Configuration Management Database (CMDB)
A Configuration management database (CMDB) is a repository designed to store components of an information system. A CMDB contains data describing managed resources like computer systems and application software and/or process artifacts like incident, problem and change records, and the relationships among these entities. In the context of Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL). http://www.itil-officialsite.com/home/home.asp , a CMDB represents the authorized configuration of the significant components of the IT environment. A key goal of CMDB is to help an organization understand the relationships between different components and track their configuration. The CMDB is a fundamental component of the ITIL framework's Configuration Management process. CMDB implementations may integrate with change management, knowledge management and/or authorization.
The CMDB module with the Tracker, Wiki, Search and Report components is a flexible framework for
Incident Management
Problem Management
Knowledge Management
Asset management
Change Management
Service Desk
Reporting
Configuration Management Database (CMDB)—ITIL defines a CMDB as a database used to store configuration records throughout their lifecycle. The configuration management system maintains CMDBs, and each CMDB stores attributes of CIs (Configuration Items), and relationships with other CIs.
Configuration Item (CI)—A configuration item is an entity in a configuration management solution such as a CMDB. ITIL defines a CI as any component to be managed to deliver an IT service. Information about each CI is recorded in a configuration record within the configuration management system and is maintained throughout its lifecycle by configuration management. CIs are managed by Change Management. CIs typically include IT services, hardware, software, buildings, people, and formal documentation such as process documentation and SLAs.
The Codebeamer CMDB functions similar to trackers, but CMDB maintains configuration items organized in categories, instead of issues organized in trackers.
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For more information, see:
Two project level permissions control whether members in a specific role can view the CMDB module and whether they can create and customize configuration item categories:
If you wish to edit these permissions, select the Members tab in the project, select Edit in the tool-tip menu next to the role that you wish to edit.
You can create and customize a CMDB Category the same way as that for a tracker. Workflows are also available. For more information, see:
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Configuration items always have specific field default values and access permissions per defined item status, even if no workflow is active.
Using a Configuration Management Database together with the ability to link issues with configuration items helps improve transparency and traceability.
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