Monday, December 17, 2018

Word of the Day: NetOps

Word of the Day WhatIs.com
Daily updates on the latest technology terms | December 17, 2018
NetOps

NetOps, also referred to as NetOps 2.0, is a networking approach that encompasses the use of DevOps tools, methods and techniques to create an agile, scalable and programmable infrastructure capable of delivering business-critical applications and services rapidly and efficiently.

Used broadly, as a combination of the words network and operations, NetOps uses a DevOps framework built on cross-team collaboration and communication to bridge the gap between how a network delivers applications and services and the company's overall strategic business goals. In a narrower sense, NetOps refers to the implementation of specific DevOps techniques or tools to satisfy those goals by making infrastructure more automated, responsive and programmable.

While NetOps traditionally has referred to network operations of any kind or era -- as in a Network Operations Center, for example -- NetOps 2.0 is most often used to describe a network that's been designed to be more responsive to a business' needs and requirements. Other terms to describe this approach include NetDevOps, DevNetOps and Super-NetOps.

NetOps history

Historically, enterprise networking teams have provisioned, deployed and managed infrastructure manually using command line interface (CLI), troubleshooting and installing devices as needed, without concern for consistency. As a result, many networks are overly fragile and complex, requiring unique fixes when broken. Because each component requires a high degree of human attention and input, scalability is inherently limited.

NetOps aims to address legacy networks' limitations by making them more responsive and scalable. Using automation and other technological advances, NetOps can allow an enterprise to respond quickly to new requests and events while minimizing manual intervention.

NetOps tools

NetOps tools use techniques such as virtualization, automation, orchestration, APIs and templates to enable teams to abstract and automate routine, repetitive network changes and link them directly to application delivery workflows. Automating the re-use of established provisioning, configuration and deployment policies makes network infrastructure management more consistent - improving both performance and security.

NetOps also includes the integration of network analytics tools designed to flag potential performance issues, gather and present relevant data and trigger automated remediation processes. Intent-based networking (IBN), a separate network initiative that relies heavily on automation, is an additional component of NetOps.

The evolution of NetOps is making it more critical for network professionals to possess basic automation and programming skills, as well as the soft skills needed to collaborate proactively with other teams and users. NetOps will require a significant cultural shift, with enterprise networking teams learning to embrace change and manage risk, rather than avoid it.

Quote of the Day

 
"Similar to the DevOps framework, a NetOps approach provides networking teams with a way to use automation and virtualization to create more agile networks and deploy applications faster." - Andrew Froehlich

Learning Center

 

10 metrics to drive a NetOps 2.0 culture shift
NetOps 2.0 provides a philosophical and operational framework for networking teams looking to keep pace with fast-changing infrastructure demands in the age of DevOps. This infographic suggests 10 key performance indicators that IT leaders can use to help drive the necessary culture shift.

Are you ready for NetOps 2.0? A primer for networking pros
NetOps 2.0 represents the philosophies, tools and practices of next-generation network design and operations -- including automation, programmability and virtualization. Here's what you need to know.

How NetOps and DevOps concepts tackle network problems
The NetOps and DevOps concepts both have a strong focus on automation, which acts as a bridge between the two approaches. Learn how using the two models together can strengthen IT.

NetOps, SecOps, DevOps concepts merge to automate security testing
Network security operations, or NetSecOps, can automate security testing for networks by adopting DevOps concepts. However, as these IT roles and job responsibilities blend together, some challenges can crop up.

What effect does NetOps have on enterprise networking teams?
As networks require more agility in order to support continuous application deployments, networking teams can use the concept of NetOps to enable and speed network automation and virtualization, as they move away from manual configuration.

Quiz Yourself

 
Successfully _______ a DevOps culture in a data center isn't easy, but it brings great rewards.
A. adapting
B. adopting

Answer

Stay in Touch

 
For feedback about any of our definitions or to suggest a new definition, please contact me at: mrouse@techtarget.com

Visit the Word of the Day Archives and catch up on what you've missed!

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