Lesson 1Config Management Database (CMDB) concepts and mapping to inventory fieldsThis part introduces CMDB ideas and shows how inventory fields connect to configuration items, relationships, and service models, so data flows steady between daily inventory and wider IT service management.
Configuration items and CI classesMapping inventory hosts to CIsModeling relationships and dependenciesSynchronizing CMDB and inventory dataGovernance and data quality controlsLesson 2Integration patterns: linking inventory to ticketing, monitoring, and backup systemsThis part shows how to connect inventory data with ticketing, monitoring, and backup systems, making sure IDs match, updates happen automatic, and info is reliable for problems, alerts, and recovery work across the setup.
Linking inventory records to ticketsSharing inventory with monitoring toolsAligning backup jobs with inventory dataUsing inventory IDs across all systemsAPIs and webhooks for data synchronizationLesson 3Concise summary of the on-premises and cloud infrastructureThis part explains how to sum up on-premises and cloud infrastructure, making high-level views of capacity, platforms, and key services that stay based on detailed inventory but easy for stakeholders to use.
Building environment overview dashboardsAggregating by site, platform, and tierHighlighting critical and shared servicesReporting capacity and utilization trendsPresenting summaries to stakeholdersLesson 4Inventory attributes: hostname, FQDN, IP addresses, MAC, OS/version, kernel, roles, services, installed packages, virtualization hostThis part defines main technical details every system record must have, explaining how IDs, network info, OS details, and job roles come together to make a unique, trackable, and supportable inventory entry.
Hostnames and FQDN naming standardsIP and MAC address tracking practicesRecording OS, kernel, and build versionsDocumenting system roles and key servicesTracking installed packages and softwareFlagging virtualization hosts and clustersLesson 5Routine inventory updates: automated schedules, change hooks from config management, and audit checksThis part describes how to keep inventory up to date with scheduled scans, change hooks from config management, and regular audits, stressing matching up data, handling exceptions, and reporting on data freshness.
Scheduled discovery and refresh cyclesHooks from deployment and config toolsDetecting drift and orphaned recordsAudit procedures and sampling methodsData freshness and completeness metricsLesson 6Methods to build inventory: automated discovery using SSH/WMI/agents and example queriesThis part covers automatic discovery methods using SSH, WMI, and agents, including credential plans, security thoughts, and example queries that gather accurate, repeatable inventory data with little manual work.
Agentless discovery with SSH and WMIUsing configuration management factsDesigning lightweight inventory agentsExample queries for OS and hardwareCredential management and securityLesson 7Inventory attributes: physical location, rack, datacenter, cloud region, subnet, VLANThis part focuses on location and network context, explaining how to record datacenter, rack, cloud region, subnet, and VLAN details so teams can fix connectivity issues, plan capacity, and understand physical and logical placement.
Datacenter, room, and rack identifiersCloud regions, zones, and placementsSubnets, VLANs, and segment mappingDocumenting cross-site dependenciesUsing location data for incident impactLesson 8Inventory attributes: dependencies, upstream/downstream services, backup policy, monitoring groups, last patch dateThis part focuses on dependency and lifecycle details, like upstream and downstream services, backup policies, monitoring groups, and patch dates, helping with impact analysis, compliance checks, and risk assessments.
Documenting upstream and downstream flowsAssigning backup tiers and retentionGrouping systems into monitoring setsTracking last patch and update datesUsing data for risk and impact analysisLesson 9Inventory attributes: ownership, business owner, application owner, SLAs, contact info, maintenance windowThis part details business and ownership attributes, including service owners, SLAs, contacts, and maintenance windows, showing how they guide approvals, incident escalation, and scheduling of disruptive work.
Identifying business and application ownersCapturing SLAs and service tiersPrimary and on-call contact detailsDefining maintenance windows and freezesOwnership changes and review cadenceLesson 10List of system types to track: Linux distributions, Windows Server, hypervisor VMs, cloud VMs, network devicesThis part groups the main system types to track, pointing out differences in metadata, lifecycle, and tools for Linux, Windows, hypervisors, cloud workloads, and network devices in a single inventory model.
Linux distribution families and variantsWindows Server editions and rolesHypervisor hosts and guest VM recordsCloud VM instances and managed servicesNetwork devices, firewalls, and appliancesLesson 11Methods to build inventory: manual spreadsheet templates and recommended column schemasThis part covers manual inventory building using spreadsheet templates, suggesting column setups, validation rules, and workflows that cut errors and make moving to automatic or CMDB systems easier later.
Designing standard spreadsheet layoutsRecommended identification columnsCapturing technical and business fieldsData validation and dropdown controlsPreparing data for CMDB import