ToDD has been out in the wild for 6 months, and in that time I’ve been really pleased with it’s growth and adoption. Considering this was just a personal side-project, I’ve been blown away by what it’s doing for my own learning experiences as well as for the network automation pipelines of the various folks that pop onto the slack channel asking questions.
For the last 6 months I’ve hosted ToDD on my personal Github profile. It was a good initial location, becuase there really was no need at the time to do anything further.
However, as of tonight, ToDD’s new permanent location is https://github.com/toddproject/todd. Read on for some reasons for this.
One of the biggest reasons for creating the “toddproject” organization came about when I started rewriting some of the testlets in Go. These are called native testlets and the intention is that they are packaged alongside ToDD because they’re useful to a very wide percentage of ToDD’s userbase (in the same way the legacy bash testlets were).
For this reason, I created the “toddproject” organization, and once that was done, it made a lot of sense to move ToDD there as well.
Rewriting the legacy Continue reading
More than 40 percent of large enterprises plan to change their IT teams as a result of this technology.
What is reliability in networking ? Why reliability is an important design tool ? I will provide the answers of these questions with the examples in this post. Reliability is within the reasonable amount of time, which depends on the application type and architecture, delivering the legitimate packets from source to destination. This time is […]
The post What is reliability in networking ? appeared first on Cisco Network Design and Architecture | CCDE Bootcamp | orhanergun.net.
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) is a control plane mechanism for Ethernet. It is used to create a Layer 2 topology (a tree) by placing the root switch on top of the tree. Since classical Ethernet works based on data plane learning and Ethernet frames don’t have TTL for loop prevention, loops are prevented by the […]
The post Spanning Tree Best Practices appeared first on Cisco Network Design and Architecture | CCDE Bootcamp | orhanergun.net.
My distaste for keynotes is well known. With the possible exception of Justin Warren (@JPWarren) there may not be a person that dislikes them more than I do. I’ve outlined my reasons for it before, so I won’t go into much depth about it here. But I do want to highlight a few recent developments that are doing a great job of helping me find new things to dislike.
When you walk into a keynote ballroom or arena and see two comfy chairs on stage, you know what’s coming. As someone told me recently, “This is when I know the next hour is going to suck.” The mock interview style of keynote speech is not good. It’s a thinly-veiled attempt to push an agenda. Perhaps it’s about innovation. Or transformation. Or some theme of the conference. Realistically, it’s mostly a chance for a keynote host (some form of VP) to provide forced banter with a celebrity that’s being paid to be there.
These “interviews” are rarely memorable. They seem self serving and very plastic. The only ones that even stand out to me in recent memory are the ones that went off the Continue reading
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In case you missed it, we launched Dockercast, the official Docker Podcast last month including all the DockerCon 2016 sessions available as podcast episodes.
In this podcast, we meet Mano Marks, Director of Developer Relations at Docker. Mano catches us up on a lot of the new cool things that are going on with Docker. We get into the new Docker 1.12 engine/swarm built-in orchestration. We also talk about some cool stuff that is happening with Docker and Windows as well as Raspberry Pi and Docker.
You can find the latest #Dockercast episodes on the Itunes Store or via the SoundCloud RSS feed.
New #dockercast episode w/ host @botchagalupe & our very own @manomarks as a guest!
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The post New Dockercast episode with Mano Marks from Docker appeared first on Docker Blog.