Network Agility

Network Agility

Network Agility is an architectural discipline for computer networking. It can be defined as:

The ability of network software and hardware to automatically control and configure itself and other network assets across any number of devices on a network.

With regards to network hardware, network agility is used when referring to automatic hardware configuration and reconfiguration of network devices e.g. routers, switches, SNMP devices.

Network Agility, as a software discipline, borrows from many fields, both technical and commercial.

On the technical side, Network Agility solutions leverage techniques from areas such as:

Commercially, Network Agility is about solving real-world business problems using existing technology. It forms a three-way bridge between Business Processes, hardware resources, and software assets. In more detail, it takes, as input: 1

  1. the Business Processes – i.e. what the network must achieve in real business terms;
  2. the hardware that resides within the network; and
  3. the set of software assets that run on this hardware.

Much of this input can be obtained through automatic discovery – finding the hardware, its types and locations, software, licenses etc. The Business Processes can be inferred to a certain degree, but it is these processes that business managers need to be able to control and organize.

Software resources discovered on the network can take a variety of forms - some assets may be licensed software products, others as blocks of software service code that can be accessed via some service enterprise portal, such as (but not necessarily) Web Services. These services may reside in-house, or they may be 'on-demand' via an on-line subscription service. Indeed, the primary motivation of Network Agility is to make the most efficient use of the resources available, wherever they may reside, and to identify areas where Business Process goals are not being satisfied to some benchmark level (and ideally to offer possible solutions).

Network Agility tools are then in a position to optimize the existing hardware to run software assets as needed to achieve the Business Process goals. As network usage is never linear, the hardware/software mix requirements will change dynamically over various time segments (weekly, quarterly, annually etc.), and step changes will be required from time to time when Business Process goals change/evolve/are updated (e.g. during/after a company re-organization).

The benefits to business of the Network Agility approach are obvious - cost savings in software]licensing and higher efficiency of hardware assets - leading to better productivity.

References

  • Erl Thomas, Service-Oriented Architecture: Concepts, Technology, and Design (Prentice Hall) 2005, [1]
  • Jerome F. DiMarzio, Network Architecture and Design: A Field Guide for IT Consultants (Sams) 2001-5, [2]
  • University of California, Methodology for Developing Web Design Patterns (White Paper)[3]

See also


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Network-Centric Service-Oriented Enterprise (NCSOE) — is a new generation enterprise capable of conducting collaboration and management of internal and external information. Using Network Centric Enterprise Services (NCES) , the enterprise can now enforce information and decision superiority in a… …   Wikipedia

  • ANT (network) — ANT is a proprietary wireless sensor network technology featuring a wireless communications protocol stack that enables semiconductor radios operating in the 2.4GHz Industrial, Scientific and Medical allocation of the RF spectrum ( ISM band ) to… …   Wikipedia

  • Service-oriented architecture — (SOA) is a method for systems development and integration where functionality is grouped around business processes and packaged as interoperable services . SOA also describes IT infrastructure which allows different applications to exchange data… …   Wikipedia

  • David S. Alberts — David Stephen Alberts (1942) is an American Director of Research for the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (OASD) for Networks and Information Integration (NII).[1] Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 3 Outreach and …   Wikipedia

  • Swarming (military) — Swarming is a behavior in which autonomous, or semi autonomous, units of action attack an enemy from several different directions and then regroup. Pulsing , where the units shift the point of attack, is a necessary part of swarming. Swarming is… …   Wikipedia

  • Power to the Edge — refers to the ability of an organization to dynamically synchronize its actions; achieve command and control (C2) agility; and increase the speed of command over a robust, networked grid. The term is most commonly used in relation to military… …   Wikipedia

  • JDSU — Infobox Company company name = JDSU company company type = Public (NASDAQ|JDSU) (TSX|JDU) foundation = Merger of JDS Fitel and Uniphase Corporation in 1999 location = Milpitas, California, United States key people = Kevin Kennedy, President CEO… …   Wikipedia

  • Inubaka: Crazy for Dogs — Cover of 1st manga volume of Inubaka Crazy for Dogs published by Shueisha, featuring Suguri Miyauchi and her dog Lupin …   Wikipedia

  • List of Omnitrix aliens — This is a list of aliens stored within the fictional Omnitrix device in the American animated television series Ben 10 and its sequel .For most of the series, the Omnitrix remains on Ben, and hence the aliens are described in relation to him. The …   Wikipedia

  • Bret Hart — This article is about the professional wrestler. For the author, see Bret Harte. For other uses, see Hitman (disambiguation). Bret Hart Hart in 2010. Ring name(s) Bret Hart …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”