Network Troubleshooting – Bigleaf Networks https://www.bigleaf.net Internet Connectivity Without Complexity Tue, 20 Aug 2024 20:21:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 https://www.bigleaf.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/favicon-70x70.png Network Troubleshooting – Bigleaf Networks https://www.bigleaf.net 32 32 Introducing the new Bigleaf Cloud Connect https://www.bigleaf.net/resources/introducing-the-new-bigleaf-cloud-connect/ Tue, 20 Aug 2024 19:36:54 +0000 https://www.bigleaf.net/?p=20986 Read More]]>

Watch this video to see how Bigleaf Cloud Connect enhances how you can achieve optimal cloud connectivity and network performance. This powerful new dashboard provides unparalleled visibility and control, simplifying network management across multiple locations.

With the new Bigleaf Cloud Connect, you can:

  • Easily manage multiple companies, sites, devices, and circuits from a single intuitive dashboard
  • Gain deeper insight into network health with comprehensive global and multi-site views
  • Access real-time metrics, performance data, and detailed site information for immediate, actionable insights
  • Leverage enhanced analytics to make informed long-term decisions and quickly troubleshoot issues

Streamlined user support, self-help resources, and improved performance make navigating the new Bigleaf Cloud Connect dashboard effortless.

This is just the beginning of a new era in cloud network management.

Welcome to Bigleaf Cloud Connect.

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Bigleaf adds consistency and management to network performance https://www.bigleaf.net/resources/sd-wan-in-action-bringing-consistency-and-management-to-network-performance/ Wed, 03 Mar 2021 21:20:00 +0000 https://www.bigleaf.net/?p=18269 Read More]]>

For managed service providers, streamlining and scaling network performance management has become an essential part of their business. However, many have found it’s difficult to ensure reliable internet connectivity and even more difficult to get visibility into issues. This leads to support tickets and Senior Engineers trying to fix things that should just work.  

MSPs shouldn’t have to use their top talent to do things that frankly amount to basic day-to-day housekeeping items. They need a solution that allows for visibility into their clients’ networks and reliable internet connectivity. Not only that, but the solution also needs to be scalable. Simply, network performance shouldn’t need to rely on complex solutions and configurations – the approach to connectivity needs to adapt. 

We sat down with Craig Anderson, vCIO of PC Miracles, to discuss how his team has used Bigleaf’s SD-WAN to take control of clients’ network performance.  

Q: Can you talk a little bit about your background and what you do and what your business does? 

A: I’ve been in the MSP space now for 13-14 years. Until recently, I was with a decent size MSP in Massachusetts, and that’s where I learned about Bigleaf and had most of my experience with it. Recently, I made a change to work remotely with PC Miracles out of Detroit and brought Bigleaf into PC Miracles. My experience ranges from running all the operations, service desk, processes for projects, managing the actual managed service, and even to some extent, a little bit of selling. Bigleaf was a major part of my success in this range of experience. We had probably about 100 clients, and I’d say a good chunk ended up using Bigleaf. 

Q: What experience first sold you on Bigleaf? 

A: When I first saw Bigleaf, a very good partner of mine who got on board early brought it in. We were doing an open house for clients and prospective clients, and they were one of our partners that were there presenting. The partner brought in a Bigleaf router with him, plugged in one of the internet connections into the wall, using our network. He also brought a Cradlepoint with a 4G LTE as a cellular internet backup and plugged that into the other port. He then took a SIP VoIP phone, and hooked it up to one of the cloud services, I don’t remember which one. 

And he makes a call, and we can all hear it… he puts it on speaker to a cell phone, and he’s talking and then he just rips the cable out. Just pulls the cable right out of one of the ports, and the phone call, just doesn’t even miss a beat. The SIP conversation flipped right over, over the alternate connection. So, there wasn’t a dropped call and redial, or any sort of loss along those lines. 

So right there, that to me was one of the biggest use cases. We were starting to see more clients go to cloud-based VoIP or really anything else that required the network to stay up.  

Q: As the technology landscape has evolved this year, how has Bigleaf been a part of that strategy?  

