Re: [c-nsp] SDN

2014-12-18 Thread Federico Cossu
LOL. after so many years, this list does not stop making me more and more
surprised, thank you, you made my day.


2014-12-18 7:35 GMT+01:00 cool hand luke :
>
> On 12/17/2014 04:21 AM, GNANESH wrote:
>
>> I need to understand and setup SDN in my office environment. Can you help
>> me out with necessary videos and installation guides ?
>>
>
> 1. could you be a little more vague?
>
> 2. is google broken? if google doesn't have what you need, then...
>
> 3. reply w/ your timeline and your training budget.
>
> /chl
>
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-- 
++
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Re: [c-nsp] SDN

2014-12-17 Thread cool hand luke

On 12/17/2014 04:21 AM, GNANESH wrote:

I need to understand and setup SDN in my office environment. Can you help
me out with necessary videos and installation guides ?


1. could you be a little more vague?

2. is google broken? if google doesn't have what you need, then...

3. reply w/ your timeline and your training budget.

/chl
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[c-nsp] SDN

2014-12-17 Thread GNANESH
I need to understand and setup SDN in my office environment. Can you help
me out with necessary videos and installation guides ?

- Gnanesh R
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Re: [c-nsp] SDN setup startup from lab first

2014-12-06 Thread Joshua Riesenweber
Georgia Tech had an online course a little while back on SDN that was pretty 
good.Goes through a fair bit on mininet, openflow, etc. including setup.

The course is over but you can probably get the archive:
https://class.coursera.org/sdn-002


Cheers,Josh

> From: xuhu...@gmail.com
> Date: Sat, 6 Dec 2014 17:55:27 +0800
> To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
> Subject: [c-nsp] SDN setup startup from lab first
> 
> Hi folks, I want to start up sdn testing in the lab to practice, any 
> suggestions how to start? Thanks 
> 
> Br,
> Xuhu
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[c-nsp] SDN setup startup from lab first

2014-12-06 Thread Xuhu NSP
Hi folks, I want to start up sdn testing in the lab to practice, any 
suggestions how to start? Thanks 

Br,
Xuhu
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Re: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-20 Thread Scott Granados
I don’t think equipment vendors are scared by the idea of software networks 
because they are participating in that space in a big way.  Look at what Cisco 
is doing or Juniper for that matter with contrails.  I haven’t worked with the 
Cisco virtualized objects but I have used Junipers VFirefly which is a 
virtualized instance of an SRX and it’s quite interesting.  You can also put 
VFirefly in packet mode and end up with something similar to a J series router. 
 I can definitely see where it’s going and some of the cool applications of 
network elements as software.
 

On Jun 20, 2014, at 3:47 AM, Vitkovský Adam  wrote:

> I think vendors have grasped this emerging opportunity very well. 
> Take Cisco for example the openflow APIs are available to the majority of 
> their high-end products and they have virtualized their OSes as well. 
> 
> I know for a fact that majority of SPs use some kind of NFV already. 
> However I'd be interested to know how many SP the use SDN. 
> 
> How I understand it is that SDN is network that orchestrates/provisions 
> itself based on the traffic flows or application signaled requirements of 
> course within operator's defined boundaries for a given 
> service/customer/application. 
> NFV on the other hand is using "cheap" processing power to offload network 
> functions that don't have "high" pps requirements. 
> The first think that comes to mind is control-plane (like Mark is doing with 
> RRs) also some data-plane functions can be offloaded to servers like CGN or 
> FW. 
> And the nice think about NFV is that since you can do it in a "cloud" if 
> designed correctly it should never go down. 
> 
> 
> adam
> 
>> -Original Message-
>> From: cisco-nsp [mailto:cisco-nsp-boun...@puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of
>> Aaron
>> Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2014 10:33 PM
>> To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
>> Subject: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv
>> 
>> I hope you all don't mind the off-topic question in this cisco mail list.
>> you all are such a broad and smart and experienced group that I wanted to
>> reach out to everyone out there in the trenches to get a feel for what you 
>> all
>> know about sdn/nfv and do you see any movement on it yet, etc.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> I have been reading a little bit about sdn/nfv/openflow and it seems that
>> these are radical, new ideas that seem that they could really change a lot
>> about what we've know about networks for the past decades.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn controllers? or nfv objects 
>> in
>> servers. or openflow?
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Does sdn/nfv scare the heck out of equipment manufacturers ?
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Aaron
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> ___
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>> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
>> archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
> 
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Re: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-20 Thread Vitkovský Adam
I think vendors have grasped this emerging opportunity very well. 
Take Cisco for example the openflow APIs are available to the majority of their 
high-end products and they have virtualized their OSes as well. 
 
