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Alcatel-Lucent wants to take software-defined networking deep into the enterprise, with a plan that would stretch all the way to the user
By focusing on the user experience, rather than just network configuration, Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) says its software-defined networking (SDN) vision will permeate the enterprise more deeply than other plans.
It's a practical approach, says Cliff Grossner, AlcaLu's network solutions marketing director. At its heart is a focus on making the user experience -- meaning application performance -- the central goal for SDN.
That's in contrast to most SDN discussions, which might include user experience but are really focused on automating the configuration of the network. "We need to look at a picture that's more than: 'This virtual machine moved from this server to this server, so we need to move ports,'" Grossner says.
Another point that's different: AlcaLu is already including the enterprise, not just the data center, in its SDN plans.
"The programmability will extend outside the data center fabric, and we're preparing for that architecturally in access-layer switches," Grossner says. Others talk about putting SDN hooks into lower-level switches, but "they're still talking about configuration," he says.
AlcaLu unveiled its SDN framework Tuesday, but really it's an expansion of AlcaLu's application-fluent programmable networks, a concept the company announced in 2010. Application fluency involves the network automatically responding to new workflows -- one of purported benefits of SDN. (See AlcaLu Unveils 10GigE Switch.)
As the "SDN" term took flight, AlcaLu sped up development on parts of the application-fluent network. For example, AlcaLu is now planning to release RESTful APIs for its Omniswitch line in the first half of 2013, earlier than it probably would have happened otherwise, Grossner says.
Those APIs would let the switches talk to network management systems, such as CloudStack and OpenStack. They would also let an external element program the Omniswitch boxes. That element could be something like an OpenFlow controller, but OpenFlow controllers won't necessarily be found in the enterprise network, Grossner says.
OpenFlow capability itself won't be added to the switches until later, Grossner says. "It's likely that for the enterprise, more early benefit will come from the RESTful APIs than from OpenFlow," he says.
He isn't divulging a timeframe for OpenFlow support on the Omniswitches. AlcaLu does plan to make some formal alliances with OpenFlow controller vendors, though; those could be announced early next year, he says.
But the whole point behind AlcaLu's approach is to not get obsessed with OpenFlow and configuration, so let's move on to something else.
AlcaLu wants to see policy infused into SDN early on. Ideally, the network would tap a user profile -- or a virtual machine's profile -- to help it make on-the-fly decisions about what to do with traffic coming from (or being sent to) a virtualized application.
Eventually, the virtual network profiles would get sliced even finer, applying to specific applications being run by a virtual machine. So, data intended for a virtual desktop would be treated differently from data heading to a test setup, for example. "It's something we're working on with Citrix Systems Inc. (Nasdaq: CTXS)," Grossner says.
— Craig Matsumoto, Managing Editor, Light Reading
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