One of the reasons I started creating ipSpace.net webinars was to help networking engineers grasp the basics of adjacent technologies like virtualization and storage. Based on feedback from an attendee of my Introduction to Virtual Networking webinar it works:
I am completely on the Network side of the house and understand what I need to build for Storage/Data replication, but I really never thoroughly understood why. This allowed me to have a coherent discussion with my counterparts in DB and Storage and some of the pitfalls that can occur if we try to cowboy the network design.
Recommendation: if you have a similar problem, start with Introduction to Virtual Networking and continue with Data Center 3.0 webinar.
Today on Packet Pushers Priority Queue, we discuss the hypervisor performance bottleneck, some of today's workarounds, and commercial-grade virtual acceleration for hypervisor networking with our sponsor 6WIND.
The post PQ Show 63: 6WIND Accelerates Hypervisor Networking: Sponsored appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today on Packet Pushers Priority Queue, we discuss the hypervisor performance bottleneck, some of today's workarounds, and commercial-grade virtual acceleration for hypervisor networking with our sponsor 6WIND.
The post PQ Show 63: 6WIND Accelerates Hypervisor Networking: Sponsored appeared first on Packet Pushers.
I will be presenting at the Cisco Connect Canada tour in Edmonton and Calgary on November 3rd and 5th, respectively. My presentation is about that three letter acronym that everyone loves to hate: SDN :-)
I will talk about SDN in general terms and describe what it really means; what we're really doing in the network when we say that it's “software defined”. No unicorns or fairy tales here, just engineering.
Next I'll talk about three areas where Cisco is introducing programmability into its data center solutions:
Below are the notes I made for myself while researching these topics and preparing for the presentation. At the bottom of this post is a Q&A section with some frequently asked questions.
I don’t want a software defined network, I want a software-assisted network. I want tools that will help prevent common but straightforward mistakes and make it easier to baseline a network. These tools have to work on real networks. Those messy, brownfield, imperfect … Continue reading
The post What about software assisted networking? appeared first on The Network Sherpa.


Posted on Packet Pushers here.
The post IETF Yokohama Day 2 appeared first on 'net work.
Note to readers: I’m currently at the IETF in Yokohama; each day I’m going to try to post something about the days events y’all might find interesting. I don’t know why, but the faucet knobs in my hotel room seem to rotate backwards. I’m forever turning the water off when I mean to turn it […]
The post IETF Yokohama: Day 2 appeared first on Packet Pushers.

The post Worth Reading: Avago buys Broadcom appeared first on 'net work.
Increased competition and slower cloud growth don't add up for Arista.
Nothing against Broadcom, but it's nice that the OCP has other options.