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Networking Field Day 26

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Did you miss our presentation at Networking Field Day 26? Watch the recording below!

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Introduction to ZPE Systems

ZPE Systems enables ‘anywhere’ operations from the data center to the edge, with global out-of-band, modular hardware & software, and cloud-based, end-to-end orchestration. In this presentation, VP of Product Management Koroush Saraf walks you through the evolution of data, compute, and networking to explain how ZPE’s visionary approach helps enterprises overcome challenges of modernizing their networks using virtualization, containerization, Software-Defined Networking, edge computing, SD-WAN, and remote access.

Global Data Center Infrastructure Management & Orchestration with ZPE Systems

Koroush Saraf explains how data centers are becoming modernized. A new generation of serial consoles, like the Nodegrid Serial Console Plus, makes network deployments simple by consolidating many appliances, and allows teams to monitor critical systems with sensors that can be accessed, managed, and controlled on one UI with Nodegrid Manager.

Deploying & Managing Critical Remote Edge Infrastructure with ZPE Systems Nodegrid

Koroush Saraf explains why edge infrastructure is increasingly distributed, and why configuring, updating, and managing IT now presents more challenges regarding connectivity and security. ZPE systems’ Nodegrid Services Routers and ZPE Cloud overcome these obstacles. Nodegrid devices serve as the on-ramp to Security Service Edge and EdgeOps, able to onboard edge services such as SD-WAN and security, and spin up edge compute workloads such as data thinning and NGFWs — all using automation delivered securely via ZPE Cloud.

Tour ZPE Systems’ Nodegrid and ZPE Cloud

In this demonstration, Sales Engineering Manager Rene Neumann shows true Zero Touch Provisioning via ZPE Cloud, and bare-metal EdgeOps automation with Ansible and Nodegrid. Rene also shows Day 2 Operations, as well as troubleshooting, identification, and remediation of different targets and Network Infrastructure using application sensors and Nodegrid Data Lake.

 

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Networking Field Day 27

  • Problems that led ZPE to develop the Zero Pain Ecosystem
  • How ZPE customers use Gen 3 OOB to automate remote critical infrastructure and edge networks
  • Demo No. 1: Hands on with Gen 3 OOB to resolve edge operational challenges
  • Demo No. 2: Go beyond standard OOB and explore the automated Zero Pain Ecosystem

View the Networking Field Day 27 Presentation

Security Field Day 7

  • ZPE Introduction: Why Cybersecurity for Enterprise Can’t Be Solved By One Vendor
  • ZPE Demo: Immutable Principles of Branch Deployment
  • ZPE Demo: Zero Pain Ecosystem – Launching Security Apps from ZPE’s Cybersecurity Platform

View the Security Field Day 7 Presentation

Top Data Center Infrastructure Management (DCIM) Trends of 2022

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Data center infrastructure management (DCIM) keeps evolving to address enterprises’ changing goals, requirements, and concerns. We spoke with DCIM sales engineers to find out which pain points are on their customer’s minds, and which emerging technologies their enterprises are currently excited about:

  • Providing 24/7 remote access with a virtual presence.
  • Consolidating infrastructure for simpler management.
  • Strategically automating DCIM workflows and equipment.

This blog will discuss why enterprises implement these DCIM tools and technologies and provide the best advice about using them within your data center environment.

The Top 3 DCIM trends of 2022

Remote DCIM

The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the existing trend towards remote DCIM with minimal on-site staff. Many organizations are cutting budgets and downsizing their staffing, and many  of the people they keep on board are working remotely. If you don’t have subject matter experts physically at your data centers, you need to be able to deploy, manage, and troubleshoot your infrastructure remotely.

One way to ensure you have 24/7 remote access to your data center infrastructure is with out-of-band (OOB) management. OOB separates the network management plane from the data plane and provides a dedicated connection to your management device, which means you always have access to your infrastructure even if there’s an ISP outage. A complementary component to having a virtual presence  is environmental monitoring, which uses sensors to detect temperature, humidity, tampering, and other data center conditions.

When an on-site visit is unavoidable, remote DCIM helps you determine the root cause of the issue beforehand so you can ensure you already have the parts and tools you need to fix it. Doing so prevents your engineers from making multiple trips or wasting time diagnosing problems on-site. Remote DCIM not only allows you to efficiently monitor and manage data center infrastructure, but it also helps minimize the amount of time and money spent traveling to remote sites to troubleshoot and fix issues.