A: So, my most recent customers have a lot of site-to-site VPNs. They have very sensitive, based on an old technology, retail database systems, and if a site loses its internet connection and flips over to an alternate VPN on a different tunnel, all the sessions were lost, everything has to reconnect. Because Bigleaf hides all that, it obfuscates the connections, they can’t tell what internet connection they’re on, they just keep going because the packets are magically going over whichever connection and it’s magic as far as I’m concerned. The other big thing about site-to-site VPNs using Bigleaf… You get the single IP. From both an MSP and a customer standpoint, that ease of use is essential. 

Any of us can get redundant internet going. Any MSP worth their salt can say, “Hey let’s put your firewall on and let’s put two internet connections on it.” But now we’re going to be able to make that turnkey, we’re not going to need to completely engineer that. We can now get it up to four internet connections without it getting complicated. Your customer is going to get the benefit of combining internet connections. We’re not just saying, “Hey if you’re on this connection, you get a 100 meg, and if you’re on this connection, you get 50 meg. We’re going to aggregate them and you’re effectively getting 150 because it’s using them both together, and you’re not going to need a senior engineer to set up something that is, from the customer standpoint, something that should be basic and should just work. 

Q: From an MSP standpoint, what is the most helpful aspect of Bigleaf’s solution? 

A: From the MSP standpoint, I personally want it because if you can bring that consistency across your customer base, you’re bringing that ease of management of internet connections to the MSP level. And if I can get to a point where the majority of, or all clients are running this, they’re going to obviously see their own benefits. But then I’m also going to see the benefit of being able to support them more easily and better because they may have whatever carrier is available in their geographical area or at their address—fiber, coax, satellite, 4G, whatever. But I’ve pulled those under one roof and consolidated that into one pane of glass, where we, as the MSP, can see what’s going on and support that and more quickly react or troubleshoot issues and quite frankly have less issues.  

We can now pull that all together under one dashboard. That’s really one of the biggest things I found—we have the right quality for VoIP, we have that reliability, and it’s turnkey. You’re not having to engineer it, and when you reduce that complexity, you’re not having to troubleshoot the multitude of things that could go wrong in a more complicated scenario. 

Q: What would you say to other MSPs on your experience with implementing Bigleaf? 

A: I am one of those partners that can get a little bit technical, maybe more than the average person. But I kind of start to glaze over a little bit when we get too deep in the weeds, and it starts to sound like a lot of work and complicated. One of the big things for me over the years, in that MSP focus, has been scalability and repeatability. You don’t want to have your senior engineers use their best talent to keep things running day-to-day. So, I am very biased towards solutions that are more turnkey, but at the same time capable, you don’t want to give up the power just because you made it simpler. To that end, I wouldn’t be as enthusiastic or I wouldn’t have wanted to pull in Bigleaf as I went to new companies, or even bring it to my customers if I didn’t think we could manage it easily. Bigleaf is very simple to manage. You pull your customers’ internet connections under a dashboard that you have as an MSP, and you have that multi-tenant aspect, and your customers can have their own access.  

One of my biggest clients, they have their IT director who wants to see what’s going on with his internet connection. In fact, in addition to Bigleaf’s stability aspect, another big driving force was wanting to have visibility into how well their connections were performing. So again, from the ease of use to management, you can just log in and see that. You have your history, you have what’s being prioritized, how much traffic is going through, all right there. I don’t think I’ve really ever had a day of training on Bigleaf, and it’s not needed even for configuring the solution. I know my team here; I was the only one coming in with experience with Bigleaf. And I’m saying “Alright, guys, I’m going to have this customer deploy Bigleaf.” The engineering team did a little bit of training, but was a bit apprehensive, right? But after they did the install, the feedback was, “Okay, yeah, that was no problem, that was easier than a regular internet cutover would have been. Certainly, easier than a firewall deployment.”  

Bigleaf takes care of a lot of it for you. But even the configurations we work with and have to manage ourselves are very straightforward. If your techs deploy a firewall, if they handle an internet cutover, or if a customer gets a new internet connection; Bigleaf is not going to be a problem. And then that visibility and managing it on an ongoing basis, that single pane of glass, you now have it for the internet connections.  

Q: If you looked at your business and your client’s network performance before Bigleaf and then after Bigleaf, what are the biggest takeaways?

A: We kind of beat it into the ground, right, on the simplicity, but it just works. Bigleaf makes redundant internet more solid. All the million little corner cases where a failover or redundancy didn’t behave as expected – all of that went away with Bigleaf.

