Searching the Help
To search for information in the Help, type a word or phrase in the Search box. When you enter a group of words, OR is inferred. You can use Boolean operators to refine your search.
Results returned are case insensitive. However, results ranking takes case into account and assigns higher scores to case matches. Therefore, a search for "cats" followed by a search for "Cats" would return the same number of Help topics, but the order in which the topics are listed would be different.
Search for | Example | Results |
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A single word | cat
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Topics that contain the word "cat". You will also find its grammatical variations, such as "cats". |
A phrase. You can specify that the search results contain a specific phrase. |
"cat food" (quotation marks) |
Topics that contain the literal phrase "cat food" and all its grammatical variations. Without the quotation marks, the query is equivalent to specifying an OR operator, which finds topics with one of the individual words instead of the phrase. |
Search for | Operator | Example |
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Two or more words in the same topic |
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Either word in a topic |
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Topics that do not contain a specific word or phrase |
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Topics that contain one string and do not contain another | ^ (caret) |
cat ^ mouse
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A combination of search types | ( ) parentheses |
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- Introduction to Configuration Manager
- HPE Universal CMDB Configuration Manager Overview
- Configuration Modeling and Analysis
- Offline Analysis
- Policies
- Data Control - Actual and Authorized States
- Historical Comparison
- Topology Mode and Inventory Mode
- System Operation Automation
- User Management
- Configuration Manager in a Multi-Tenant UCMDB Environment
- Licensed Content
- Home Page
- UCMDB Browser
- Use Cases
- Best Practices for Working with Configuration Manager
Use Cases
The following are some examples of how Configuration Manager can be used:
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View your servers
As a system administrator, you can view your servers and their details (attributes, CPUs, file systems, and IP addresses), as well as the high-level relationships between them.
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Investigate your hardware
As a system administrator, you can quickly see the different types of CPUs used in your physical servers.
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Establish a configuration baseline for a lab
As a lab administrator, you can analyze the configuration of your servers and establish a baseline that best represents the current configuration of (most of) your servers.
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Model and view an application service tree
As an application owner, you can model and view your application service tree from the business layer through your application and software layers down to your infrastructure layers.
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Investigate and isolate configuration changes that may have caused problems in your application.
As an application owner, you may have an application that suffers from degraded performance that started some time ago. You can isolate configuration changes that happened in your application service tree during that time period that may have caused the problem.
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Track changes that occur in your application service tree
As an application owner, you can track and acknowledge changes that occur in your application service tree.
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Automatically acknowledge changes (reduce manual tracking)
As an application owner, you can track and acknowledge changes that happen in your application service tree, but you want an option to manually track only interesting changes while automatically acknowledging changes that do not violate predefined conditions.
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Create a compliance stack for your application service tree
As an application owner, you can create policies that cover your applications' configuration compliance.