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Squid Game: The Official Podcast


Squid Game is back—and this time, the knives are out. In the thrilling Season 3 premiere, Player 456 is spiraling and a brutal round of hide-and-seek forces players to kill or be killed. Hosts Phil Yu and Kiera Please break down Gi-hun’s descent into vengeance, Guard 011’s daring betrayal of the Game, and the shocking moment players are forced to choose between murdering their friends… or dying. Then, Carlos Juico and Gavin Ruta from the Jumpers Jump podcast join us to unpack their wild theories for the season. Plus, Phil and Kiera face off in a high-stakes round of “Hot Sweet Potato.” SPOILER ALERT! Make sure you watch Squid Game Season 3 Episode 1 before listening on. Play one last time. IG - @SquidGameNetflix X (f.k.a. Twitter) - @SquidGame Check out more from Phil Yu @angryasianman , Kiera Please @kieraplease and the Jumpers Jump podcast Listen to more from Netflix Podcasts . Squid Game: The Official Podcast is produced by Netflix and The Mash-Up Americans.…
Programmable Packet Forwarding Pipelines Using P4 on Software Gone Wild
Manage episode 452827844 series 1040798
Content provided by ipSpace.net. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ipSpace.net or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
Every time a new simple programming language is invented, we go through the same predictable cycle:
- Tons of hype;
- Unbounded enthusiasm when people who never worked in target environment realize they could get something simple done in a short time;
- Ever-worsening headaches as the enthusiasts try to get a real job done with the shiny new tool;
- Disappointment;
- A more powerful language is invented to replace the old one.
A few years ago we experienced the same cycle when OpenFlow was the-one-tool-to-bind-them all.
140 episodes
Manage episode 452827844 series 1040798
Content provided by ipSpace.net. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ipSpace.net or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
Every time a new simple programming language is invented, we go through the same predictable cycle:
- Tons of hype;
- Unbounded enthusiasm when people who never worked in target environment realize they could get something simple done in a short time;
- Ever-worsening headaches as the enthusiasts try to get a real job done with the shiny new tool;
- Disappointment;
- A more powerful language is invented to replace the old one.
A few years ago we experienced the same cycle when OpenFlow was the-one-tool-to-bind-them all.
140 episodes
All episodes
×As I started Software Gone Wild podcast in June 2014, I wanted to help networking engineers grow beyond the traditional networking technologies. It’s only fitting to conclude this project almost seven years and 116 episodes later with a similar theme Avi Freedman proposed when we started discussing podcast topics in late 2020: how do we make networking attractive to young engineers. Elisa Jasinska and Roopa Prabhu joined Avi and me, and we had a lively discussion that I hope you’ll find interesting. Listen to the podcast…
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This podcast introduction was written by Nick Buraglio , the host of today’s podcast. In today’s evolving landscape of whitebox, brightbox, and software routing, a small but incredibly comprehensive routing platform called FreeRTR has quietly been evolving out of a research and education service provider network in Hungary. Kevin Myers of IPArchitechs brought this to my attention around March of 2019 , at which point I went straight to work with it to see how far it could be pushed. Read more ……
Remember my rant how “ fail fast, fail often sounds great in a VC pitch deck, and sucks when you have to deal with its results ”? Streaming telemetry is no exception to this rule, and Avi Freedman (CEO of Kentik) has been on the receiving end of this gizmo long enough to have to deal with several generations of experiments… and formed a few strong opinions. Unfortunately Avi is still a bit more diplomatic than Artur Bergman – another CEO I love for his blunt statements – but based on his NFD16 presentation I expected a lively debate, and I was definitely not disappointed. Enjoy the podcast…
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This podcast introduction was written by Nick Buraglio , the host of today’s podcast. In the original days of this podcast, there were heavy, deep discussions about this new protocol called “OpenFlow”. Like many of our most creative innovations in the IT field, OpenFlow came from an academic research project that aimed to change the way that we as operators managed, configured, and even thought about networking fundamentals. For the most part, this project did what it intended, but once the marketing machine realized the flexibility of the technology and its potential to completely change the way we think about vendors, networks, provisioning, and management of networking, they were off to the races. We all know what happened next. Read more ……
