New free Plugin: Centreon integration

We would like to announce a new plugin — Centreon— available to all GLPI Network Cloud customers and for everyone with a marketplace registered (free tiers) !

The git repository is also open to everyone : https://github.com/pluginsGLPI/centreon

The plugin use the Centreon API to retrieve informations about hosts and display them in corresponding computers (matching the name). 

The tab shows services informations with their statuses, and a timeline of events.

You can also send a few actions to the distant server like:

  • Force a refresh
  • Set a downtime
  • Acknowledge an alert

This is the first version of the plugin and we will continue to work on it and deliver more features (metrics, widgets for our dashboards, listing of all services, etc) soon.

New exclusive plugin: Unread Messages

We would like to announce a new plugin — Unread — available to all GLPI Network Cloud customers and via our professional offers starting on the Basic GLPI Network Subscription (on-premises) and above !

This plugin helps you to keep track of unread messages while you were offline and don’t want to miss ant messages that could have be sent, and you should be aware of.

Notification bell

The plugin adds a new notification bell in the top right corner so you can keep track of everything you need to. This notification bell list all your unread messages.

screenshot main plugin unread

Timeline indicator

The timeline indicator adds a line below the last item you have read on THE tickets’ timeline. So now it’s possible to come back to work knowing exactly where you stopped before.

screenshot timeline plugin unread

List indicator

When you open the ticket list, all the tickets with unread messages are highlighted, and you can choose the one you want to know more about.

screenshot search plugin unread

Find the subscription brochure here: https://glpi-project.org/wp-content/uploads/EN.pdf

On GLPI Network Cloud: https://glpi-network.cloud/

Documentation for this plugin can be found by clicking this link: https://plugins.glpi-project.org/#/plugin/unread

You can test this plugin (and all other GLPI Network plugins) on your GLPI Network Cloud demo instance.

GLPI Inventory – What’s the difference between the native, the plugin and the GLPI Agent toolbox

Since GLPI 10, we have added three new tools for companies willing to manage and keep track of security and investments on IT assets like computers, servers, monitors, printers and, software programs, for example.

Companies of various sizes must manage the assets, so they might plan correctly the lifecycle of purchase, usage, maintenance and/or disposal correctly and effectively. Imagine if an IT department can keep track of the number of computers or monitors there are to be fixed and how many should be bought the next year.

Native GLPI Inventory

The native inventory is the fundamental functionality at the heart of GLPI. It acts as a central hub for managing and tracking IT assets, covering everything from hardware and software to user accounts and basic inventory information.

You will always start here. The native inventory serves as the foundation, addressing basic inventory needs like tracking the number of computers that need attention or planning for new hardware acquisitions.

The GLPI Native Inventory lays the groundwork, providing the essential structure for all things asset management in GLPI.

GLPI Inventory Plugin

Think of the plugin as an extension that enhances GLPI’s inventory capabilities. It steps in when you require more advanced features such as detailed hardware and software information, network discovery, and robust reporting – ideal for medium to large organizations with complex IT infrastructure.

You will deploy the plugin when your IT landscape becomes intricate, demanding network discoveries, scheduled tasks, SNMP inventory, or software deployment. It’s the toolkit for handling the complexities of a dynamic IT environment.

The GLPI Inventory plugin expands GLPI’s functionality, introducing advanced features and additional capabilities beyond the native inventory.

GLPI Agent Toolbox

The GLPI Agent toolbox introduces an agent software deployed on client devices to collect detailed information. It serves two primary purposes: replacing certain GLPI Inventory plugin features like network discovery and inventory support via scheduled tasks, and providing real-time data from devices in challenging network environments.

You will turn to the toolbox when you need to supplement or replace features provided by the GLPI Inventory Plugin, particularly in scenarios where direct GLPI access is restricted, such as strongly segmented DMZs or isolated VLANs. It’s your go-to for detailed, real-time information and proactive monitoring.

The toolbox offers more reliable inventory data, more tools to manage inventory tasks, reduces manual data entry, facilitates proactive monitoring, supports remote inventory and tasks in isolated or secured network environments.

When to Choose

The native inventory is the cornerstone, always part of your GLPI infrastructure. The GLPI Inventory Plugin and GLPI Agent Toolbox are able to extend some GLPI’s capabilities to address advanced tasks, such as network discovery and inventory in segmented DMZs and VLANs, and provide solutions for restricted or challenging network environments. 

Your choice depends on your organization’s specific requirements, the complexity of your IT infrastructure, and the need for enhanced features that go beyond the native inventory’s capabilities.

Useful Links

Video content:

00:00 – GLPI Inventory, Plugin, and Agent Toolbox

00:28 – Native GLPI Inventory Features

04:40 – New Types of Assets

06:20 – GLPI Partial Inventory

08:34 – Pictures in Assets

09:45 – GLPI Inventory Plugin

11:39 – GLPI Agent Toolbox

15:02 – Which one should you choose?