Hi,

I have the filters already downloadable. Just type in the thresholds you
want for AR and the various applications, and you can download the filters
needed.

A regular form is also included that will record any breach of your
thresholds.

Review the details and download here: http://www.rrr.se/cgi/licnotify

        Best Regards - Misi, RRR AB, http://www.rrr.se (ARSList MVP 2011)

Products from RRR Scandinavia (Best R.O.I. Award at WWRUG10/11):
* RRR|License - Not enough Remedy licenses? Save money by optimizing.
* RRR|Log - Performance issues or elusive bugs? Analyze your Remedy logs.
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> David,
>
> I can send you that filter.  You would need to define the number and who
> should be notified.
>
> Dave
>
> On Nov 19, 2012, at 3:53 PM, "David Durling" <durl...@uga.edu> wrote:
>
>> Thanks, Dave.  I might take your idea of monitoring the Server
>> Statistics form on floating usage one day -
>>
>> David
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
>>> [mailto:arslist@ARSLIST.ORG] On Behalf Of Shellman, David
>>> Sent: Friday, November 16, 2012 2:19 PM
>>> To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
>>> Subject: Re: License analysis utitily to run locally
>>>
>>> The free RRR version is online.  You purchase you can run locally.
>>>
>>> Since it's tied to custom form it may not be that useful to you.  It's
>>> two filters
>>> (one for modify and one for submit) that updates a record in a
>>> collector form.
>>> It generates a count of the number of times an individual submits or
>>> modifies
>>> a record in various forms during an hour.  The count is not as
>>> important as
>>> they actually performed an action that requires a license within an
>>> hour.  My
>>> perl script looks at how often a person used a license within a given
>>> time
>>> period (normal business hours) over a set time period.
>>>
>>> Since we are a global company, our highest usage of floating licenses
>>> is
>>> between 9:00 AM and 11:00 AM.  (This data can be found in the Server
>>> Statistics form when enabled).
>>>
>>> So the perl script counts the number of times that an individual
>>> creates/modifies at least one record within a given hour from 9:00 AM
>>> up to
>>> 11:00 AM, Monday through Friday, for say the last 8 weeks. (Our
>>> greatest
>>> impact on licenses is from the US so we exclude US holidays from the
>>> analysis.)  Since we are looking at a 2 hour block each day, 5 days a
>>> week,
>>> over 8 weeks, the perl script can actually convert this to a percentage
>>> of time,
>>> the person has needed a license to do their job within that time
>>> period.  The
>>> script also retrieves if the person has a float or a fixed license.
>>>
>>> We have a filter added to the Server Statistics form that triggers
>>> based on
>>> 'Floating Write Lic Connections' greater than a certain value to let us
>>> know
>>> when we are getting tight on licenses.  When that happens we will run
>>> the
>>> script to figure out how to rebalance fixed/floating licenses.
>>>
>>> Misi's product uses a slightly different approach.  His takes it up a
>>> notch and
>>> looks at login and license release. His routine can also give you a
>>> suggested
>>> fixed/floating count and with the paid version who should have a fixed
>>> vs a
>>> floating.
>>>
>>> Dave
>>
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>
> _______________________________________________________________________________
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