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This podcast introduction was written by Nick Buraglio , the host of today’s podcast. As we all know, BGP runs the networked world. It is a protocol that has existed and operated in the vast expanse of the internet in one form or another since early 1990s, and despite the fact that it has been extended, enhanced, twisted, and warped into performing a myriad of tasks that one would never have imagined in the silver era of internetworking, it has remained largely unchanged in its operational core. The world as we know it would never exist without BGP, and because of the fact that it is such a widely deployed protocol with such a solid track record of “just working”, the transition to a better security model surrounding it has been extraordinarily slow to modernize. Read more ……
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In early May 2020 I wrote a blog post introducing SuzieQ , a network observability platform Dinesh Dutt worked on for the last few years. If that blog post made you look for more details, you might like the Episode 111 of Software Gone Wild in which we went deeper and covered these topics: How does SuzieQ collect data What data is it collecting from network devices What can you do with that data How can you customize and extend SuzieQ Listen to the podcast…
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A while ago we discussed a software-focused view of Network Interface Cards (NICs) with Luke Gorrie, and a hardware-focused view of them with Or Gerlitz (Mellanox), Andy Gospodarek (Broadcom) and Jiri Pirko (Mellanox). Why would anyone want to implement features in hardware and not in software, and what would be the best hardware implementation? We discussed these dilemmas with Silvano Gai in Episode 110 of Software Gone Wild podcast . Read more ……
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This podcast introduction was written by Nick Buraglio , the host of today’s podcast. As private overlays are becoming more and more prevalent and as SD-WAN systems and technologies advance, it remains critical that we continue to investigate how we think about internetworking. Even with platforms such as Slack Nebula , Zerotier , or the wireguard based TailScale becoming a mainstream staple of many businesses, the question of “what is next” is being asked by an ambitious group of researchers. Read more ……
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The last Software Gone Wild podcast recorded in 2019 focused on advances in Linux networking - in particular on interesting stuff presented at NetDev 0x13 conference in Prague. The guests (in alphabetical first name order) Jamal Hadi Salim , Shrijeet Mukherjee , Sowmini Varadhan , and Tom Herbert shared their favorite topics, and commented on the future of Linux networking. Read more ……
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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 ;) Listen to the podcast…
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Everyone is talking about FRRouting suite these days, while hidden somewhere in the background OpenBGPD has been making continuous progress for years. Interestingly, OpenBGPD project was started for the same reason FRR was forked - developers were unhappy with Zebra or Quagga routing suite and decided to fix it. We discussed the history of OpenBGPD, its current deployments and future plans with Claudio Jeker , one of the main OpenBGPD developers, in Episode 106 of Software Gone Wild . Listen to the podcast…
Sick-and-tired of intent-based GUIs that are barely better than CiscoWorks on steroids? How about asking Siri-like assistant queries about network state in somewhat-limited English and getting replies back in full-blown sentences? Warning: you might be reentering the land of unicorns driving flying DeLoreans... but then keep in mind what Arthur Clarke had to say on this topic ;). Welcome to Net2Text , another proof-of-concept tool created by the group led by Laurent Vanbever … who joined us for a short chat to discuss it, resulting in Episode 105 of Software Gone Wild . Listen to the podcast…
Imagine you would have a system that would read network device configurations, figure out how those devices might be connected, reverse-engineer the network topology, and be able to answer questions like “ what would happen if this link fails ” or “ do I have fully-redundant network ” or even “ how will this configuration change impact my network ”. Welcome to Batfish . Interested? You’ll find more in Episode 104 of Software Gone Wild . Listen to the podcast…
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When I was still at university the fourth-generation programming languages were all the hype, prompting us to make jokes along the lines “fifth generation will implement do what I don’t know how ” The research team working in Networked Systems Group at ETH Zurich headed by prof. Laurent Vanbever got pretty close. The description of their tool says: Read more ……
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Every time a new simple programming language is invented, we go through the same predictable cycle: Tons of hype; Unbounded enthusiasm when people who never worked in target environment realize they could get something simple done in a short time; Ever-worsening headaches as the enthusiasts try to get a real job done with the shiny new tool; Disappointment; A more powerful language is invented to replace the old one. A few years ago we experienced the same cycle when OpenFlow was the-one-tool-to-bind-them all. Read more ……
