Video: Cloud Models, Layers and Responsibilities
In late spring 2019, Matthias Luft and Florian Barth presented a short webinar on cloud concepts, starting with the obvious topic: cloud models, layers, and responsibilities.
Disaster Recovery and Failure Domains
One of the responses to my Disaster Recovery Faking blog post focused on failure domains:
What is the difference between supporting L2 stretched between two pods in your DC (which everyone does for seamless vMotion), and having a 30ms link between these two pods because they happen to be in different buildings?
I hope you agree that a single broadcast domain is a single failure domain. If not, let agree to disagree and move on - my life is too short to argue about obvious stuff.
Tuning BGP Convergence in High-Availability Firewall Cluster Design
Two weeks ago Nicola Modena explained how to design BGP routing to implement resilient high-availability network services architecture. The next step to tackle was obvious: how do you fine-tune convergence times, and how does BGP convergence compare to the more traditional FHRP-based design.
You Still Need a Networking Engineer for a Successful Cloud Deployment
You’ve probably heard cloudy evangelists telling CIOs how they won’t need the infrastructure engineers once they move their workloads into a public cloud. As always, whatever sounds too good to be true usually is. Compute resources in public clouds still need to be managed, someone still needs to measure application performance, and backups won’t happen by themselves.
Even more important (for networking engineers), network requirements don’t change just because you decided to use someone else’s computers:
Questions to Ask About Product Using Overhyped Technology
I stumbled upon a great MIT Technology Review article (warning: regwall ahead) with a checklist you SHOULD use whenever considering a machine-learning-based product.
While the article focuses on machine learning at least some of the steps in that list apply to any new product that claims to use a brand new technology in a particular problem domain like overlay virtual networking with blockchain:
Worth Reading: Resilience Engineering
Starting with my faking disaster recovery tests blog post Terry Slattery wrote a great article delving into the intricacies of DR testing, types of expected disasters, and resilience engineering. As always, a fantastic read from Terry.
IP Fabric with Gian-Paolo Boarina on Software Gone Wild
No, we were not talking about IP fabrics in general - IP Fabric is a network management software (oops, network assurance platform) Gian Paolo discovered a while ago and thoroughly tested in the meantime.
He was kind enough to share what he found in Episode 107 of Software Gone Wild, and as Chris Young succinctly summarized: “it’s really sad what we still get excited about something 30 years after it was first promised”… but maybe this time it really works ;)
Upcoming Events and Webinars (December 2019)
The registration is still open for the Using VXLAN to Build Active-Active Data Centers workshop on December 3rd, but if you can’t make it to Zurich you might enjoy these live sessions we’ll run in December 2019:
- In the last session of autumn 2019 network automation course (December 5th) we’ll have Jeremy Schulman talking about ChatOps and Slack integration;
- On December 10th Matthias Luft will continue the Cloud Security series with a session focused on identity and access management (IAM);
- Remember the Business Aspects of Networking Technologies idea I started in April? Finally I found time for the second session (on December 12th), this time focused on addressing the business challenges instead of getting excited about technology;
- We’ll conclude the Autumn 2019 webinar season with another session in the EVPN Deep Dive saga on December 17th. This time we’ll have Krzysztof Szarkowicz, the author of MPLS in the SDN Era talk about MPLS-based EVPN.
All webinars I mentioned above are accessible with Standard ipSpace.net Subscription, and you’ll need Expert Subscription to enjoy the automation course contents.
Is There a Future for Networking Engineers?
Someone sent me this observation after reading my You Cannot Have Public Cloud without Networking blog post:
As much as I sympathize with your view, scales matter. And if you make ATMs that deal with all the massive client population, the number of bank tellers needed will go down. A lot.
Based on what I read a while ago a really interesting thing happened in financial industry: while the number of tellers went down, number of front-end bank employees did not go down nearly as dramatically, they just turned into “consultants”.
The EVPN Dilemma
I got an interesting set of questions from a networking engineer who got stuck with the infamous “let’s push the **** down the stack” challenge:
So, I am a rather green network engineer trying to solve the typical layer two stretch problem.
I could start the usual “friends don’t let friends stretch layer-2” or “your business doesn’t need that” windmill fight, but let’s focus on how the vendors are trying to sell him the “perfect” solution: