Chapter 13: Network Automation
Historically, a network consisted of mostly hardware with just a modicum of software involvement. Changing the topology of it involved installing and configuring new switches or blades in a chassis or, at the very least, re-patching some cables. Now, the scenario has changed, and the complex infrastructures built to cater for multi-tenant environments such as cloud hosting, or microservice-based deployments, require a network that is more agile and flexible. This has led to the emergence of Software-Defined Networking (SDN), an approach that centralizes the network configuration (where historically it was configured on a per-device basis) and results in a network topology being defined as a whole, rather than as ...
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