In this Datanauts episode, Chris and Ethan walk through performance troubleshooting from virtualization and network perspectives, and share tips for troubleshooting across silos.
The post Datanauts 008 – The Silo Series: Performance Troubleshooting appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On this week's show we look at the fallout from the Ashley Madison attack. Did Brian Krebs just dox the Impact Team ringleader? Is he Australian?
Adam Boileau and I talk about all the AshMad fallout and other infosec news.
Startup Rubrik tackles VM backups with an integrated appliance that offers premises and cloud-based storage, and offers deuplication and replication. It can back up to Amazon S3 or OpenStack private clouds.
The post Startup Radar: Rubrik Rethinks VM Backups appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Network Break 50 covers new pricing ideas from Big Switch, routing around censorship, Target's settlement with Visa card issuers, insurance and InfoSec, SD-WAN patents, and partner ecosystems.
The post Network Break 50: InfoSec Arguments & Anti-Censorship Routing appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Active distributed monitoring gathers network and application performance data from multiple locations to give IT better visibility and improve troubleshooting. Find out how NetBeez simplifies distributed monitoring.
The post How Distributed Network Monitoring Boosts Visibility, Speeds Troubleshooting appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Highlights from Network Field Day 10 include the SD-WAN goldrush, the novel concept of quality products, and the performance-boosting DPDK project.
The post SD-WAN Gold Rush, Quality Products, And DPDK appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Arista CloudVision is a turnkey approach to workload orchestration and workflow automation. Building on Arista’s success in building programmable and open software for the cloud with Arista EOS, CloudVision extends the EOS architecture to a network-wide perspective.
The post Show 251 – Arista Networks CloudVision – Sponsored appeared first on Packet Pushers.
In this week's podcast we check in with Troy Hunt from HaveIBeenPwned.com. Troy has done the responsible thing in adding the Ashley Madison dataset to his service -- you can only search for email addresses in the dump after you've verified that you control them. We'll talk to him about why he did that.
I recently moved from Windows to Linux on my personal laptop and thought I might share my experience. This isn’t directly network related, but hopefully of interest to some portion of the large and diverse PP audience, especially considering recent events in the Microsoft realm. Ignoring that, using Linux ‘at home’ is a great way to learn about […]
The post From Windows to Linux appeared first on Packet Pushers.
When I’m not working (boring right now), reading Everyday Feminism (fascinating*) or spending time with the family (awesome) I’m writing. I’ve three book projects on the go, two of which are taking far too long and rapidly become a chore. The third is the third edition of my F5 iRules book (I’m not shilling – […]
The post F5 iRules – What is a Program? appeared first on Packet Pushers.
While cruising in our Galaxy-class starship to another data center, we’ve hit a storage scaling issue. There’s no way to add any more performance to our antimatter storage array! The chief engineer suggests that we perform a saucer separation to decouple capacity from performance, which will allow us to scale the two requirements individually. Release the docking latches, and let’s hope this maneuver can save us! Satyam Vaghani of PernixData joins the Datanauts for this discussion of decoupled storage.
The post Datanauts 007 – Decoupled Storage Architecture appeared first on Packet Pushers.
I’m gearing up for a new certification effort, but after eighteen years of progressive experience in IT, a piece of paper or some new initials in my email signature was an extrinsic motivator I didn’t need. Still I found something about the entire process inviting and realized that it was the intrinsic benefits of certification […]
The post Intrinsic Benefits Of Certification appeared first on Packet Pushers.
In the Assured Security Model, software-defined infrastructure is assisted by an analytics system with state awareness of dynamic data center components.
The post Assured Security Model for Data Center and Cloud appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Take a network break! In this episode Oracle tells customers to stop security testing on its software, Arista posts a strong Q2, Symantec sells Veritas, F5 releases a new version of Big-IP and more.
The post Network Break 49: Oracle Scolds Customers Over Security appeared first on Packet Pushers.
A favorite topic among network engineers, documentation is a source of both wonder and horror. Network documentation is difficult to get right. How much detail is enough? How old is that diagram, really? Can't this be automated? Wait, the automated generator spit out *that*? In this show, the Packet Pushers along with former guest Dominik discuss their documentation experiences, good and bad. What have we gotten right? What have we gotten wrong? What's been worth the trouble? What was a waste of time? What did we wish we'd documented before we really needed it?
The post Show 250 – How To Document A Network appeared first on Packet Pushers.
This episode of Network Break looks at ONIE security risks, a sensible car hack lawsuit, missing millions at Ubiquiti, EMC and VMware going all the way, a potential Apple win at IBM, and other tech news.
The post Network Break 48: Apple Smugness, ONIE Pwned appeared first on Packet Pushers.
On this week's show we're chatting with Mark Dowd and Brian Krebs about Oracle CSO Mary Ann Davidson's somewhat odd blog post from earlier this week. In the post she laid into security researchers for violating Oracle's EULA when reverse engineering their products. The post got pulled, much drama, we sift through the ashes of that. Plus we chat to Brian about the daring $46.7m online heist against Ubiquiti Networks.
New IPv4 address space is almost gone from the global market. Organizations need to introduce IPv6 into their environments to ensure uninterrupted business operations with the rest of the world. Yet, implementing IPv6 is not as simple as firing up a routing scheme. How does an organization know if it’s ready? Special guest Ed Horley joins the Datanauts in this discussion.
The post Datanauts 006 – Assessing IPv6 Readiness appeared first on Packet Pushers.
There’s been a lot of talk of late on the performance of centralized network controllers (such an odd thing to say when you think about it, but there it is). Ethan recently had a post up on the topic of scaling and SDNs that overlaps with this topic, and SDN Testing ran some interesting tests […]
The post SDN Controller Benchmarking appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's show looks at building a data center fabric around Juniper's QFX switch line to improve automation and enable IT service delivery. Thanks to our sponsor Juniper Networks.
The post Show 249 – Juniper QFX DC Fabrics & Automation – Sponsored appeared first on Packet Pushers.