Consolidated solutions

One of the biggest challenges in DCIM is dealing with many different appliances, solutions, and vendors. This means engineers and technicians need to be trained in deploying, managing, and troubleshooting all these disparate solutions. Vendor lock-in may prevent all these systems from working together or integrating with a central DCIM tool, which means engineers have to jump from box to box to monitor issues or perform maintenance. Plus, there’s the hassle of license management, and different vendor contracts coming up for renewal at different times.

That’s why many organizations are moving towards consolidated DCIM solutions with all-in-one devices. Instead of looking for best-of-breed solutions for routing, out-of-band access, infrastructure management, server/compute, and other data center devices, you can get all of these functions rolled-up into a single box. An all-in-one data center solution is like the Swiss Army Knife of DCIM—it may not be the absolute best at any one feature, but you get all the tools you need in one device.

Another way that organizations overcome vendor lock-in and infrastructure complexity is through vendor-neutral DCIM platforms. With an open-architecture platform, you can integrate all your disparate devices and solutions into one centralized control panel. This increases the ease and efficiency of your engineers to manage your entire data center infrastructure.

All-in-one devices and vendor-neutral DCIM platforms both help reduce the complexity of your data center infrastructure, saving you time, money, and frustration.

DCIM automation

Many organizations are beginning or continuing their DCIM automation initiatives in 2022. Some examples of the data center management workflows that are frequently automated include:

  • Power load balancing and management
  • VM (virtual machine) deployment and management
  • Environmental monitoring and analysis
  • Network load balancing
  • Issue remediation

DCIM automation reduces the amount of time your engineers spend performing tedious, repeatable, and manual tasks. This, in turn, reduces the risk of human error, so you can ensure optimal performance and uptime in your data center.

Often, organizations make the mistake of automating the low-hanging fruit first (whichever tasks are easily automated by their chosen solution) rather than analyzing and prioritizing DCIM workflows based on what will help them achieve their specific business goals. This may not make DCIM any easier or more efficient for them in the long run. Other enterprises assume that DCIM automation is an all-or-nothing proposition that requires orchestration and highly complicated scripts and tooling. This leaves them feeling too intimidated to even begin their automation efforts.

DCIM automation doesn’t have to be difficult. Suppose you start with a complete understanding of your data center infrastructure and which workflows are most critical to your business. In that case, you can then automate them in the order that’s most beneficial to your team and your enterprise. And it doesn’t need to happen all at once—you can begin by creating a simple script to handle a single process, then move on to using technology like zero touch provisioning (ZTP) to automatically configure new data center devices. It is important to use DCIM devices and solutions that provide all the automation capabilities you need without locking you into a single vendor’s ecosystem or feature roadmap. This way, your automation initiatives can scale with you in exactly the way you need them to.

When you take the right approach, DCIM automation can help your organization run more efficiently to save time and resources.

In 2022, many enterprises are prioritizing remote DCIM solutions that give them a 24/7 virtual presence in their data center. They’re also consolidating their data center infrastructure with all-in-one solutions that provide centralized monitoring and management. Finally, organizations are looking for ways to automate DCIM workflows without adding to the complexity of their data center infrastructure and management.

Achieve your DCIM goals in 2022 with Nodegrid

Nodegrid is an innovative data center infrastructure management platform that can help you stay ahead of DCIM trends in 2022 and beyond.

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The Nodegrid Serial Console delivers remote OOB management of up to 96 connected devices in a single 1U rack-mounted device, ensuring you have 24/7 access to monitor and manage your data center infrastructure. Nodegrid’s modular design means you can create a customized data center management solution with all the functionality you need in one box. You can also use Nodegrid’s environmental monitoring sensors to keep an eye on environmental conditions in your rack, even from thousands of miles away.

Any data center infrastructure connected to a Nodegrid box can be deployed, managed, and monitored from one consolidated software platform—Nodegrid Manager for fully on-premises deployments, or ZPE Cloud for hybrid and cloud-based infrastructure.

Finally, Nodegrid enables and simplifies DCIM automation through features like zero touch provisioning and network scripting support. With the vendor-neutral, Linux-based Nodegrid OS, you can automate and orchestrate your data center infrastructure without vendor lock-in hampering your efforts. Nodegrid allows you to create a completely customized automation architecture using third-party tools like Ansible, Docker, and RESTful.

Want to learn more about DCIM? Read our Q&A with a 20-year DCIM expert.

See how Nodegrid can help you take advantage of DCIM trends in 2022.

Contact ZPE Systems to view a free demo.

