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Secure Network Management for Government

 

Certifications

WhatsUp Gold
US Army:
  Certificate of Networthiness
  Cert# - 201006999
US Navy:
  DADMS ID - 76463
USMC:
  DADMS ID - 76585

Event Log Management
Event Archiver
US Army:
  Certificate of Networthiness
  Cert# - 201004611

Government Resources

Contact Jeff Johnson at
govsales@ipswitch.com
or 781 676-5758

Locate US Government & GSA Resellers »

WhatsUp Gold in the News:

Several agencies say power management is paying off
EPA, Energy and a DOD office are among those reporting lower energy use
GCN - Government Computer News, Oct. 6, 2009

WhatsUp Gold Deployments

WhatsUp Gold Government Deployments

Networks are mission critical and essential to the security, financial health, infrastructure and defense of the United States, at all levels of government. Without functional and reliable networks the nation would grind to a halt. “Mission critical” is not a watch-word, it is reality. 

Optimal network performance and knowledge about the status of your network health are more important than ever. But network uptime and reliability are only part of the network management story, Government network engineers and administrators also have to contend with increased oversight, security, compliance and information assurance guidance and directives.

The network management and monitoring solution that more and more Federal, State and Local governments choose to deploy is WhatsUp Gold. From Iraq and Afghanistan, to cities and towns across the United States, network professionals depend on WhatsUp Gold to give them 360° visibility into, actionable intelligence about and control over their network infrastructures.

Ipswitch develops products that are comprehensive in features, yet easy to deploy, use and maintain. Our strong relationships  with Department of Defense, Military and Government customers ensures we deliver the essential features that meet or exceed the technology, security and networking directives they are required to comply with when deploying and using a network management solution. 

Some of the features incorporated into WhatsUp Gold to meet these directives include:

  • 128 bit SSL encryption  - enables secure transactions between users & WhatsUp Gold
  • IPv6 enabled device monitoring– complies with Federal IPv6 directives
    [Read our whitepaper on IPv6 monitoring]
  • Enhanced SNMPv3 security - all SNMP transactions between WhatsUp Gold and devices require proper credentials and are encrypted
    [Read our whitepaper on SNMP v3]
  • Configurable role based management – users can only access authorized tools and reports
  • Support for FIPS (Federal Information Processing Standards) 140-2 standards – combined with AES 256-bit encryption ensures compliance with security and regulatory regulations.

These features not only make WhatsUp secure, but more importantly, it helps our Government customers comply with strict network security and management directives. The result is a solution that is trustworthy, easy to procure, and with flexible licensing technology and installation options, easy to deploy on the most secure government networks, in the most remote locations in the world. 

WhatsUp Gold is a trusted network management solution for customers within the US Military, Federal Agencies, Government IT Contractors/Integrators and State and Local governments across the US, including:

  • US Army
  • US Navy
  • US Marine Corps
  • US Air Force
  • US Coast Guard
  • Air National Guard
  • NASA
  • US Department of Energy
  • US Department of Justice
  • US Department of Revenue
  • US Department of State
  • US Geological Survey
  • US Department of Veterans Affairs
  • US District Courts
  • FAA
  • SEC
  • NOAA
  • National Park Services
  • National Institute of Health
  • Social Security Administration
  • Fish and Wildlife Services
  • Northrop Grumman
  • Lockheed Martin
  • General Dynamics
  • Raytheon
  • State of California
  • State of Washington
  • City of New York
 

U.S. Army Counts On WhatsUp Gold to "Reboot" Iraq

Government Resources

Contact Jeff Johnson at
govsales@ipswitch.com
or 781 676-5758

Locate US Government & GSA Resellers »

WhatsUp Gold in the News:

Several agencies say power management is paying off
EPA, Energy and a DOD office are among those reporting lower energy use
GCN - Government Computer News, Oct. 6, 2009

WhatsUp Gold Deployments

WhatsUp Gold Government Deployments

Organization:
United States Army Central Command (CENTCOM)/Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA)

Industry:
Defense

Business Challenge:
CENTCOM needed a network monitoring application that could be installed quickly, immediately pinpoint the cause of network and power outages, and handle a complex, dynamic network topology.

Outcome:
ORHA, under the direction of CENTCOM, chose WhatsUp® Gold for around-the-clock monitoring of applications, servers, devices, and network resources.

