Things you say actually mean stuff
This is totally out of context, but imagine the consultants and marketers promising us unicorn-generated nirvana like follow-the-sun VM mobility or large-scale flow-based forwarding encountering Alice.
Complex Routing in Hyper-V Network Virtualization
The layer-3-only Hyper-V Network Virtualization forwarding model implemented in Windows Server 2012 R2 thoroughly confuses engineers used to deal with traditional layer-2 subnets connected via layer-3 switches.
As always, it helps to take a few steps back, focus on the principles, and the “unexpected” behavior becomes crystal clear.
2014-02-05: HNV routing details updated based on feedback from Praveen Balasubramanian. Thank you!
VMware Virtual Network: Stuck Between the Past and the Future
If you want to implement overlay virtual networking with VMware products today, you have two options: use vCNS 5.5 or NSX for vSphere… and I would be hard pressed to choose one or the other.
Post #2000
When I started blogging in 2006, I had no idea that I’d still be doing it 8 years later… and I never dreamed of writing my 2000th post (this one, according to my blogging platform).

A virtual cake I got from my lovely daughter ;)
IPv6 reachability between ULA and GUA endpoints
From the IPv6 Trivia department: can a host with an ULA address reach a service with a global IPv6 address? Can a host with only a link-local address reach a service with a global IPv6 address? The answer to both questions might be Yes (but you better know what scopes and zones are if you want to figure it out).
Automation Explained
Just in case you've missed it: the ultimate explanation of DevOps, NetOps and other automation ideas.
Network Monitoring with OpenFlow
You know how hard it is to get the network traffic statistics: interface counters are too coarse, Netflow records are too granular, Sflow is sampling… life is hard for network monitoring Goldilocks.
In the Network Monitoring video (part of Real-Life OpenFlow Use Cases webinar) I explained an interesting alternative: you could get (hardware permitting) traffic counters with ever OpenFlow flow entry, resulting in any granularity you need.
PA, PI or ULA IPv6 Address Space? It depends
Having “do we need ULA” blogologs with Ed Horley is great … and the best part of them is that we’re both right (aka: It Depends). OK, let’s try to quantify that last part.
Published on , commented on July 9, 2022
Control and Data Plane Separation – Three Years Later
Almost three years ago the OpenFlow/SDN hype exploded and the Open Networking Foundation started promoting the concept of physically separate control and data planes. Let’s see how far its founding members got in the meantime:
vSphere Does Not Need LAG Bandaids – the Network Might
Chris Wahl claimed in one of his recent blog posts that vSphere doesn't need LAG band-aids. He's absolutely right – vSphere’s loop prevention logic alleviates the need for STP-blocked links, allowing you to use full server uplink bandwidth without the complexity of link aggregation. Now let’s consider the networking perspective.