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Remember how Nick Buraglio tried to use OpenDaylight to build a small part of SuperComputing conference network … and ended up with a programmable patch panel? This time he repeated the experiment using Faucet SDN Controller – an OpenFlow controller focused on getting the job done – and described his experience in Episode 101 of Software Gone Wild . We started with the usual “ what problem were you trying to solve” and quickly started teasing apart the architecture and got geekily focused on interesting things like: Read more ……
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I mentioned Multipath TCP (MP-TCP) numerous times in the past but I never managed to get beyond “ this is the thing that might solve some TCP multihoming challenges ” We fixed this omission in Episode 100 of Software Gone Wild with Christoph Paasch (software engineer @ Apple) and Mat Martineau from Open Source Technology Center @ Intel. Read more ……
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A while ago we did a podcast with Luke Gorrie in which he explained why he’d love to have simple, dumb, and easy-to-work-with Ethernet NICs. What about the other side of the coin – smart NICs with their own CPU, RAM and operating system? Do they make sense, when and why would you use them, and how would you integrate them with Linux kernel? We discussed these challenges with Or Gerlitz (Mellanox), Andy Gospodarek (Broadcom) and Jiri Pirko (Mellanox) in Episode 99 of Software Gone Wild . Read more ……
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In previous Software Gone Wild episodes we covered Snabb Switch and numerous applications running on it, from L2VPN to 4over6 gateway and integration with Juniper vMX code . In Episode 98 we focused on another interesting application developed by Max Rottenkolber : high-speed VPN gateway using IPsec on top of Snabb Switch ( details ). Enjoy! Listen to the podcast…
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In summer 2018 Juniper started talking about another forward-looking concept: Network Reliability Engineering. We wanted to find out whether that’s another unicorn driving DeLorean with flux capacitors or something more tangible, so we invited Matt Oswalt, the author of Network Reliability Engineer’s Manifesto to talk about it in Episode 97 of Software Gone Wild . Read more ……
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We love to claim that we’re engineers and yet sometimes we have no clue how technology we use really works and what its limitations are… quite often because understanding those limitations would involve diving pretty deep into math ( graphs , queuing and system reliability quickly come to mind). Read more ……
After a series of forward-looking podcast episodes we returned to real life and talked with Carl Buchmann about his network automation journey, from managing upgrades with Excel and using Excel as the configuration consistency tool to network-infrastructure-as-code concepts he described in a guest blog post in February 2018 Read more ……
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In recent years Linux networking started evolving at an amazing pace. You can hear about all the cool new stuff at netdev conference … or listen to Episode 94 of Software Gone Wild to get a CliffsNotes version. Roopa Prabhu , Jamal Hadi Salim , and Tom Herbert joined Nick Buraglio and myself and we couldn’t help diverging into the beauties of tc , and the intricacies of low-latency forwarding before coming back on track and started discussing cool stuff like: Read more ……
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Hardware vendors are always making their silicon more complex and feature-rich. Is that a great idea or a disaster waiting to happen? We asked Luke Gorrie , the lead developer of Snabb Switch (an open-source user-land virtual switch written in Lua) about his opinions on the topic. TL&DL version : Give me a dumb NIC, software can do everything else. If you want to know more, listen to Episode 93 of Software Gone Wild . Listen to the podcast…
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In recent Software Gone Wild episodes we explored emerging routing protocols trying to address the specific needs of highly-meshed data center fabrics – RIFT and OpenFabric . In Episode 92 with Dinesh Dutt we decided to revisit the basics trying to answer a seemingly simple question: do we really need new routing protocols? Read more ……
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In 2014, we did a series of podcasts on Snabb Switch ( Snabb Switch and OpenStack , Deep Dive ), a software-only switch delivering 10-20 Gbps of forwarded bandwidth per x86 core . In the meantime, Snabb community slowly expanded, optimized the switching code, built a number of solutions on top of the packet forwarding core, and even forked a just-in-time Lua compiler to get better performance. To find out the details, listen to Episode 91 of Software Gone Wild in which Luke Gorrie explained how far the Snabb project has progressed in the last four years. Listen to the podcast…
