ManTech International Cuts Maintenance Requirements With Tivoli Tool
Friday, July 22, 2011
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ManTech, which has more than 10,000 employees stationed in the US and in about 40 other countries, has been in business since 1968. The company works with national and international government agencies, such as the Department of Defense, Department of Justice, Department of State, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and North American Treaty Organization, on projects ranging from making it easier for naval ships and submarines to move about undetected to a Department of Energy initiative to reduce solar energy technology costs by 75% by 2020.
The projects are complex and require a great deal of custom application development. To support the business, the defense contractor purchased a hodgepodge of Dell Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co., IBM, and Oracle Inc. hardware, whose configuration was constantly in flux. For new projects or alterations with existing ones, the systems were reconfigured, for instance switching from Microsoft Windows to Linux operating systems. The process to keep the machines up-to-date was labor-intensive: system administrators had to physically retool the workstations with each change. The systems were in such a state of fluctuation that nine system administrators spent their day configuring the workstations. "We realized we needed to be more efficient," admitted Daniels.
So in the spring of 2009, the corporation solicited bids from the leading blade suppliers: Dell, HP, IBM, and Oracle. The defense contractor liked the automation found with IBM CloudBurst, servers that come with pre-integrated and preloaded software, server, and storage functions; QuickStart consulting services to help corporations establish private clouds; and Tivoli Automation Manager, which speeds up deployments. The appliance features virtual software images for common functions that can be used out of the box or customized, so businesses can deploy private cloud services.
Management was an important element in the selection. Since the previous systems had been so widely dispersed, the organization's development group had not worked with a central management system. "We used HP's Openview a bit for our network connections but never really installed a comprehensive, central management suite," noted Daniels. "Consequently, we struggled in areas, such as patch management, and making sure that our systems were running the right software." IBM's CloudBurst came bundled with Tivoli Service Automation Management, which automates and manages the deployment of development, test, pre-production and production systems.
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