NAC status and authentication history for a device
Centralized Configuration Management
Core Capabilities
The CMDB structures key elements of your network such as Config Items, Subscriptions, and Networks and maps how they relate to each other, to your sites, and to the services they depend on. It supports rich metadata and relationship modeling for devices, virtual assets, and connectivity configurations across vendors and domains.
See Every Asset in Context
Each object’s detail page shows context-relevant information from integrations:
Real time monitoring metrics like latency and uptime
IPAM allocations and fixed address management
Logs correlated with the device or site’s operational context
Built for Real World Operations.
Our Features:
Configurable Data Model
- Define types for Config Items, Subscriptions, and their relationships.
- Model physical devices, logical assets, services, or network connections however your environment demands.
Integration Ready
- Populate CMDB entries dynamically from Order Management, Monitoring, NAC, IPAM, and provider APIs.
- Use CMDB data to fuel automation and enrich external systems with network context.
Site Based Structuring
- All items belong to an Organizational Unit (site), inheriting permissions and context.
- Drill into any site’s network inventory, subscriptions, or configuration status from its dashboard view.
Support for Operational Workflows
- Use CMDB entries to initiate changes, investigate issues, or trace dependencies.
- Config Items link back to orders and subscriptions, streamlining lifecycle tracking.
Operate With Complete Visibility and Control.
Why it matters:
Live Documentation
Always know what’s deployed where, who owns it, and how it’s performing without needing to chase spreadsheets or tribal knowledge.
Up to Date via Integration
No more stale records. As devices change state the CMDB reflects those changes automatically.
Improved Troubleshooting
Contextual views simplify diagnostics: check logs, performance, and access events directly from the device or network page.
Policy Driven Access
Inherits role based access control from your organizational structure. Only the right people see and modify the right data.
Common Use Cases.
Field Engineers validate connectivity and ownership before touching hardware.
Service Desk Teams use it as a launchpad for diagnostics without deep tool knowledge.
Network Administrators
track configuration state and link it to the order history.
IT Operations maintain documentation to meet audit, change management, and compliance needs.