Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Thursday September 29 2016, @12:03AM   Printer-friendly
from the get-connected dept.

I came across an article a few hours ago, http://www.networkworld.com/article/3121969/lan-wan/virtualizing-wan-capabilities.html

I was wondering how much of all that makes sense. It seems to put a lot of focus on the virtual buzz that exists today everywhere and it seems to be being pushed in networking as well. While I don't mind this being implemented by those who want to, I am a bit of a fanboy of the saying "Hardware is King". All this "IT as a service" doesn't seem to have much sense unless one defines what IT is. It may range from just a shared printer, to an entire rack full of servers and switches, to an entire floor full of them. Virtualised WANs and the notion of a 'WAN as a service' could be easy as a breeze to be managed, but how robust could they be? While performance needs at the network level always go up, how does this relate to virtualizing that in itself, transforming it into yet another layer down the stack? A layer which encapsulates all the other layers and which in turn may contain such a layer too. How deep would the nesting level go?

From the article:

"In the network, NFV [Network Functions Virtualization] allows routers, switches, firewalls, load balancers, content delivery systems, end-user devices, IMS [IP Multimedia Subsystem] Nodes, and almost any other network function to be run as software on virtual machines—ultimately, on shared servers, using shared storage," Honnachari explained in an executive brief.

Basically it is the promise of being able to draw a network in a CAD-like software, and push a "Run" button.

Then there is also:

In a world where every part of business is moving, ever faster, the new WAN era will be characterized by user-intuitive solutions that help businesses sense and adapt to shifting demands, allowing those businesses to achieve competitive advantage by helping them optimize their business in motion.

What could be these shifting demands to change your mind often about the WAN infrastructure on which many other things depend on? The virtual network of the International Stock Exchange traffic, anyone?

Like someone else mentioned, would any Soylentils enjoy playing "The Sims: NOC Edition"?

Previously:
Software-Defined Networking is Dangerously Sniffable [
AT&T Open Sources SDN 8.5 Million Lines of Code - to be Managed by Linux Foundation [updated]


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 1) by FunkyLich on Thursday September 29 2016, @02:01PM

    by FunkyLich (4689) on Thursday September 29 2016, @02:01PM (#407902)

    What makes you so certain that the packets will get delivered from the several-layer-virtualised distributed-potentially-across-continents os-and-application system with the same efficiency and speed as directly onto hardware? Do you think maintenance of virtual WAN (which I don't equate with mere creating VMs in OpenStack and connecting it with some virtual router in the same OpenStack to ultimately be delivered on the same physical port. However complicated an OpenStack farm made of hundreds or even thousands of nodes may seem, it would be still very simple to any serious WAN infrastructure) would be simpler than maintenance of hardware and its configurations as they currently are?

    You use SSL/TLS and that's till where you care about. But beyond this very same point, is where I start to care about, while I don't really care what lies before it. I already fight with modems and plan every drop, just so you will be able to just use SSL/TLS. What I am concerned about is that all this will add several layers where things can go wrong. Certainly we could solve all this with this somebody-elses-problem you seem to suggest and instead of 10 people we employ one hundred, with at most equal performance of the network as far you'd be concerned and would perceive. But I doubt you'd like an eight-fold increase in your bill for these extra 90 people dealing with a kind of distributed magic box.