
SAS Event Stream ManagerSAS
SAS Event Stream Manager integrates SAS Event Stream Processing studio and server components, so you can get the most value possible from your event stream projects.
Vendor
SAS
Company Website
sas-event-…ger-110313.pdf
Product details
SAS Event Stream Manager is a web-based client that enables you to manage your SAS Event Stream Processing environment. You can use SAS Event Stream Manager to perform the following tasks:
- deploy SAS Event Stream Processing projects into production environments and test environments
- monitor the status of your deployments
- administer your deployments and manage change
- monitor your SAS Event Stream Processing metering servers You can use SAS Event Stream Processing Studio to create the projects that you deploy to ESP servers using SAS Event Stream Manager.
Use it to
- Manage multiple SAS Event Stream Processing environments.
- Deploy multiple SAS Event Stream Processing projects to multiple SAS servers on the edge or in the cloud.
- Monitor the health of SAS Event Stream Processing projects and servers running in the cloud, on-premises and on the edge
Key Benefits
- Skip sending manual alerts. Get alerts automatically when new champion analytical models are available for updating on servers.
- Let the software handle the logistics. With SAS Event Stream Manager, you won’t need to copy files to deploy to SAS Event Stream Processing servers or use manual command line instructions to interact with the servers.
- Know what’s running on a server now and what ran in the past. SAS Event Stream Manager shows all SAS Event Stream Processing projects currently running on a server and provides a historical log of all previous projects.
- Avoid having to manually summarize deployment status. The software summarizes the state of the SAS Event Stream Processing server assigned to each deployment and to all the projects running on those servers, so administrators see a high level of detail.
- Simplify project version control. Easily see how SAS Event Stream Processing projects have changed over time and test new versions before promoting them for live use