In a previous post I discussed network verification, a new area of technology that applies what is known as formal verification – mathematical analysis of a complex system to determine rigorously if it meets the end-to-end goal – to network infrastructure.But what is such verification good for and how is it different from today’s common practice, whereby nearly every organization monitors its network, typically by sampling ongoing flows, events or logs. Isn’t that enough to catch problems as the organization deploys changes?To read this article in full, please click here
In a previous post I discussed network verification, a new area of technology that applies what is known as formal verification – mathematical analysis of a complex system to determine rigorously if it meets the end-to-end goal – to network infrastructure.But what is such verification good for and how is it different from today’s common practice, whereby nearly every organization monitors its network, typically by sampling ongoing flows, events or logs. Isn’t that enough to catch problems as the organization deploys changes?To read this article in full, please click here
Across all sorts of networks today – in enterprises large and small, service providers, government agencies, and beyond – there is a transformation towards a software-driven architecture. Where procedures were once manual, they are becoming more automated, driven perhaps foremost by the need for agility, while maintaining availability and protection.That transformation is coming in a broad arc, not a single drop-in solution, and the industry is still figuring it all out; you’ll see me write more about “softwarization” of the network here in the future. In this post, I’ll discuss a burgeoning aspect of this transformation towards automation: a new technology called network verification, which helps predictively ensure that business goals match reality, even throughout frequent change. With this automated assurance of resilience and security intent, the network can become more agile. And network verification does that with math!To read this article in full, please click here
Across all sorts of networks today – in enterprises large and small, service providers, government agencies, and beyond – there is a transformation towards a software-driven architecture. Where procedures were once manual, they are becoming more automated, driven perhaps foremost by the need for agility, while maintaining availability and protection.That transformation is coming in a broad arc, not a single drop-in solution, and the industry is still figuring it all out; you’ll see me write more about “softwarization” of the network here in the future. In this post, I’ll discuss a burgeoning aspect of this transformation towards automation: a new technology called network verification, which helps predictively ensure that business goals match reality, even throughout frequent change. With this automated assurance of resilience and security intent, the network can become more agile. And network verification does that with math!To read this article in full, please click here