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Introducing proactive troubleshooting https://www.bigleaf.net/resources/introducing-proactive-troubleshooting/ Mon, 22 Feb 2021 20:35:00 +0000 https://www.bigleaf.net/?p=16367 Read More]]>

We’ve all been there. You know there’s an issue on your ISP’s end or with one of your application vendors, but when you contact them you get the equivalent of a “Did you try turning it off and back on?” — even if you show them some tests you ran from the command line. With our new network troubleshooting feature, we’ll give you the tools to make those conversations less frustrating and more productive. 

As a Bigleaf Networks customer, you can now run these network tests right from your Bigleaf web dashboard. This will give you a faster, more accurate way to troubleshoot network and application performance issues using trusted third-party data from Bigleaf. You can use that data to be proactive before talking with your team, customers, ISPs, application vendors, or Bigleaf support. 

3 network performance tests 

You can run three different tests from the new troubleshooting section: 

  • Ping: With a ping test, you can identify where you want a set of packets to be transmitted to and Bigleaf will tell you how long the trip takes. It’s a good way to determine if there’s something in that path that’s causing a problem. 
  • MTR: A My Traceroute (MTR) test  traces the route the network packets take along a given path to a specific end point. Whereas the ping test is point to point, the MTR test identifies all the stops a packet takes along the way. MTR gives you the ability to pinpoint individual devices that might be causing a problem. 
  • TCPdump: This more advanced test captures all the TCP/IP packets that are transmitted between the network and a Bigleaf router, to identify any traffic abnormalities. 

Here’s an example of what you’ll get what you run an MTR test through Bigleaf:

Why you’ll want to run tests with Bigleaf 

There are a lot of factors that can make a network unreliable or cause performance issues. Identifying what causes those issues is often challenging because traffic may be handled by different players in the stream, and that can make the test data unreliable. Because Bigleaf owns and operates the backbone — the Bigleaf Cloud Access Network — and our own gateway clusters, we’re able to ensure the most accurate, objective results. 

You can also run some of these tests from the command line or ask Bigleaf’s support team to run them for you, but many of our customers and partners — especially managed service providers (MSPs) — wanted a fast, easy, and reliable test that improves on their previous efforts. We built the new troubleshooting feature in your Bigleaf web dashboard to help make that process a bit easier.

What do you think of  this troubleshooting feature or other aspects of the Bigleaf solution? Please share your  ideas with us in an email to product@bigleaf.net

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What’s new with risk monitoring and how customers use it https://www.bigleaf.net/resources/whats-new-with-risk-monitoring/ Thu, 19 Nov 2020 04:57:06 +0000 https://www.bigleaf.net/?p=7946 Read More]]>

In our last software release, we introduced Bigleaf risk monitoring, our new feature that uses artificial intelligence to give you fewer, but more insightful and actionable alerts on network issues that pose a risk to your business.

Today I’m pleased to share some improvements we’ve made to risk monitoring. 

But first, I want to say thank you to everyone who has turned on risk monitoring so far. And an extra big thank you to everyone who’s sent feedback to our product team at product@bigleaf.net and shared your experience or stories with our support team. (More on some of those later in this blog post.) You make these updates possible and better. 

What’s new in risk monitoring 

In this month’s release, we’ve continued to improve how Bigleaf risk monitoring assesses the health and performance metrics to provide guidance on how to address the issues that could affect your business and site’s continuity or uptime. Many of the updates included refactor how risks are calculated and how they are associated with companies’ sensitivity levels.

Based on the usage we’ve seen so far and the customer conversations we’ve had, this will further improve how we align the prescriptive nature of our risk monitoring with customer needs. 

For more details on what’s changed with risk monitoring, check out the release notes

How risk monitoring is already making a difference 

As soon as we turned on risk monitoring, Bigleaf customers started to report a positive impact. Here are some examples of what we’ve already heard so far. 

Discovering an important issue that hasn’t caused a problem yet 

One of our customers learned something surprising: One of their circuits had been down for over a month. Because they had a second circuit that Bigleaf automatically failed over to using the same IP, they hadn’t noticed any issues with their internet connectivity and didn’t think anything was out of the ordinary during that time.   

As soon as they set up risk monitoring, they immediately received the risk notification that their primary circuit was down. Had that not happened, they would have continued to pay for that down circuit and been at risk of incurring downtime had their remaining circuit failed.   

