hay problemas en este sentido.
Adicionalmente recomiendo mirar el tema de la integración con el directorio activo aqui
jueves, 31 de enero de 2008
miércoles, 30 de enero de 2008
Videos de HAL Sobre Backup Exec y problemas de Respaldo
Mirando estos videos (en ingles) nos podemos dar cuenta de los sufrimientos tipicos de un administrador de sistemas para mantener sus equipos arriba mire a Hal
Symantec gana Editor Choice de PC Magazine
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2704,2234130,00.asp
Businesses face myriad Internet threats—rootkits to the left, bots to the right, spyware behind—yet, despite all opposition, they must charge onto an e-commerce and technology battlefield. Fortunately, the new Symantec Endpoint Protection 11 (EP 11), an anti-everything software client, strings virtual barbed wire around your business's PCs. A host-based intrusion prevention system (HIPS) uses TruScan proactive threat scanning to prevent zero-day attacks and at the same time locks down the desktop so that only authorized apps can run. Device control regulates the copying of files to USB memory devices. Antivirus and antispyware features (along with anti-rootkit protection) guard against malware. A network IPS rounds out the product, along with a firewall that provides low-level protection from network threats. Typically, when testing a product as feature-rich as this, we find a few things that don't work, so we're happy to report that Symantec Endpoint Protection 11 actually does work. It blocked malware and controlled removable device privileges as configured and is a fine choice for businesses with perhaps 25 to 50 users.
Businesses face myriad Internet threats—rootkits to the left, bots to the right, spyware behind—yet, despite all opposition, they must charge onto an e-commerce and technology battlefield. Fortunately, the new Symantec Endpoint Protection 11 (EP 11), an anti-everything software client, strings virtual barbed wire around your business's PCs. A host-based intrusion prevention system (HIPS) uses TruScan proactive threat scanning to prevent zero-day attacks and at the same time locks down the desktop so that only authorized apps can run. Device control regulates the copying of files to USB memory devices. Antivirus and antispyware features (along with anti-rootkit protection) guard against malware. A network IPS rounds out the product, along with a firewall that provides low-level protection from network threats. Typically, when testing a product as feature-rich as this, we find a few things that don't work, so we're happy to report that Symantec Endpoint Protection 11 actually does work. It blocked malware and controlled removable device privileges as configured and is a fine choice for businesses with perhaps 25 to 50 users.
jueves, 3 de enero de 2008
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