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Network Automation

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Fewer types of boxes, templates, ways to do essentially the same thing? ... How to maintain consistency between human tweakage and the database? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Network Automation


1
Network Automation
  • Albert Greenberg, Nick Feamster, Richard Mortier,
    Mark Poepping, Lun Li, Sharad Agarwal, Changhoon
    Kim, Ramveer Chandra, et al.

2
What is network automation?
  • The performance of the following network tasks
    with minimal human involvement
  • Provisioning
  • Detection
  • Diagnosis
  • Remediation
  • Corollary Humans become involved with network
    operation at higher levels (i.e., not repeatedly
    doing the same painful tasks)

3
Some Questions
  • Why automate?
  • What to automate? (desired end states)
  • How do we get there?
  • Robotize current methodology, or rethink?
  • Self-correction (like biological systems, e.g.,
    DNA)
  • What are the roadblocks?
  • Are our network element building blocks and their
    behavior fit for automation?
  • Big guard rails?

4
Why Automate?
  • Human cost
  • Are we talking about making operators redundant?
  • Noits more about automating folklore?
  • Care costs gtgt Ops costs, so self-help gtgt
    self-managing?
  • Reliability!!!
  • Continuous high quality service very high
    availability
  • Faster detection, remediation, etc.
  • Scale!!!
  • How else to keep up with feature creep?
  • Every case is a special case (we dont really
    believe this)

5
What to Automate?
  • Proactive Piece
  • Is-ness spec driving automation?
  • Reactive Piece
  • Detection (See)
  • Possible to monitor and detect network problems?
  • What data sets are needed?
  • How to do correlation of those datasets?
    (metadata)
  • The role of detection vs. statistical analysis
  • Diagnosis (Know)
  • Again, what data needs to be collected to make
    this possible
  • Stat based vs model based?
  • Remediation (Restore)
  • Do we want automated scripts

How far along this spectrum to go? (Many
answers.)
6
Vision
  • Network operators plug in boxes, and walk
    awaysort of
  • A small set of policies trigger programs which
    write programs which write programs which
    realizes the network
  • A small set of probes provide all measurements
    and event collection/ correlation needed to
    support internal metrics and external SLAs
  • Knowledge database
  • Operators become specialists forensics, software
    development, etc. (operation at a higher level,
    less fire-fighting)
  • Caveat there will always be a need for amazing
    people, but doing more introspective work
    (design, test, certification ... and automation
    over-ride when needed)

7
Roadblocks
  • Cost
  • Complexity
  • Data
  • Knowledge
  • Human factors

8
Obstacle 1 Cost
  • Automation costs money and time
  • Worth detecting if theres nothing to do about
    it?
  • Worth automating if the operation only happens
    once?
  • Alternate solution 1 Monkeys
  • At what point is it time to automate the corner
    case
  • Alternate solution 2 Overprovision
  • Perhaps we can ride out the storm (or expect
    failures and design low cost systems so that they
    dont really matter)
  • Server community has seen that repeatable simple
    components software can provide both very low
    cost and resilient whole (e.g., Google switching
    and computing platform)

9
Obstacle 2 Complexity
  • How to manage it?
  • Dummy boxes and lots of wires/stitching
  • Monolithic box with complexity in configuration
  • Fewer types of boxes, templates, ways to do
    essentially the same thing?
  • Cokes network vs Pepsis network?

10
Obstacle 3 Data
  • Lots of inputs
  • Topology
  • Configuration
  • Fault events (measured and logged)
  • Performance events (e.g., active measurements)
  • Version numbers
  • Fiber mappings
  • Metadata
  • Crucial! Version numbers, gaps in data
    collection, collection method, staleness
  • If this data goes inconsistent, big surprises!
  • Challenges
  • Correlation
  • what to do when data isnt correlated?
  • Privacy and sharing issues

11
Obstacle 4 Human Nature/Corner Cases
  • Operators are used to touching routers
  • Automation effectively adds a shim
  • Humans will likely want a way to bypass the
    configuration database
  • How to maintain consistency between human
    tweakage and the database?
  • How to evolve the automation database? (when
    does a corner case become normal)
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