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David Barroso was sick-and-tired of using ZX Spectrum of Network Automation and decided to create an alternative with similar functionality but a proper programming language instead of YAML dictionaries masquerading as one. The result: Nornir , an interesting network automation tool formerly known as Brigade we discussed in Episode 90 of Software Gone Wild . Read more ……
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Continuing the series of data center routing protocol podcasts , we sat down with Russ White (of the CCDE fame), author of another proposal: OpenFabric . As always, we started with the “ what’s wrong with what we have right now, like using BGP as a better IGP ” question, resulting in “ BGP is becoming the trash can of the Internet ”. Read more ……
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Years ago Petr Lapukhov decided that it’s a waste of time to try to make OSPF or IS-IS work in large-scale data center leaf-and-spine fabrics and figured out how to use BGP as a better IGP . In the meantime, old-time routing gurus started designing routing protocols targeting a specific environment: highly meshed leaf-and-spine fabrics. First in the list: Routing in Fat Trees (RIFT). Read more ……
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Continuing the Linux networking discussion we had in Episode 86 , we focused on Linux interfaces in Episode 87 of Software Gone Wild with Roopa Prabhu and David Ahern. We started with simple questions like “ what is an interface ” and “ how do they get such weird names in some Linux distributions ” which quickly turned into a complex discussion about kernel objects and udev , and details of implementing logical interfaces that are associated with ASIC front-panel physical ports. Read more ……
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Linux operating system is used as the foundation for numerous network operating systems including Arista EOS and Cumulus Linux. It provides most networking constructs we grew familiar with including interfaces, VLANs, routing tables, VRFs and contexts, but they behave slightly differently from what we’re used to. In Software Gone Wild Episode 86 Roopa Prabhu and David Ahern explained the fundamentals of packet forwarding on Linux, and the differences between Linux and more traditional network operating systems. Read more ……
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A long while ago Marcel Wiget sent me an interesting email along the lines “ I think you should do a Software Gone Wild podcast with Phil Shafer , the granddaddy of NETCONF ” Not surprisingly, as we started discovering the history behind NETCONF we quickly figured out that all the API and automation hype being touted these days is nothing new – some engineers have been doing that stuff for almost 20 years. Read more ……
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During Cisco Live Berlin 2017 Peter Jones (chair of several IEEE task forces) and myself went on a journey through 40 years of Ethernet history (and Token Bus and a few other choice technologies). The sound quality is what you could expect from something recorded on a show floor with pigeons flying around, but I hope you’ll still enjoy our chat. Listen to the podcast…
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In June 2017, we concluded the Building Next Generation Data Center online course with a roundtable discussion with Andrew Lerner, Research Vice President, Networking, and Simon Richard, Research Director, Data Center Networking @ Gartner. In the second half of our discussion (first half is here ) we focused on these topics: Read more ……
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A while ago I got a kind email from Kireeti Kompella, CTO @ Juniper Networks, saying “ A colleague sent me an email of yours regarding SDN, the trough of disillusionment, and the rise of automation. Here's a more dramatic view: the Self-Driving Network -- one whose operation is totally automated. ” Even though Software Gone Wild podcast focuses on practical ideas that you could deploy relatively soon in your network, we decided to make an exception and talk about (as one of my friends described it) a unicorn driving a flying DeLorean with a flux capacitor. Read more ……
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In June 2017, we concluded the Building Next Generation Data Center online course with a roundtable discussion with Andrew Lerner, Research Vice President, Networking, and Simon Richard, Research Director, Data Center Networking @ Gartner. During the first 45 minutes, we covered a lot of topics including : Read more ……
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Imagine a service provider that allows you to provision 100GE point-to-point circuit between any two of their POPs through a web site and delivers in seconds (assuming you’ve already solved the physical connectivity problem). That’s the whole idea of SDN, right? Only not so many providers got there yet. Read more ……