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Security Field Day 7

Download our Security Field Day 7 Presentation

Cybersecurity vendors are at the top of their game? So why are cyberattacks increasing and becoming more effective? Download our exclusive presentation from Security Field Day 7, and you’ll see:

  • Why cybersecurity for enterprise is a team sport
  • How to overcome risks using immutable infrastructure & automation
  • How to build, destroy, & rebuild edge networks to avoid disaster or data compromise

Complete the form to download the full presentation.

SFD

ZPE Introduction: Why Cybersecurity for Enterprise Can’t Be Solved By One Vendor

Cybersecurity vendors are at the top of their game. So why are cyberattacks increasing and becoming more effective? We’ll discuss the modern enterprise’s pain of having too many products, from too many vendors, which leaves too many security gaps. We’ll also discuss why this dynamic attack surface can’t be solved simply by adding more products, and instead requires a platform — an automated and open platform capable of unifying the diverse ecosystem of cybersecurity solutions and eliminating gaps.

ZPE Demo: Immutable Principles of Branch Deployment

In this demo, we will show you how to overcome supply chain security risks and address ransomware by putting immutable infrastructure principles into action. We will demonstrate how to use SaltStack automation on our out-of-band platform, which we’ll use to build, destroy, and re-build an edge data center — with ease and at scale.

ZPE Demo: Zero Pain Ecosystem – Launching Security Apps from ZPE’s Cybersecurity Platform

In this demo, we will show our enterprise cybersecurity platform that powers what we call the Zero Pain Ecosystem. We will demonstrate the ease of use in securing remote branch locations, by using Horizon3’s NodeZero to launch an automated pen test, and by running a Splunk agent to feed XDR systems. We will conclude this demo by showing how to use immutable principles for disaster recovery, to decommission an infrastructure stack and rebuild it automatically from scratch.

Liked what you saw?

Check out our other Network/Security Field Day Presentations

Networking Field Day 26

  • Introduction to ZPE Systems
  • Global Data Center Infrastructure Management & Orchestration with ZPE Systems
  • Deploying & Managing Critical Remote Edge Infrastructure with ZPE Systems Nodegrid
  • Tour ZPE Systems’ Nodegrid and ZPE Cloud

View the Networking Field Day 26 Presentation

Networking Field Day 27

  • Problems that led ZPE to develop the Zero Pain Ecosystem
  • How ZPE customers use Gen 3 OOB to automate remote critical infrastructure and edge networks
  • Demo No. 1: Hands on with Gen 3 OOB to resolve edge operational challenges
  • Demo No. 2: Go beyond standard OOB and explore the automated Zero Pain Ecosystem

View the Networking Field Day 27 Presentation

Automating Your Network Operations Does Not Have to Be Difficult

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The importance of network automation is clear—you can reduce human error, create more efficient workflows, and streamline operations. However, many enterprises delay their automation efforts because of how challenging the process can be.

Fortunately, automating your network operations does not have to be difficult if you start with a comprehensive plan and implement the right tools and solutions.

 

Best practices for automating your network operations

1. Automate what you need versus what you can

Start your automation journey by identifying and prioritizing the most beneficial workflows for your business to automate. It may seem easier to choose whatever automation tools are provided by your existing vendors and then try to make them work with your infrastructure. However, that could lead you to follow the automation path that’s best for your vendors, versus the path that’s best for your particular use cases and requirements.  Though the former approach may seem simpler in the short-term, it will reduce the overall success of your automation efforts and make it harder to achieve your goals.

You need a full understanding of all the components that make up your network infrastructure so you can accurately identify and prioritize which devices, processes, and applications to automate in which order. Then, you need to ensure your automation solution can get its hooks into every aspect of your infrastructure, including things like environmental monitoring sensors, PDUs (power distribution units), and other devices that may not be part of your initial orchestration framework. Automating your network operations based on what you need, versus what’s easiest, will ultimately save you time and effort in reaching your automation goals.

This ultimately means that every enterprise’s path to automation should look a little different. However, below are some recommendations for network operations, workflows, and tasks to automate.

 

2. Automate device provisioning

Device provisioning is often a time-consuming, tedious task, which makes it prone to human error—and a prime candidate for automation. There are a couple of common ways to automatically spin up new infrastructure, including:

Zero touch provisioning (ZTP): Devices enabled with ZTP automatically download and execute configurations over the network, allowing you to deploy routers, switches, console servers, and other appliances with very little human intervention. This is especially beneficial for remote infrastructure at colocation facilities, branch offices, warehouses, and other locations where you may not have IT staff available to install and configure devices on-site.

