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OpenDaylight: the next Penguin?
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
April 09, 2013 02:01 PM ET
It seems to be passe
to be solid these days. The latest example of this is the just-announced OpenDaylight
project, in which a bunch of the biggest names in computing and networking
have gotten together to push an open source
development effort to support software-defined (i.e., virtual) networking under
the umbrella of the Linux
Foundation.
This is an impressive group -- 18
generally very well-known companies have signed up as
members so far, split across three levels. I expect that the level is
determined by how much the company is willing to pony up but I've not been able
to find that detail, even in the online bylaws.
The topic of software-defined networking
(SDN) is well hyped but hard to nail down. The OpenDaylight
Project has a good technical
overview, but even there it sounds more than a little like mumbo jumbo:
"The business logic and algorithms reside in the applications.
These applications use the controller to gather network intelligence, run
algorithms to perform analytics, and then use the controller to orchestrate the
new rules, if any, throughout the network."
The first time I heard about SDN, at
least this iteration of the concept, was in 2009 when in San Francisco with the
IETF. At the time the concept seemed somewhat cool but also seemed like a solution
in search of problems to solve. If the PR is to be believed, virtual computing
(a.k.a. "the cloud") is such a problem. I'm not sure yet.
But I do know and trust a number of the
people of the OpenDaylight project board. There are some rather sharp
people there, and if any group can develop useful technology this seems like a
good group to give it a try. According to the schedule, we should know if they
pull it off in the fall.
I'm still not quite sure what
"it" is, though. And, more importantly, I am far from sure how to
manage "it" when "it" is deployed. I have always been leery
of managing complex virtual environments. Seems like it's rather easy to build
an environment that is too complex to actually be managed, especially with the
current management tools.
The OpenDaylight
Project technical overview says: "Software Defined Networking (SDN)
separates the control plane from the data plane within the network, allowing
the intelligence and state of the network to be managed centrally while
abstracting the complexity of the underlying physical network." Two things
worry me about this: the central management -- since the project does not
mention developing any tools to do that management; and abstracting complexity
-- since even non-abstract complexity seems to be nearly impossible to deal
with when something minor goes wrong.
I do note that the members of the OpenDaylight project seem to be on the supplier rather than
the user side. I do not see Amazon or Google on the list. To me, the project
would be more interesting if there were big operators in the mix.
Disclaimer:
Like most big companies, Harvard is working in the cloudy space (e.g., http://www.mghpcc.org/) and may find that
what the OpenDaylight project produces turns out to
be useful. But it is too early to say and the university has expressed no
opinion on daylight as an objective.
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