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NEC Press Release for GEC

October 29th, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

NEC today announced their participation in the GEC3 OpenFlow demo, and their intention to support OpenFlow going forward. Press releases are online in English and Japanese. The GEC OpenFlow demo includes several NEC Switches at Stanford as well as in JGN2plus in Tokyo. NEC has been instrumental in working with Stanford to make this demo happen across continents.

The NEC IP8800 switches used in the demo are some of the best OpenFlow hardware that currently exists. They offer a good fan-out and are able to do OpenFlow at line rates. The only bad news is that what we are using are prototypes and they are not available commercially. However to quote from the release:

“NEC plans to support OpenFlow features in its future products and  to encourage universities, public testbed projects, and researchers to  experiment with innovative network ideas. “

So far we have had fairly few details about OpenFlow capable hardware on this blog, but expect this to change in the future. If you are interested in OpenFlow hardware, feel free to get in touch with us.

GEC Demo, OpenFlow Press Release

October 28th, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

We are getting ready for the OpenFlow demo at the Geni Engineering Conference 3. We had a first dry run yesterday which by and large went fine. Stanford also today did a press release on OpenFlow and the GEC Demo. Full text after the jump.

Read the rest of this entry »

Another OpenFlow Demo

October 22nd, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

Yesterday OpenFlow was demonstrated at the Cisco Distinguished Engineers Meeting in Sunnyvale. We demonstrated virtual machine mobility and the graphical user interface for flow dragging. Our OpenFlow network included nodes in Internet2 and JGN2plus (Japan). The demo was very well received.

This was also the warm-up for the big demo at the GENI engineering conference next week at HP Labs. Expect to read more here in a few days.

Version 0.8.2 Released

October 17th, 2008, derickso in OpenFlow Blog

OpenFlow version 0.8.2 has been released.  The reference implementations, tests, and tools are now available on the downloads page, and the corresponding spec is on the documents page.

Notable in this release:

  • Combined package containing the Linux Reference System, NetFPGA Reference System, Reference Regression Tests, and OpenFlow Wireshark Dissector
  • NetFPGA hardware accelerated forwarding (4×1Gb Ethernet OpenFlow Switch)
  • Highly tested - this is the version that has been used for our 2008 SIGCOMM Demo and the upcoming GEC Demo

Enjoy!

Welcome Rob and Srini

October 13th, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog
Rob Sherwood

Rob Sherwood

Srini Seetharaman

The group of people developing OpenFlow is growing and we are happy to welcome Rob Sherwood and Srinivasan Seetharaman to the team. Both hail from Deutsche Telekom Laboratories, and are working at Stanford as visiting researchers and part of the OpenFlow team.

Srini holds a Ph.D.from the Georgia Institute of Technology and brings in expertise on cross-layer interaction in overlay networks. Rob completed his Ph.D. at the University of Maryland (College Park) where he worked on network security and Internet measurement.

Expect to read more about them on this blog soon. In the mean time welcome Rob and Srini!

Towards OpenFlow 0.9

September 21st, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

The OpenFlow v0.8.1 spec was released way back in May of 2008.  Since then, a number of vendors have joined the OpenFlow Consortium.  These implementations have identified a number of areas where the current OpenFlow spec is underspecified, inconsistent, or missing useful features.

Thanks to Justin, Ben and Brandon, we are nearing the release of OpenFlow 0.9, which will fix many bugs and provide a number of new features. Our hope is that OpenFlow 0.9 will contain all the features desired for the big OpenFlow 1.0 release, and only small changes will be described in 0.9.X spec releases.

Some of the most important new features include:

  • Vendor extensions. This is necessary to keep 3rd party implementations of OpenFlow backwards compatible while allowing vendors to implement features they want to test.
  • Better capability reporting.  Now a switch reports the features and wildcard fields it supports, for each table.
  • IP subnetting support.  This enables OpenFlow switches to act as IP routers on some commodity switches.

For a more complete list of the proposed v0.9 changes, take a look at the 0.9 release notes draft on the wiki.

POMI 2020 Retreat Photos

September 21st, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

Photos from the POMI 2020 Retreat in Tahoe are online now here.

OpenFlow at the POMI retreat

September 18th, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

Today we presented OpenFlow at the POMI off-site. POMI 2020 is a new major research effort at Stanford that is exploring how the wide proliferation of powerful mobile devices will change networking, computing and applications. POMI involves about 15 Stanford faculty from electrical engineering, computer science but also other fields such at education.

One of the major challenges of future mobile networked devices is that the current IP based infrastructure does not offer good support for either security nor mobility, and OpenFlow offers potential solutions with POMI and Ethane type solutions. OpenFlow will be one of the major initiatives inside POMI and we are excited about the potential collaborations.

New Logo

September 10th, 2008, appenz in OpenFlow Blog

As you may have noticed, the OpenFlow Switch Site has a new logo. It was designed by Worth1000 user NoxCiepher.

OpenFlow Dissector Released as Wireshark Plugin

August 27th, 2008, dgu in OpenFlow Blog

After its successful debut at the OpenFlow tutorial, the fist public release of the OpenFlow dissector is now available on the downloads page.  This Wireshark plugin will decode all packets for the current OpenFlow release and hierarchically present the details in a human-readable form. Instructions on how to install and use it can be found on the OpenFlow Wiki.

OpenFlow Dissector for Wireshark (v0.85.1)

OpenFlow Dissector for Wireshark (v0.85.1)


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