Infrastructure as Code (IaC): IaC uses software abstraction to separate infrastructure configurations from the underlying hardware. This allows you to write configurations as repeatable scripts that you can deploy and manage automatically. You can also use IaC orchestration tools like RedHat Ansible to store and automatically execute configuration scripts for all your infrastructure devices from one central control panel.

Automating the device provisioning process with ZTP and IaC will streamline your network operations by increasing the speed and accuracy with which you can spin up new resources.

 

3. Automate WAN and Branch management

Managing WAN (wide area network) and branch networks can be very challenging without automation. Often, you don’t have on-site staff to monitor and troubleshoot networking equipment. You also need to back-haul all remote traffic through your primary firewall to apply security policies and controls, which creates bottlenecks on the network and reduces productivity. Plus, every new site you add will further increase the complexity of your enterprise network.

One way to automate WAN and branch management is through software-defined wide area networking, or SD-WAN. SD-WAN decouples the WAN management plane from the underlying hardware and, similarly to IaC, abstracts it as software. This makes it easier to introduce automation to your WAN management. For example, you can use SD-WAN intelligent routing to separate cloud-destined traffic and divert to a cloud-based security stack such as Security Service Edge (SSE), reducing bottlenecks and improving performance. Automating your WAN and branch management through SD-WAN reduces the challenge of distributed network management.

 

4. Automate with NetDevOps

DevOps is a popular paradigm that combines software development and IT operations departments into one collaborative team to streamline software releases. NetDevOps takes this a step further by integrating network management into the equation. NetDevOps focuses on operationalizing processes by using a systematic approach to automating and orchestrating network management, development, and operations tasks.

NetDevOps automation uses technologies like IaC and SD-WAN but takes things a step further by integrating them with DevOps tools like code repositories, test automation, and CI/CD (continuous integration/continuous delivery). This allows your entire IT department to function together as one efficient unit, eliminating bottlenecks between teams and streamlining product releases.

  Want to learn more? Read What is NetDevOps? The Definitive Guide

Automating your network operations does not have to be difficult if you start with a robust plan that focuses on your organization’s unique environment, requirements, and capabilities. Often, enterprises start with automatic device provisioning because it’s a tedious and repeatable process. WAN and branch management is another good candidate for automation because it can have a large impact on overall network performance. Finally, for development-focused organizations, the NetDevOps methodology integrates DevOps tools and processes into network automation efforts to create more efficient software release cycles.

 

Automating your network operations is easier with the right solution

Not all network automation platforms offer the same capabilities, features, or level of control. For example, many solutions don’t allow integrations with popular IaC tools like Ansible, Chef, and Puppet. If your platform isn’t vendor-neutral, you’re going to find it challenging to create a fully-integrated NetDevOps environment using code repositories, IaC, and test automation. For true end-to-end automation, you need a platform that can get its hooks into every piece of your infrastructure, or else you’ll end up with a bloated patchwork of solutions that’s difficult to orchestrate and optimize.

ZPE Systems delivers a vendor-neutral network automation platform that doesn’t suffer from any of these limitations. Our Zero Pain Ecosystem can “say yes” to any device, system, or service you add to your network, ensuring you’re able to automate what you need, when you need it. With features like secure zero touch provisioning, SD-WAN, and even SD-Branch, you can automatically deploy and manage your infrastructure from behind one pane of glass. And, all ZPE solutions integrate with leading third-party automation tools, giving you end-to-end automation with consolidated, centralized orchestration.

Automating your network operations is easier with ZPE Systems. But don’t take our word for itsee our solution in action by requesting a free demo today.

How to Choose the Best Branch Office Connectivity Solution for Your Network

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Branch network management involves many moving parts. For example, you may need to remotely deploy, orchestrate, and troubleshoot the branch network without on-site IT staff. In addition, you need a way to connect your branch locations to the enterprise network and efficiently route that traffic without affecting performance. You also must keep branch traffic, devices, and connections as secure as the rest of your enterprise network.

Your branch office connectivity solution should provide the innovative tools and technology your engineers and admins require to manage your branch networks effectively, even from hundreds or thousands of miles away.

 

What you should look for in a branch office connectivity solution

The most crucial components of a comprehensive branch office connectivity solution include:

 

Remote out-of-band management

One of the biggest challenges in branch networking is remote troubleshooting. If your WAN link to the branch office goes down, you need a way to diagnose and fix the issue without an expensive truck roll.

Remote out-of-band (OOB) management solves this problem by providing an alternative path to your critical branch infrastructure. OOB separates the management plane from your production network and makes it available via a dedicated connection—typically a cellular link. That’s how OOB management gives you 24/7 remote access to troubleshoot, administer, and monitor your branch network infrastructure.

