Hello community!<\/p>\n
Would it be possible to use SpiceWorks (installed on a Laptop), take it to client sites and scan their network? I know the answer is yes and it is possible but my challenge is that most small companies use the default 192.168.1.xx or 192.168.0.xx subnet and I want to keep their data separate, even though they have the same subnet. Currently, there is one database that holds all network data so data from customers on the same subnet will intermingle. I guess I am looking for a multi-tenant solution.<\/p>\n
If SpiceWorks is not able to do this, are there other open source tools that can accomplish what I am after?<\/p>\n
Thanks in advance for your time!<\/p>\n
-A<\/p>","upvoteCount":2,"answerCount":6,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T17:24:15.000Z","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"alinader3","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/alinader3"},"acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"
It isn’t designed to work like this, your best installing a Spiceworks server on each site and having the data collected per site, while this isn’t central there may also be legal reasons and of course IP reasons why you shouldn’t mix clients data in to a single DB<\/p>","upvoteCount":3,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T17:27:02.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/2","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Rod-IT","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/Rod-IT"}},"suggestedAnswer":[{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Hello community!<\/p>\n
Would it be possible to use SpiceWorks (installed on a Laptop), take it to client sites and scan their network? I know the answer is yes and it is possible but my challenge is that most small companies use the default 192.168.1.xx or 192.168.0.xx subnet and I want to keep their data separate, even though they have the same subnet. Currently, there is one database that holds all network data so data from customers on the same subnet will intermingle. I guess I am looking for a multi-tenant solution.<\/p>\n
If SpiceWorks is not able to do this, are there other open source tools that can accomplish what I am after?<\/p>\n
Thanks in advance for your time!<\/p>\n
-A<\/p>","upvoteCount":2,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T17:24:15.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/1","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"alinader3","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/alinader3"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Thanks for your response.<\/p>","upvoteCount":0,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T17:33:46.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/3","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"alinader3","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/alinader3"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Exactly what Rod said. I install Spiceworks on a machine at each place and then I have remote access to that machine. This ensures up to date information and you can go back and look at the history of things. If you only scan when you travel to sites, you are going to miss everything that happened in between.<\/p>","upvoteCount":1,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T17:54:44.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/4","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"PatrickFarrell","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/PatrickFarrell"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Yep, that makes sense. Thanks Patrick.<\/p>","upvoteCount":0,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T18:21:09.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/5","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"alinader3","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/alinader3"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
You’re welcome and welcome to the community. Give Rod a Best Answer.<\/p>","upvoteCount":0,"datePublished":"2016-10-10T18:30:59.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/using-spiceworks-to-scan-clients-network/531647/6","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"PatrickFarrell","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/PatrickFarrell"}}]}}