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OpenConfig sounds like a great idea, but unfortunately only a few vendors support it , and it doesn’t run on all their platforms, and you need the latest-and-greatest software release. Not exactly a set of conditions that would encourage widespread adoption. Things might change with the OpenConfig data models supported in NAPALM. Imagine you could parse router configurations or show printouts into OpenConfig data structures, or use OpenConfig to configure Cisco IOS routers running a decade old software. Read more ……
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Network automation and orchestration is a great idea… but how do you verify that what your automation script wants to do won’t break the network? In Episode 78 of Software Gone Wild we discussed the intricacies of testing network automation solutions with Kristian Larsson (developer of Terastream orchestration softare) and David Barroso of the NAPALM and SDN Internet Router fame. Read more ……
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Ansible, Puppet, Chef, Git, GitLab… the list of tools you can supposedly use to automate your network is endless, and there’s a new kid on the block every few months. In Episode 77 of Software Gone Wild we explored Salt, its internal architecture, and how you can use it with Mircea Ulinic , a happy Salt user/contributor working for Cloudflare, and Seth House , developer @ SaltStack, the company behind Salt. Read more ……
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During Cisco Live Europe 2017 (where I got thanks to the Tech Field Day crew kindly inviting me ) I had a nice chat with Peter Jones, principal engineer @ Cisco Systems. We started with a totally tangential discussion on why startups fail, and quickly got back to flexible hardware and why one would want to have it in a switch. Read more ……
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During Cisco Live Europe (huge thanks to Tech Field Day crew for bringing me there ) I had a chat with Jeff McLaughlin about NETCONF support on Cisco IOS XE, in particular on the campus switches. We started with the obvious question “ why would someone want to have NETCONF on a campus switch ”, continued with “ why would you use NETCONF and not REST API ”, and diverted into “ who loves regular expressions ”. Teasing aside, we discussed: Read more ……
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In autumn 2016 I embarked on a quest to figure out how TCP really works and whether big buffers in data center switches make sense. One of the obvious stops on this journey was a chat with Thomas Graf, Linux Core Team member and a founding member of the Cilium project . Read more …
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Last year Cisco launched a new series of Nexus 9000 switches with table sizes that didn’t match any of the known merchant silicon ASICs. It was obvious they had to be using their own silicon – the CloudScale ASIC. Lukas Krattiger was kind enough to describe some of the details last November, resulting in Episode 73 of Software Gone Wild . For even more details, watch the Cisco Nexus 9000 Architecture Cisco Live presentation. Listen to the podcast…
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In 2013, large-scale cloud providers and ISPs decided they had enough of the glacial IETF process of generating YANG models used to describe device configuration and started OpenConfig – a customer-only initiative that quickly created data models covering typical use cases of the founding members (aka “What Does Google Need”). Read more ……
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When I recorded the first podcast with Thomas Graf we both found it so much fun that we decided to do it again. Thomas had attended the NetDev 1.2 conference so when we met in November 2016 we warmed up with What’s NetDev and then started discussing the hot new networking stuff being added to Linux kernel: Read more ……
A while ago I decided it's time to figure out whether it's better to drop or to delay TCP packets , and quickly figured out you get 12 opinions (usually with no real arguments supporting them) if you ask 10 people. Fortunately, I know someone who deals with TCP performance for living, and Juho Snellman was kind enough to agree to record another podcast. Update 2017-03-31: Added More information section Read more ……
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From the moment Cisco and VMware announced VXLAN some networking engineers complained that they'd lose visibility into the end-to-end path. It took a long while, but finally the troubleshooting tools started appearing in VXLAN environment: NVO3 working group defined Fault Managemnet framework for overlay networks and Cisco implemented at least parts of it in recent Nexus OS releases. You'll find more details in Software Gone Wild Episode 69 recorded with Lukas Krattiger in November 2016 (you can also watch VXLAN Technical Deep Dive webinar to learn more about VXLAN). Listen to the podcast…
