IC Colloquium : A New Approach to Network Functions

Thumbnail

Event details

Date 20.03.2017
Hour 10:1511:30
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars
By : Aurojit Panda - UC Berkeley
IC Faculty candidate

Abstract :
Modern networks do far more than  just deliver packets, and provide network functions -- including  firewalls, caches, and WAN optimizers — that are crucial for scaling networks, ensuring security and enabling new applications.  Network functions were traditionally implemented using dedicated hardware middleboxes, but in recent years they are increasingly being deployed as VMs on commodity servers. While many herald this move towards network function virtualization (NFV) as a great step forward, I argue that accepted virtualization techniques are ill-suited to network functions. In this talk I describe NetBricks — a new approach to building and running virtualized network functions that speeds development and increases performance. I end the talk by discussing the implications of being able to easily create and insert new network functions. 

Bio :
Aurojit Panda is a PhD candidate in Computer Science at the University of California Berkeley, where he is advised by Scott Shenker . His work spans programming languages, networking and systems, and his recent work has investigated network verification, consensus algorithms in software defined networks and frameworks for building network functions. He has received best paper awards at SIGCOMM and EuroSys, and was previously awarded a Qualcomm Innovation Fellowship.

More information
 

Practical information

  • General public
  • Free
  • This event is internal

Contact

  • Host : Jim Larus

Share