Summary: IBM's Inder Gopal discusses is view that
a balanced, high performance, reliable virtualized environment requires a
complete array of virtualization technology including virtual processing,
virtual storage and virtual networking working in harmony.
Inder Gopal, Vice President, IBM System
Networking Development Systems and Technology Group, stopped by to discuss his
views of what technology is required to create a balanced, reliable, high
performance and agile data center environment. He also came by to introduce
IBM's Software
Defined Network for Virtual Environment (SDN VE).
What does it take to create a balanced data center environment?
Inder pointed out that, in IBM's view, that such a balanced data center
environment can only be created with a carefully selected mix of virtualization
technology including processing virtualization, storage virtualization and
network virtualization (see Sorting
out the different layers of virtualization for more information on the
layers of virtualization technology.) I pointed out that access virtualization,
application virtualization and both management and security technology are also
required.
He made the point that creating an environment that best meets an
organization's requirements usually means deploying a mix of technologies coming
from many vendors and is likely to also include many different system
architectures and operating systems.
Then he turned back to the discussion of IBM's Software Defined Network for
Virtual Environments.
Software Defined Network for Virtual Environment
IBM believes that creating a flexible, agile virtual environment requires the
following networking components:
- A network hypervisor
- Management and security tools that support simple, easy operation in a virtual environment
- An set of tools that allow the creation of an overlay network making it possible to view the virtual network environment as just a traditional Ethernet-based LAN
- Traditional network switches and OpenFlow enabled network switches that make
it easily possible to do the following:
- Create virtual networks that can link together systems supporting components of an distributed, multi-tier, multi-site workload
- Support a multi-tenant environment that isolates one virtual network from others
- The environment must support multiple layers of communication and management
including the following
- The data plane - the layer that carries data packets from one place to another
- The control plane - the layer containing the logic that controls where data packets go and who can see them
- The management plane - the layer allowing a network administrator to log into a device and configure how devices work
The company is offering a collection of hardware and software products
designed to help organizations design and implement virtual environment.
Getting from today's networks to software defined networking
Our conversation then turned to a discussion of the gold rules of IT (see
Reprise
of the Golden Rules of IT for more information on the rules). I pointed
out that to be successful in today's world, it is necessary for suppliers to
help organizations get from where they are today to a desired future state
without having to abandon what they're doing and start over. I pointed out that
organizations don't rip out technology and replace it just for the joy of using
new technology.
Inder agreed and said that is the reason that IBM is so careful to design
products and services that recognize that organizations need to continue to be
productive even while they're carefully implementing their future. This has
means, he pointed out, that the company's products are designed to work in a
multi-vendor, multi-platform, multi-site environment.
When a networking product wasn't designed to operate in a virtual
environment, IBM supplies tools, such as the Distributed Virtual Switch, The
OpenFlow Controller, and sometime in mid 2013, the Software Defined Network for
Virtual Environments.
Snapshot analysis
I've long been a proponent of implementing an architecture and only acquiring
products and services that fit into that architecture. The architecure should be
based, as much as is possible, on international and industry standards rather
than just upon products and technologies from a single vendor. It was refreshing
to speak with an industry executive that appeared to operate based upon the same
principles.
I would urge IT architects to learn more about what IBM is doing with
virtualization technology in general and network virtualization in specific.
By: Dan Kusnetzky
Source: http://www.zdnet.com/ibm-on-the-importance-of-network-virtualization-to-a-virtualized-environment-7000013677/
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