For so long, I’ve heard - as have many of you I’m sure - that GNS3, though a GREAT emulator for Cisco IOS software, is not practical for studying anything related to switching. Routing is handled just fine, but because of the proprietary ASICs in Cisco switches, it is not something that can be easily reverse-engineered, thus GNS3 cannot do it. After all, all routing is essentially done in software in GNS3.
I have seen the conversation around SDN evolve over what amounts to the last few years from something that was barely whiteboard material, to something on everyone’s lips in this industry. Why? What’s so interesting about these three little letters? Well, if you’ve heard of it, you’ve undoubtedly heard from your local vendor account manager that their product is the leader in the SDN market, or that they just made a big acquisition that really puts them ahead in the SDN space, blah, blah, blah.
I have seen the conversation around SDN evolve over what amounts to the last few years from something that was barely whiteboard material, to something on everyone’s lips in this industry. Why? What’s so interesting about these three little letters? Well, if you’ve heard of it, you’ve undoubtedly heard from your local vendor account manager that their product is the leader in the SDN market, or that they just made a big acquisition that really puts them ahead in the SDN space, blah, blah, blah.
The idea of security in a vSphere vSwitch is a concept not usually discussed in vSphere peer groups or curricula. They are somewhat specialized features that are normally either not used, or irrelevant due to the presence of another switching architecture such as the vDS (including the Cisco Nexus 1000v) or VM-FEX, where these policies also exist and are much more feature-rich. Thus, the idea of performing these functions on a native vSwitch is usually not talked about.
The idea of security in a vSphere vSwitch is a concept not usually discussed in vSphere peer groups or curricula. They are somewhat specialized features that are normally either not used, or irrelevant due to the presence of another switching architecture such as the vDS (including the Cisco Nexus 1000v) or VM-FEX, where these policies also exist and are much more feature-rich. Thus, the idea of performing these functions on a native vSwitch is usually not talked about.
I’m working on setting up a lab that consists of leading storage and compute products for testing, and I ran into some interesting issues with a few different things…some with respect to the way the Cisco ASA does hairpinning, as well as allowed connections in such a configuration. There were also some routing issues experienced as a result, and I want to explore my experience in all of this during this post.
I’m working on setting up a lab that consists of leading storage and compute products for testing, and I ran into some interesting issues with a few different things…some with respect to the way the Cisco ASA does hairpinning, as well as allowed connections in such a configuration. There were also some routing issues experienced as a result, and I want to explore my experience in all of this during this post.
I’m working on setting up a lab that consists of leading storage and compute products for testing, and I ran into some interesting issues with a few different things…some with respect to the way the Cisco ASA does hairpinning, as well as allowed connections in such a configuration. There were also some routing issues experienced as a result, and I want to explore my experience in all of this during this post.
Last week I did an overview of the performance-minded storage solution that Nexgen has put together. In summary, by using SSD-based read AND write caching that’s moved in and out of the cache in an intelligent way, we can get better performance than traditional disk arrays with slower disks, and fewer of them. I’d like to do a quick tour of the hardware for their low-end model, the n5-50. It’s actually pretty straightforward and the internals are interesting enough that I decided to take some pictures and discuss their role in the solution.
Last week I did an overview of the performance-minded storage solution that Nexgen has put together. In summary, by using SSD-based read AND write caching that’s moved in and out of the cache in an intelligent way, we can get better performance than traditional disk arrays with slower disks, and fewer of them. I’d like to do a quick tour of the hardware for their low-end model, the n5-50. It’s actually pretty straightforward and the internals are interesting enough that I decided to take some pictures and discuss their role in the solution.
Last week I did an overview of the performance-minded storage solution that Nexgen has put together. In summary, by using SSD-based read AND write caching that’s moved in and out of the cache in an intelligent way, we can get better performance than traditional disk arrays with slower disks, and fewer of them. I’d like to do a quick tour of the hardware for their low-end model, the n5-50. It’s actually pretty straightforward and the internals are interesting enough that I decided to take some pictures and discuss their role in the solution.
I began my professional career after college by starting in route/switch. Although I still do plenty of route/switch work, I have also recently taken on responsibilities focused on more datacenter-centric technologies like virtualization, and storage, in addition to the networking in the back-end that makes it all work. Much to the stress of my schedule (and my……stress), one has not trumped the other - they simply exist in parallel.
I began my professional career after college by starting in route/switch. Although I still do plenty of route/switch work, I have also recently taken on responsibilities focused on more datacenter-centric technologies like virtualization, and storage, in addition to the networking in the back-end that makes it all work. Much to the stress of my schedule (and my……stress), one has not trumped the other - they simply exist in parallel.
I was given the privilege to tinker with some gear from my friends over at Nexgen Storage. For those that have not heard of them, I encourage you to head over to http://www.nexgenstorage.com/product/technology and take a peek at the solution. They are one of the “little guys”, but they’re doing some cool things with respect to performance, and providing the ability to give priority to certain tiers of applications or tenants that are using the system.
I was given the privilege to tinker with some gear from my friends over at Nexgen Storage. For those that have not heard of them, I encourage you to head over to http://www.nexgenstorage.com/product/technology and take a peek at the solution. They are one of the “little guys”, but they’re doing some cool things with respect to performance, and providing the ability to give priority to certain tiers of applications or tenants that are using the system.
I was given the privilege to tinker with some gear from my friends over at Nexgen Storage. For those that have not heard of them, I encourage you to head over to http://www.nexgenstorage.com/product/technology and take a peek at the solution. They are one of the “little guys”, but they’re doing some cool things with respect to performance, and providing the ability to give priority to certain tiers of applications or tenants that are using the system.
I set up Auto Deploy in my home lab using vSphere 5.1 on an existing server, in order to boot a Cisco UCS C220 M3 server whose local hard drives have not arrived yet.
I followed Duncan Epping’s walkthrough for Auto Deploy on vSphere 5.0, but this post is about what I had to do differently to get it working. Hopefully I save you some headaches. There might be some improvements to this process, but I was under a deadline and I know that it worked for me - please share any improvements in the comments.
I set up Auto Deploy in my home lab using vSphere 5.1 on an existing server, in order to boot a Cisco UCS C220 M3 server whose local hard drives have not arrived yet.
I followed Duncan Epping’s walkthrough for Auto Deploy on vSphere 5.0, but this post is about what I had to do differently to get it working. Hopefully I save you some headaches. There might be some improvements to this process, but I was under a deadline and I know that it worked for me - please share any improvements in the comments.
2012 has been a crazy year for me. I’d like to briefly summarize my year and publicly post some of my goals for 2013.
Accomplishments in 2012 Blogging - Monthly Views to Keeping It Classless increased by over 450% this year, and every single month had consistently more views than the month before. I want to thank each and every one of you for reading my articles - I really only got into this recently and the explosive growth is still hard to believe.
2012 has been a crazy year for me. I’d like to briefly summarize my year and publicly post some of my goals for 2013.
Accomplishments in 2012 Blogging - Monthly Views to Keeping It Classless increased by over 450% this year, and every single month had consistently more views than the month before. I want to thank each and every one of you for reading my articles - I really only got into this recently and the explosive growth is still hard to believe.