Book Image

Learning OpenDaylight

By : Reza Toghraee
Book Image

Learning OpenDaylight

By: Reza Toghraee

Overview of this book

OpenDaylight is an open source, software-defined network controller based on standard protocols. It aims to accelerate the adoption of Software-Defined Networking (SDN) and create a solid foundation for Network Functions Virtualization (NFV). SDN is a vast subject; many network engineers find it difficult to get started with using and operating different SDN platforms. This book will give you a practical bridge from SDN theory to the practical, real-world use of SDN in datacenters and by cloud providers. The book will help you understand the features and use cases for SDN, NFV, and OpenDaylight. NFV uses virtualization concepts and techniques to create virtual classes for node functions. Used together, SDN and NFV can elevate the standards of your network architecture; generic hardware-saving costs and the advanced and abstracted software will give you the freedom to evolve your network in the future without having to invest more in costly equipment. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to design and deploy OpenDaylight networks and integrate them with physical network switches. You will also have mastered basic network programming over the SDN fabric.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface

Chapter 4. Building a Virtual SDN Test Lab with Virtual Switches

In the previous chapters, we learned about software-defined networking, the OpenDaylight controller, and the basic installation of OpenDaylight in both standalone and distributed modes. In this chapter, we will build a virtual SDN lab. You may think that having OpenDaylight in a virtual environment means actually having a lab, but we need other elements for our SDN lab, which are switches.

As you already know, switches are physical devices with multiple Ethernet ports, from 10 MBps to 100 GBps. Remember that a software-defined network is a combination of an SDN controller and underlay switches and routers managed by the controller. We need switches to build our OpenDaylight lab and test our YANG applications. Plus, we need to build them in our virtual environment to ensure they are easy to manage and integrate with OpenDaylight and the SDN environment.

If you are a Cisco guru, you may know how to virtualize Cisco switches. Just...