The Network is the Computer…..
April 8, 2010 Leave a Comment
Is your Data Centre ready for the Cloud? If you have more than two hops between the Internet/WAN and your applications the answer is no. With today’s SOA architectures, latency and throughput is more critical to application performance.
The traditional three tier switching model of Access, Distribution and Core was conceived by Cisco in the days where data thus traffic flowed vertically to a single point, gathering speed on the way. 100Mbp/s access to GbE uplinks aggregated on 10GbE switches at the core, these in turn fed big fat application specific hosts with GbE network adaptors pushing and pulling very similar data types – mostly all fat clients.
The world is now flat….. Well, its getting flatter by the day. Applications will no longer live in private data centres; Enterprises will use a mix of SaaS and Private Cloud solutions to meet tomorrow’s demands. Virtualisation will allow business to turn up and down IT resources to meet with demand. This has a huge effect on your network infrastructure.
To add to your woes, your staff are using more and more Social Applications, not just Facebook and YouTube but Google Apps, Internet chat and Blogging are all seeing a huge increase within the Enterprise.
So what do I do?
The concern with the traditional model is latency – forcing packets to stop at every layer. Enterprises should build networks with a distribution layer of 10 GbE switches that is flattened out, becoming the communication link between servers with as few hops as possible, thus killing network latency.
Leaf-spine topology for computing network architecture
Some describe this two-layer switching method as leaf-spine switching topology or, similarly, a fat-tree switching topology. In this scenario, servers are connected to leaf switches, which are then connected to a broad web of spine switches that provide interconnected bandwidth between leafs and spines.
This fabric of switches, which includes as many ports as possible, allows equal bandwidth access to every connection, enabling non-blocked movement data in an any-to-any server environment. Cloud leaf fabric controls the flow of traffic between servers, while the spine switching fabric moves traffic between nodes bi-directionally.
Very little is static in a cloud environment. Instances of servers and networks are provisioned at the drop of a hat. To this end, the network architect must seek out a partner that understands the end-to-end solution from Application to User. Varidion are a next generation service provider that builds and operates fully managed Infrastructure as a service that allows Enterprises to focus on the business elements of IT and not the technology end.
Remember – The network is the Computer!
Last week I was discussing the merits of a Cloud based infrastructure with a prospect and he jokingly asked me for a “Long Term Weather Forecast”, I thought it was a joke but it soon became apparent that some insight into the coming Years would help them choose their wardrobe for the coming seasons. So in true Michael Fish tradition.

