Dell has announced new networking solutions to help customers deliver faster results, maximise efficiency and modernise and transform operations in scale-out and cloud-based environments. New products introduced include the Dell Networking Z9500, the highest density, energy-efficient, and only pay-as-you grow 10/40 GbE data centre core switch available today.
The new Active Fabric Controller and efforts to accelerate Network Functions Virtualisation (NFV) solutions into the sector through industry consortiums and collaboration with industry partners such as Red Hat also can help customers transform and modernise data centre infrastructures.
Dell is helping customers upgrade data centre network architectures to meet new demands imposed by virtualisation, changing traffic patterns, and the nature of today’s workload needs including cloud-based and “as-a-service” offerings.
By using standards-based technologies, Dell delivers architectures that help advance legacy systems, prevent vendor lock-in penalties, and future proof infrastructure for an easier transition to software-defined networking (SDN), cloud-based services and emerging technology approaches such as NFV.
The Dell Networking Z9500 Fabric Switch is the highest-density fixed-form factor data centre switch with a full suite of L2/L3 routing and switching protocols. The Dell Networking Z9500 switch is designed to address data centre 10/40 GbE aggregation requirements through centralised core or distributed core architectures for high performance enterprise data centres, cloud computing, provider hosted data centres, and enterprise LAN cores.
The Dell Networking Z9500 is ideal for workloads such as Web 2.0, high performance computing and virtualisation:
* Unmatched density/performance: The Z9500 switch delivers five times the density per RU and throughput of more than 10Tbps with one half the latency compared to Dell’s previous generation switches;
* Ultimate flexibility: 3RU core switch with 132 40GbE ports and expandable to 528 10GbE ports;
* Scalability for today and tomorrow: Future ready scalability with ‘pay-as-you-go’ licensing for 36, 84, or 132 port SKUs in a fixed form factor switch to build fabrics for small scale data centres and increase fabric capacity as compute demand grows;
* Ideal for workloads including Web2.0, high-performance computing, and virtualisation demanding flatter fabrics; and
* Highly efficient: consumes half the power per port of leading competitors and tool-less Enterprise ReadyRails mounting kits reduce time and resource for efficient rack installation
OpenStack and OpenFlow hold significant promise to advance the infrastructure economics, operational and technical capabilities of modern businesses. However, each can be highly complex and difficult for enterprise IT to adopt. What cloud administrators need is a way to simplify networking configurations while enhancing network functions for cloud-based services.
Dell Active Fabric Controller is a purpose-built SDN platform designed to simply and securely configure and deploy networking functionality in cloud and XaaS environments. Dell Active Fabric Controller is targeted for enterprise OpenStack deployments and as an optional component of Dell OpenStack-Powered cloud solutions.
The update offers a single, integrated solution to provide on-demand virtualised network services to OpenStack with fully automated, unified lifecycle management of the physical infrastructure:
* Simple operation and intelligent approach – Plug-n-Play networking solution optimised for cloud and application administrators; and works with OpenStack applications to deliver workload and policy awareness. Allows for insertion of service appliances including firewall, load balancing and wide area network optimisation.
* Deliver customised policy – on-demand customised virtual fabrics that adapts whenever workloads are started, stopped or modified, enhancing the security, performance and efficiency for each application.
* Experience ultimate efficiency – elastic, auto-adapting fabric services offer the ultimate efficiency in design, operations and application provisioning with automated lifecycle operations and self-service for centralised, fabric-wide visibility.
From simple plug-and-play device discovery and provisioning, automated topology and forwarding optimisation, fabric wide programmability and a simple operational lifecycle, Dell Active Fabric Controller offers a new vision for networking. Active Fabric Controller serves a fundamental building block on both enterprise control software as well as a key element of accelerating NFV deployments with its integration into OpenStack.
Dell is helping bring innovative NFV solutions to market by spearheading industry consortiums such as CloudNFV and collaborating with industry partners including Red Hat. Just as SDN is increasing network flexibility, reducing costs and driving efficiency within enterprise networks, NFV can equally transform the telecommunications industry by utilising an open, disaggregated, cloud-based approach.
* Dell, specifically Dell Research, recently took the leadership reins of CloudNFV, an industry consortium to develop, test and implement a cloud-based NFV model. To drive real, customer-tested-customer-validated solutions into the market, Dell and CloudNFV are working closely with telecommunications companies and standards groups like the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) to demonstrate and perfect commercially viable, cloud-based NFV solutions. With the leadership of CloudNFV, Dell is continuing the company’s long history of championing open and standard solutions to provide customers with choice and consistency across multiple technologies.
* Dell also recently extended its co-engineering agreement with Red Hat announced in December 2013 to include NFV and SDN solutions built specifically for the telecom segment.
“Dell is committed to changing the game in networking. As a follow on to our recent Open Networking announcement, I’m excited about demonstrating more innovation in bringing new and open solutions to our customers regardless of size,” says Brad Pulford, Dell Enterprise Solutions group director.
“We’re extending our leadership in SDN, NFV, and advanced new architectures that maximise customer choice and provide superior economics to the way networking has always been done.”