During the U.S. invasion of Iraq in April 2003, 169 civilians embedded with CENTCOM were sent in under the protection of the Department of Defense to form the basis of the interim government that was to be set up after the fall of Saddam Hussein. The civilians were hand picked for their unique systems and networking expertise and soon occupied Hussein's Ramadan palace (now the U.S. Embassy) on the banks of the Euphrates River. Approximately twenty satellite, tele¬communications and network systems senior engineers entered Iraq to support them.

As the battle for Iraq raged around them, the civilian network engineers set up their satellites, network servers and power supplies to run the country. Once power was established via U.S. Army mobile generators, the network sprung to life - but it wasn't pretty. Fiber optic wires and Ethernet cables were duct-taped to the floors and routed inside and outside of the palace through bombed-out windows so that the palace courtyard took on the look of a spaghetti factory after an explosion.

"Network cables hung from walls, windows, and from crystal chandeliers," says Dana Beausoleil, a former contractor who acted as a senior network engineer and IT first responder during the rewiring of Baghdad. "Relay boxes, switches, and routers sat in the middle of huge corridors branching out in every direction, down circular marble staircases and eventually terminating in a network control room that connected to the satellite that was the connection to the outside world."

Inside the palace, the staff walked on top of cable bundles taped to the floors with signs reading, "You're walking on your internet connection." Inside the server room, the air conditioning failed and servers ran at 125 degrees with every over-temperature alarm lit. There was a clear need for around-the-clock monitoring of applications, servers, devices, and network resources. "WhatsUp Gold was proven technology," recalls Beausoleil. "We required something that was widely accepted by a variety of engineers, could be set up quickly, handle rapidly-changing network configurations effortlessly, and combined ease of use with maximum information needs reporting."

The fact that WhatsUp Gold can be implemented in any environment in under one hour and enables administrators to discover their network in minutes was key to the engineers' work in Iraq, where a network built for 200 users was pressed into service for over 2,000 users, with all of the associated overload and reliability issues. "We would sometimes experience 20 or more power outages a day," says Beausoleil. "We installed WhatsUp Gold and hung a 42-inch plasma television monitor on a marble wall whose sole purpose was to display the network status." WhatsUp Gold's visual mapping allowed the staff to see the network through multiple onscreen icons and gave them the ability to reconfigure the map design on the fly with drag-and-drop functionality as the network expanded. When everyone from ambassadors and generals from multiple nations to U.S. Army and coalition force commanders are counting on the network being available to direct critical joint operations in the command center, each outage presented the possibility for far-reaching consequences. "A dozen times a day, whether it was a satellite link in Germany going down or a mail server overheating, WhatsUp Gold was successful in triggering immediate response from some of the most exhausted IT staff on the planet," Beausoleil declares with pride.

Installing WhatsUp Gold was a critical command decision. Prior to implementing it, one failed core switch effectively shut down the government of Iraq for three days as the staff manually diagnosed the single source of failure. "The only way to find the failed network component was to shut the entire network down and restart and retest each component one by one," explains Beausoleil. "It was brutally slow work." WhatsUp Gold's configurable device dependency feature eliminated dependent alerts and enabled administrators to more easily diagnose problems without the distraction of numerous alarms. "The ceaseless damage control provided by WhatsUp Gold never failed in monitoring the only working civilian network of an entire nation," says Beausoleil. "We couldn't have done our job in Iraq without WhatsUp Gold doing its job."

Download WhatsUp Gold

 

Quotes from Federal Government WhatsUp Gold Users

"The US Navy N6 and Joint Staff J6 departments are very pleased with WhatsUp Gold. The favorite tools are the WhatsUp Gold NetFlow Monitor statistics on our serial SATCOM links, and the split-second bandwidth graphs. We also find the web performance monitor tool extremely useful for gathering quick snapshots of interface utilization on our backbone switches. The WhatsUp Gold product has been integrated into our NOC watch officer workstation, complete with displays for all three networks on giant plasma screens" – Jesse Davis, US Navy (Contractor)
"We purchased WhatsUp Gold a few years ago, thinking that it would just be something we can play with in our free time. Today, we can't live without it, and we have loved it ever since. Its a great investment for early detection of a variety of network issues. Thanks Ipswitch!" – Richard Virgen with Northrop Grumman, UMS Development Center
“WhatsUp Gold 14 will play a key role in helping the Texas State Guard to accomplish its mission by providing greater visibility into our communications infrastructure. While always important, this visibility becomes critical during when we are called upon to deploy during emergencies. WhatsUp Gold will become our internal IT 'force multiplier'.” – R. A. MILLER, COL, GS, TXSG, DCS Communications and Information (J6)