I know for a fact that majority of SPs use some kind of NFV already. 
However I'd be interested to know how many SP the use SDN. 

How I understand it is that SDN is network that orchestrates/provisions itself 
based on the traffic flows or application signaled requirements of course 
within operator's defined boundaries for a given service/customer/application. 
NFV on the other hand is using "cheap" processing power to offload network 
functions that don't have "high" pps requirements. 
The first think that comes to mind is control-plane (like Mark is doing with 
RRs) also some data-plane functions can be offloaded to servers like CGN or FW. 
And the nice think about NFV is that since you can do it in a "cloud" if 
designed correctly it should never go down. 


adam

> -Original Message-
> From: cisco-nsp [mailto:cisco-nsp-boun...@puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of
> Aaron
> Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2014 10:33 PM
> To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
> Subject: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv
> 
> I hope you all don't mind the off-topic question in this cisco mail list.
> you all are such a broad and smart and experienced group that I wanted to
> reach out to everyone out there in the trenches to get a feel for what you all
> know about sdn/nfv and do you see any movement on it yet, etc.
> 
> 
> 
> I have been reading a little bit about sdn/nfv/openflow and it seems that
> these are radical, new ideas that seem that they could really change a lot
> about what we've know about networks for the past decades.
> 
> 
> 
> Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn controllers? or nfv objects 
> in
> servers. or openflow?
> 
> 
> 
> Does sdn/nfv scare the heck out of equipment manufacturers ?
> 
> 
> 
> Aaron
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ___
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> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
> archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/

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Re: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-19 Thread Mark Tinka
On Thursday, June 19, 2014 10:33:16 PM Aaron wrote:

> Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn
> controllers? or nfv objects in servers. or openflow?

If running a route reflector over IOS XE over CSR1000v over 
VMware ESXi over an HP server counts as NFV, then I'm doing 
that :-).

Mark.


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Re: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-19 Thread Azher Mughal
Things are coming slowly, e.g. Wedge from Facebook:

https://code.facebook.com/posts/681382905244727/introducing-wedge-and-fboss-the-next-steps-toward-a-disaggregated-network/

http://www.businessinsider.com/facebook-just-fired-a-huge-shot-at-cisco-2014-6

-Azher

On 6/19/2014 1:33 PM, Aaron wrote:
> I hope you all don't mind the off-topic question in this cisco mail list.
> you all are such a broad and smart and experienced group that I wanted to
> reach out to everyone out there in the trenches to get a feel for what you
> all know about sdn/nfv and do you see any movement on it yet, etc.
>
>  
>
> I have been reading a little bit about sdn/nfv/openflow and it seems that
> these are radical, new ideas that seem that they could really change a lot
> about what we've know about networks for the past decades.
>
>  
>
> Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn controllers? or nfv objects
> in servers. or openflow?
>
>  
>
> Does sdn/nfv scare the heck out of equipment manufacturers ?
>
>  
>
> Aaron
>
>  
>
>  
>
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> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
> archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
>

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Re: [c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-19 Thread Dumitru Ciobarcianu
On 19-Jun-14 23:33 PM, Aaron wrote:
> 
> Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn controllers? or nfv objects
> in servers. or openflow?
> 

I've seen this quote somewhere and I liked it: "SDN exists in the
marketing plane only". I liked it.

Dumitru

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[c-nsp] sdn/nfv

2014-06-19 Thread Aaron
I hope you all don't mind the off-topic question in this cisco mail list.
you all are such a broad and smart and experienced group that I wanted to
reach out to everyone out there in the trenches to get a feel for what you
all know about sdn/nfv and do you see any movement on it yet, etc.

 

I have been reading a little bit about sdn/nfv/openflow and it seems that
these are radical, new ideas that seem that they could really change a lot
about what we've know about networks for the past decades.

 

Is anyone out there yet working with any sdn controllers? or nfv objects
in servers. or openflow?

 

Does sdn/nfv scare the heck out of equipment manufacturers ?

 

Aaron

 

 

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