Learn more about why out-of-band remote access is critical for branch networking

 

 

Zero touch provisioning

Another branch networking challenge involves the initial deployment of infrastructure. Sending a networking team out to every new branch to install and configure everything by hand is both expensive and time-consuming. However, if you pre-stage new devices at your headquarters and then ship them out to the branch, someone may intercept the package and use those devices to breach your network.

Zero touch provisioning (ZTP) addresses this challenge by automating remote device configurations. A ZTP-enabled device just needs power, network access, and the IP address of a configuration repository. The device will then download and execute the necessary scripts without much (if any) human intervention. ZTP allows you to remotely and automatically deploy an entire branch in just minutes.

For more about ZTP and its benefits, watch this short video: What is Zero Touch Provisioning?

 

 

SD-WAN/SD-Branch

Using a traditional WAN (wide area network) to connect your branch offices to your enterprise network comes with a few frustrating limitations. For example, there’s often no way to centrally manage branch router configurations and policies, which means engineers need to update each individual machine when there’s a change.

Software-defined WAN, or SD-WAN, virtualizes your WAN architecture as software and decouples it from the underlying hardware. You can centrally manage and deploy that software from a cloud-based platform, allowing network admins to update configurations and policies quickly and efficiently.

However, SD-WAN typically only covers the larger network infrastructure, but doesn’t extend into the individual branch LANs to give you control over the servers, switches, and other critical networking devices. SD-Branch solves this problem by consolidating SD-WAN, routing, firewalls, security, and LAN functions into a single solution. With SD-Branch, you get cloud-based visibility and control over your branch LANs and WANs from one centralized management platform.

Find out how to control more of your network with SD-Branch

 

 

Security

To protect your business from a breach, you must ensure that your branch office connectivity solution allows you to use the same security methodologies, policies, and controls as your enterprise network. For example, your branch gateway router should support zero trust security, which follows the principle of “never trust; always verify” when giving access to sensitive data, applications, and services.

Branch network traffic also needs to route through a firewall, which means—in traditional WAN—backhauling traffic through your central hub or datacenter, even if that traffic is ultimately destined for the cloud. This creates bottlenecks and delays for your entire enterprise network.

You can solve this problem with SASE, or Secure Access Service Edge. SASE uses SD-WAN technology to redirect remote, cloud-destined traffic through a cloud-based firewall, also known as Firewall as a Service (FWaaS).

SASE solutions also include other cloud-based security technologies like Cloud Access Security Brokers (CASB) and Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) to ensure maximum branch network security without impacting performance.

Learn more about SASE implementation in this step-by-step guide

 

 

Automation

Branches add complexity to your network, as we’ve illustrated in the previous sections. You need to deploy, monitor, troubleshoot, and optimize both the WAN link and the internal branch LAN while keeping everything secure. There are a lot of tedious and repeatable tasks involved in branch network management, which is why automation is a crucial component of next-generation branch office connectivity solutions.

Automation is also foundational to the NetDevOps methodology, which seeks to combine your networking, development, and IT operations into one streamlined and collaborative unit. Network automation for NetDevOps focuses on abstracting network and infrastructure configurations as software scripts that you can repeatedly deploy to many different devices. NetDevOps automation increases the efficiency of your branch network management.

Find out more in Automation: Reducing Costs and Improving Efficiency

Your branch office connectivity solution should contain remote out-of-band access, zero touch provisioning, SD-WAN/SD-Branch networking, security, and automation. However, to get all of these features, you often have to combine many different boxes from several vendors, creating operational complexity and hampering orchestration efforts. The best solution for branch networks combines all these capabilities into a single platform, like Nodegrid.

 

 

Why choose Nodegrid as your branch office connectivity solution

The Nodegrid Hive SRTM is a 5-in-1 branch gateway that delivers out-of-band, SD-WAN, security, NetDevOps automation, and compute all in one compact, ZTP-enabled device. The Hive SR consolidates your branch network infrastructure by eliminating the need for multiple branch office connectivity solutions.

Nodegrid Hive SRTM vendor-neutral architecture supports easy integrations with network automation and orchestration tools including Docker, RedHat Ansible, and Puppet so you can take advantage of NetDevOps efficiency. Plus, you can use ZPE Cloud management to orchestrate, administer, and troubleshoot your branch network from anywhere in the world.

Want to see the Nodegrid Hive SR branch office connectivity solution in action?

Schedule a demo or contact ZPE Systems to learn more.

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