Book Image

Practical Network Automation

By : Abhishek Ratan
Book Image

Practical Network Automation

By: Abhishek Ratan

Overview of this book

Network automation is the use of IT controls to supervise and carry out every-day network management functions. It plays a key role in network virtualization technologies and network functions. The book starts by providing an introduction to network automation, SDN, and its applications, which include integrating DevOps tools to automate the network efficiently. It then guides you through different network automation tasks and covers various data digging and reporting methodologies such as IPv6 migration, DC relocations, and interface parsing, all the while retaining security and improving data center robustness. The book then moves on to the use of Python and the management of SSH keys for machine-to-machine (M2M) communication, all followed by practical use cases. The book also covers the importance of Ansible for network automation including best practices in automation, ways to test automated networks using different tools, and other important techniques. By the end of the book, you will be well acquainted with the various aspects of network automation.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Why create web-based scripts/frameworks?


A web framework is a collection of scripts, hosted on a web platform such as Internet Information Services (IIS) (on Windows) or Apache (on Linux), and calling the same script using front-end web-based languages such as HTML.

There are times when people ask why we want to migrate our current scripts or create scripts on a web framework. The answer is very simple. A web framework ensures that our scripts are used by multiple end users using just the browser. This gives the programmer the independence to code the script on their preferred platform (such as Windows or Linux), and people can use the scripts on their choice of browser. They don't need to understand how you have written the code, or what you are calling or using in the back-end, and of course, this ensures that you prevent your code from being directly visible to end users. 

Let's say  you have written a script that calls four or five libraries for specific tasks. There are general libraries...