Today we talk about how network analytics and telemetry differ from traditional monitoring, what new data sources & techniques are available, and how we can put this data to good use.
The post PQ Show 75: Talking Network Analytics And Telemetry appeared first on Packet Pushers.
If you missed a VMware vForum in a city near you, you can still join us on April 19th for vForum Online! At this free digital event, you’ll get practical guidance, and develop new strategies for building a digital success plan across the cloud, the virtualized network, and mobile. Continue reading
The rapid migration from enterprise to cloud, driven by the economics of scale, the convergence of local and wide-area networking (LAN-WAN), the migration from Fibre Channel to IP storage, the rise of analytics and the emergence of new cloud applications is dramatic. In the past two years, we have witnessed a massive shift in the way applications are built and deployed, moving away from legacy siloed infrastructure to seamless workload mobility. The demands of these new workloads change the way spine networks are reconstructed for cloud networking. As physical compute or storage silos evolve to support cloud applications, one can automate and provision the entire network to handle any workload, workflow or workstream, with real time agility.
Use techniques like traffic policing and WAN optimization to get the most out of your bandwidth.
Is your IT organization guilty of data hoarding or lusting after big data?
Long story short: I burned out last autumn and still haven’t recovered.
I managed to find a replacement instructor for three of my workshops, so I hope they’ll still take place. I’m also working on other ways of delivering them to whoever is interested in an interactive live session.
To all the people who wanted to meet me in Las Vegas: I’m really sorry I’ll miss you. Interop was always a great place for interesting conversations and awesome workshop audiences.
So there’s a mistake I’ve been making, for years. I’ve referred to what is link aggregation as “LACP”. As in “I’m setting up an LACP between two switches”. While you can certainly set up LACP between to switches, the more correct term for the technology is link aggregation (as defined by the IEEE), and an instance of that is generically called a LAG (Link Aggregation Group). LACP is an optional part of this technology.
Here I am explaining this and more in an 18 minute Youtube video.