Oracle’s Enterprise Manager is an on-premises monitoring and management tool. The console is designed primarily to manage other Oracle products, it but can integrate to manage non-Oracle components as well.
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Uptrends
Score 8.1 out of 10
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Uptrends is the eponymous product from the company in Massachusetts for monitoring a website's uptime, used as well for monitoring web apps' functioning, server monitoring with alerts and reporting, and general analysis of a website's performance, element-by-element.
$16.21
per month
Pricing
Oracle Enterprise Manager
Uptrends
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
Starter
$16.21
per month
Business
$22.61
per month
Enterprise
$54.04
per month
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Oracle Enterprise Manager
Uptrends
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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The basic plans (Starter, Premium, and Professional) come with a fixed amount of uptime monitors you can use for the price shown. The advanced plans (Business and Enterprise) are fully customizable, so you only pay for what you need. The price gets higher based on the number of monitors you add. You can calculate the exact fee in your account using our pricing configurator
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Oracle Enterprise Manager
Uptrends
Features
Oracle Enterprise Manager
Uptrends
Monitoring Tasks
Comparison of Monitoring Tasks features of Product A and Product B
Oracle Enterprise Manager
-
Ratings
Uptrends
7.4
Ratings
4% below category average
Remote monitoring
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Network device monitoring
00 Ratings
9.00 Ratings
Multiple Server Monitoring
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Multi-device monitoring
00 Ratings
6.00 Ratings
Automated alerts and notifications
00 Ratings
7.10 Ratings
Management Tasks
Comparison of Management Tasks features of Product A and Product B
Oracle Enterprise Manager
-
Ratings
Uptrends
7.5
Ratings
1% above category average
Patch Management
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Service configuration management
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Software and hardware inventory
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Policy-based automation
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Reporting
Comparison of Reporting features of Product A and Product B
Oracle Enterprise Manager
-
Ratings
Uptrends
7.7
Ratings
1% above category average
Performance data reports
00 Ratings
8.00 Ratings
Customizable reporting
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Data visualization
00 Ratings
8.90 Ratings
Risk analysis
00 Ratings
7.00 Ratings
Security
Comparison of Security features of Product A and Product B
I wish I had an option to give it a 9.5 :) OEM Cloud Control is very well suited if you have a system with multiple implementations of Oracle Database Enterprise Edition. If you are willing to pay for the huge license cost which is typical with Oracle, then you will love to use OEM Cloud Control to monitor your entire ERP solution including web servers, applications, network, storage, and physical servers. It is not worth the buck if your's is a small implementation. Your DBA's should be able to work without depending on OEM Cloud Control.
Oracle Enterprise Manager is a "one stop shop" for all of our management needs. This is helpful because it minimizes the management of the management software itself. There are less upgrades and connectivity issues to handle. And there are "plug-ins" for additional products we use like Blue Medora's one for PostgreSQL.
Managing administrative jobs can be burdensome in a shop with dozens of servers and databases. OEM Cloud Control makes it easy since you can view all the jobs for all servers in one place. It is easy to filter on jobs with problems or the like so that you can quickly look at the logs and fix the issues.
Tuning PL/SQL is much easier using OEM Cloud Control. Most DBAs are familiar with trace files and TKPROF, but not having to do those things at a command line smooths the process out. The graphical interface makes it easier to show developers exactly what the issues are. This makes for less finger-pointing and quicker resolution of performance problems.
Proactive management is easier using OEM Cloud Control. Before having the gui, I had a collection of scripts that I would have to install on each database server, then set up cron jobs to run them. When Oracle was upgraded, those scripts might have to be updated on each and every server. OEM Cloud Control has those things built in. You can choose exactly which metrics are important to you. And you can keep performance graphs up all day on a second monitor to let you instantly see when something might cause a problem.
We also use OEM to monitor SQL Server. However, OEM only provided limited features for SQL Server. It would be nice if we can schedule backup jobs for SQL Server in OEM.
The ability to run SQL queries. You can't run queries in OEM. I have to go to SQL Developer or SQL PLUS to run. queries.
It's great! It does everything and anything you would want it to do. It can monitor things which doesn't comes out of the box by adding plug ins to it, for example, you can even monitor Oracle GoldenGate Replication by adding a plug-in to OEM Cloud Control.
I still rate OEM as a must-have tool for central management of Oracle fleet. The pros and cons of the product is prominent. Meanwhile, I also acknowledge that OEM was design about a decade ago. At that time, it did not have the landscape we have today, such as cloud, DEVOPS, machine learning, etc. I hope in future releases, the design will incorporate those features.
Support average response time is 24 hours, which is quite a significant time when having some issues and needs help. They have notification issues as well. I mean, when a customer needs to be notified, for example canceling anything related acc maybe they sent notification and service suspend immediately, no pre notifications to act and be ready not to be blind.
Kibana from Elastic is another monitoring tool that claims to provide very similar information to OEM. It seems to be an information tool rather than a tool that can actually make changes within a database. I think Kibana is more robust for hardware versus database software so it is more suited to that purpose and does to compare to the Oracle Database monitoring attributes of OEM.
The price range is good if compared with the following tools. Alerts are informative, easy to connect with chat ops software, like slack, which is widely used by teams in my company. Performance measurement, which can be tracked day by day and can be delivered to stakeholders, all this made me decide to choose this tool.
Positive: Alerting features. Without this we would have to be a 24x7 shop with someone always manning the helm. With the alerting feature we can define levels of alerts and only get the most pressing alerts sent out.
ROI: OEM is free, so the ROI is whatever you make of it.