I was recently asked to automate the way a client handles Cisco IOS upgrades. As I’ve been using Ansible a lot lately I decided to start there. Basically the steps required to do the upgrade can be broken down into parts which map quite nicely to tasks in an Ansible playbook. Even if you aren’t using IOS you might find it interesting to see how different Ansible modules can be combined in order to complete a set of tasks.
John Donovan introduces Ecomp on the ONS 2016 stage.
I was recently asked to automate the way a client handles Cisco IOS upgrades. As I’ve been using Ansible a lot lately I decided to start there. Basically the steps required to do the upgrade can be broken down into parts which map quite nicely to tasks in an Ansible playbook. Even if you aren’t using IOS you might find it interesting to see how different Ansible modules can be combined in order to complete a set of tasks.
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Open source and networking do mix, but not easily.
This week I was peacefully reading the March 9th issue of ACM Queue when I received a bit of a surprise. It seems someone actually buys the “blame the victim” game, arguing that governments are going to break all encryption if we don’t give them what they want.
These ideas are all based on the same principle: If we cannot break the crypto for a specific criminal on demand, we will preemptively break it for everybody. And whatever you may feel about politicians, they do have the legitimacy and power to do so. They have the constitutions, legislative powers, courts of law, and police forces to make this happen. The IT and networking communities overlooked a wise saying from soldiers and police officers: “Make sure the other side has an easier way out than destroying you.” But we didn’t, and they are.
If you don’t get the point, it’s simple: the only way to really have secure communications is to give the government the keys. Once again, my inner philosopher threw up (as I recently said on a Network Break podcast). The reason I find the line of argument above so horrifying is simple: it’s just true enough to Continue reading
Here's a recap of some of the biggest news from the OCP Summit, including analysis of new hardware and software.
The post Yes, That Just Happened: A Recap Of The 2016 OCP Summit appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Here's a recap of some of the biggest news from the OCP Summit, including analysis of new hardware and software.
The post Yes, That Just Happened: A Recap Of The 2016 OCP Summit appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Ready to jump off the corporate treadmill? On The Next Level we discuss the joys and perils of life as an employee, freelancer, and entrepreneur.
The post The Next Level: Employee, Freelancer, Entrepreneur appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Ready to jump off the corporate treadmill? On The Next Level we discuss the joys and perils of life as an employee, freelancer, and entrepreneur.
The post The Next Level: Employee, Freelancer, Entrepreneur appeared first on Packet Pushers.
This is a great news everyone ! Now you will enjoy your CCDE preparation much more than before: orhanergun.net has a new fancy design and a new membership price for the most special network design content! You won’t believe but it’s ONLY $349 per year! Besides, it means that the investment in your career is […]
The post orhanergun.net New Design – New Price ! appeared first on Cisco Network Design and Architecture | CCDE Bootcamp | orhanergun.net.
An upcoming webinar with SDxCentral and RedHat will separate container fact from hype and show how enterprise IT can use containers to accelerate business agility and achieve greater security across hybrid cloud environments.