Category: Data Center

Does Optimal L3 Forwarding Matter in Data Centers?

Every data center network has a mixture of bridging (layer-2 or MAC-based forwarding, aka switching) and routing (layer-3 or IP-based forwarding); the exact mix, the size of L2 domains, and the position of L2/L3 boundary depend heavily on the workload ... and I would really like to understand what works for you in your data center, so please leave as much feedback as you can in the comments.

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LineRate Proxy: Software L4-7 Appliance With a Twist

Buying a new networking appliance (be it VPN concentrator, firewall or load balancer … aka Application Delivery Controller) is a royal pain. You never know how much performance you’ll need in two or three years (and your favorite bean counter will not allow you to scrap it in less than 4-5 years). You do know you’ll never get the performance promised in vendor’s data sheets … but you don’t always know which combination of features will kill the box.

Now, imagine someone offers you a performance guarantee – you’ll always get what you paid for. That’s what LineRate Systems, a startup just exiting stealth mode is promising.

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Full Mesh Is the Worst Possible Fabric Architecture

One of the answers you get from some of the vendors selling you data center fabrics is “you can use any topology you wish” and then they start to rattle off an impressive list of buzzword-bingo-winning terms like full mesh, hypercube and Clos fabric. While full mesh sounds like a great idea (after all, what could possibly go wrong if every switch can talk directly to any other switch), it’s actually the worst possible architecture (apart from the fully randomized Monkey Design).

Before reading the rest of this post, you might want to visit Derick Winkworth’s The Sad State of Data Center Networking to get in the proper mood.
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Networking Tech Field Day #3: First Impressions

Last week Stephen Foskett and Greg Ferro brought back their merry crew of geeks (and a network security princess) for the third Networking Tech Field Day. We’ve met some exciting new vendors (Infineta and Spirent) and a few long-time friends (Arista, Cisco, NEC and Solarwinds).

Infineta gave us a fantastic deep-dive into deduplication math, and Spirent blew our socks off with their testing gear. As for the generic state of the networking industry, William R. Koss nicely summarized my feelings in a blog post published last Friday:

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Cisco & VMware: Merging the Virtual and Physical NICs

Virtual (soft) switches present in almost every hypervisor significantly reduce the performance of high-bandwidth virtual machines (measurements done by Cisco a while ago indicate you could get up to 38% more throughput if you tie VMs directly to hardware NICs), but as I argued in my “Soft Switching Might Not Scale, But We Need It” post, we need hypervisor switches to isolate the virtual machines from the vagaries of the physical NICs.

Engineering gurus from Cisco and VMware have yet again proven me wrong – you can combine VMDirectPath and vMotion if you use VM-FEX.

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Stretched Layer-2 Subnets – The Server Engineer Perspective

A long while ago I got a very interesting e-mail from Dmitriy Samovskiy, the author of VPN-Cubed, in which he politely asked me why the networking engineers find the stretched layer-2 subnets so important. As we might get lucky and spot a few unicorns merrily dancing over stretched layer-2 rainbows while attending the Networking Tech Field Day, I decided share the e-mail contents with you (obviously after getting an OK from Dmitriy).

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Looking into Data Center Storage Protocols mysteries

Should you use FC, FCoE or iSCSI when deploying new gear in your existing data center? What about Greenfield deployments? What are the decision criteria? Should you just skip iSCSI and use NFS if you’re focusing on server virtualization with VMware? Does it still make sense to build separate iSCSI network? Are jumbo frames useful? We’ll try to answer all these questions and a few more in the first Data Center Virtual Symposium sponsored by Cisco Systems.

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Video: Networking requirements for VM mobility

You’re probably sick and tired of me writing and talking about networking requirements for VM mobility (large VLAN segments that some people want to extend across the globe), but just in case you have to show someone a brief summary, here’s a video taken from the Data Center Fabric Architectures webinar.

You’ll also find VM mobility challenges described to various degrees in Introduction to Virtual Networking, VMware Networking Deep Dive and Data Center Interconnects webinars

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