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In Software Gone Wild Episode 52 Katerina Barone-Adesi explained how Igalia implemented 4-over-6 tunnel termination (lwAFTR) with Snabb Switch . Their solution focused on very fast data plane and had no real control plane. No problem – there are plenty of stable control planes on the market, all we need is some glue. Read more ……
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A few weeks ago Matt Oswalt wrote an interesting blog post on principles of automation , and we quickly agreed it’s a nice starting point for a podcast episode. In the meantime Matt moved to StackStorm team so that became the second focus of our chat… and then we figured out it would be great to bring in Matt Stone (the hero of Episode 13 ). Read more ……
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During our summer team-building podcast we agreed it would be fun to record a few episodes along the “ how do I become a programmer ” theme and figured out that Elisa Jasinska would be a perfect first candidate. A few weeks ago we finally got together and started our chat with campfire stories remembering how we got started with networking and programming. Read more ……
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We did a podcast describing NAPALM , an open-source multi-vendor abstraction library, a while ago, and as the project made significant progress in the meantime, it was time for a short update. NAPALM started as a library that abstracted the intricacies of network device configuration management . Initially it supported configuration replace and merge; in the meantime, they added support for diffs and rollbacks Read more ……
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We did several podcasts describing how one could get stellar packet forwarding performance on x86 servers reimplementing the whole forwarding stack outside of kernel ( Snabb Switch ) or bypassing the Linux kernel and moving the packet processing into userspace ( PF_Ring ). Now let’s see if it’s possible to improve the Linux kernel forwarding performance. Thomas Graf , one of the authors of Cilium claims it can be done and explained the intricate details in Episode 64 of Software Gone Wild . Read more ……
In March 2016 my friend Matt Oswalt announced a distributed network testing framework that he used for validation in his network automation / continuous integration projects. Initial tests included ping and DNS probes, and he added HTTP testing in May 2016. The project continues to grow (and already got its own Github and documentation page) and Matt was kind enough to share the news and future plans in Episode 63 of Software Gone Wild . To ask questions about the project, join the Todd channel on networktocode Slack team (self-registration at slack.networktocode.com ) Listen to the podcast…
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When LinkedIn announced their Project Falco I knew exactly what one of my future Software Gone Wild podcasts would be: a chat with Russ White (Mr. CCDE, now network architect @ LinkedIn). It took us a long while (and then the summer break intervened) but I finally got it published: Episode 62 is waiting for you. Listen to the podcast…
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Does it make sense to run OpenStack on top of VMware infrastructure? How well does NSX work as a Neutron plug-in? Marcos Hernandez answered these questions (and a lot of others) in the Episode 61 of Software Gone Wild (admittedly after a short marketing pitch in the first 10 minutes). Listen to the podcast…
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Software Gone Wild podcast is well into its toddler years and it was time for a teambuilding exercise . Just kidding – we wanted to test new tools and decided to discuss the vacation experiences and podcast ideas while doing that. On a more serious note: we’re always looking for cool projects, implementations and ideas. Contact us at podcast (-the weird sign-) ipspace.net. Listen to the podcast…
A few days after I published a blog post arguing that most service providers cannot possibly copy Google’s ideas Giacomo Bernardi wrote a comment saying “ well, w e managed to build our own gear. ” Initially I thought they built their own Linux distribution on top of x86 server, but what Giacomo Bernardi described in Episode 59 of Software Gone Wild goes way beyond that: Read more ……
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A while ago Big Switch Networks engineers realized there’s a cool use case for their tap aggregation application (Big Tap Monitoring Fabric) – an intelligent patch panel traffic steering solution used as security tool chaining infrastructure in DMZ… and thus the Big Chain was born. Curious how their solution works? Listen to Episode 58 of Software Gone Wild with Andy Shaw and Sandip Shah. Listen to the podcast…
A few weeks after I published Docker Networking podcast, Brent Salisbury sent me an email saying “hey, we have experimental Macvlan and Ipvlan support for Docker ” – a great topic for another podcast. It took a while to get the stars aligned, but finally we got Brent, Madhu Venugopal, John Willis and Nick Buraglio on the same Skype call resulting in Episode 57 of Software Gone Wild . Listen to the podcast…
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