Verifying the network is working as intended 

On the opposite side of the customer story above, another customer was able to use Bigleaf risk monitoring to verify that one of their circuits was disconnected, as intended. They had disabled that line because of infrastructure changes they made due to the COVID-19 shutdowns. Bigleaf risk monitoring showed them that no traffic was going through that circuit. That gave them the peace of mind that things were working exactly as intended. 

Recognizing small issues that are signs of bigger issues

One of our Bigleaf home office customers had a circuit that was issuing low level latency and packet loss alerts. However, they always seemed to resolve relatively quickly, and they happened in a seemingly sporadic fashion. So, the less technical home user didn’t think that there was a bigger problem at hand. However, when risk monitoring came online, this customer received a risk alert identifying the issues that happened more often than they should, and suggesting that she contact her ISP. When she did, she learned that her hardware had loose connections. She was able to upgrade to a new router and speed plan that worked better, and for a lower monthly fee.  

Try risk monitoring and let us know what you think 

To turn on risk monitoring, log in to your Bigleaf dashboard, go to your account settings, and create a new alert destination to turn them on. You may also see a pop-up prompting you to set up risk monitoring alerts, and you can choose that option, as well. For more details, check out our post on how to set up and use risk monitoring

We’d love to know what you think! Send your feedback or ideas for future improvements to  product@bigleaf.net. And as always, if you have any questions or need support, don’t hesitate to contact us

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Introducing risk monitoring https://www.bigleaf.net/resources/introducing-risk-monitoring/ Thu, 08 Oct 2020 03:16:45 +0000 https://www.bigleaf.net/?p=7727

So many of us suffer with a deluge of information, much of it unusable information. More than half the respondents to a survey of IT professionals dealt with more than 10,000 alerts per day, and 27% of all respondents received over one million alerts per day. Not surprisingly, the majority of respondents admitted they struggled to get through all the notifications and to figure out which actually needed immediate attention. 

This is why I am pleased to announce the introduction of Bigleaf risk monitoring. This new feature makes use of artificial intelligence to filter alerts so only the important, actionable items will be prioritized. 

Focus on the issues that pose a risk to your business

Instead of reporting on normal, individual network events — like your latency spiking every few seconds — Bigleaf’s risk monitoring isolates critical events that pose a threat to your business continuity and your site’s uptime.  

Each risk alert is designed to give you a clear explanation and path to resolution so you can take immediate action. To support this feature, we’ve updated the Bigleaf dashboard to include a new overview, detailed risk view, and override rules for these risks. 

 

The dashboard has a new widget that provides the number of risks a site currently has triggered and highlights the top three risks for that site.

The risks we monitor range from site outages all the way to looking at the mix of traffic across your different circuits.  There are currently 12 risks we will calculate and report, including: 

     

      • Extended period of elevated alarm levels 

      • Circuit outage(s) that result in only a single circuit remaining 

      • Critical traffic volume exceeds the capacity of the backup circuits 

      • A site is down 

    Get fewer, more actionable alerts 

    With risk monitoring, you can expect to receive a lot fewer email alerts because you’re no longer being alerted for every single performance issue, however insignificant. Depending on your site, you could see as much as a 50% reduction in email alerts. 

    There’s no need to change alert settings to report only the most severe issues. While you can still adjust risk notification sensitivity, this decision is based on the level of business impact that concerns you most. You won’t miss any critical pieces of data, such as recurring, lower-level latency alarms, that could indicate a bigger problem. 

    Detailed performance information is a critical part of the troubleshooting path, but the context is also important. Bigleaf risk monitoring analyzes the context around patterns or potential impact, to answer the key question: “Do I need to worry?” 

    When the alerts and other information are presented without context, that forces us to try and build some interpretation model. Whether we use a tool or just figure it out in our heads, we need to filter out-of-context alerts and decide how urgent or important they might be, and whether they require immediate attention.  

    See what Bigleaf risk monitoring can do for you 

    To learn more about Bigleaf’s risk monitoring and actionable alerts, watch our  recorded webinar or request a demo.  

    If you’re already a Bigleaf customer and you’re ready to get started with these new risk-based alerts, you can either follow the wizard when you initially log in, or you can go to your Accounts page in your Bigleaf dashboard and add a new alert destination.

    And we’d love to hear what you think! You can share your feedback with me at product@bigleaf.net or opt in to early feature access for future releases. 

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