Book Image

Mastering Python Networking - Second Edition

By : Eric Chou
Book Image

Mastering Python Networking - Second Edition

By: Eric Chou

Overview of this book

Networks in your infrastructure set the foundation for how your application can be deployed, maintained, and serviced. Python is the ideal language for network engineers to explore tools that were previously available to systems engineers and application developers. In this second edition of Mastering Python Networking, you’ll embark on a Python-based journey to transition from traditional network engineers to network developers ready for the next-generation of networks. This book begins by reviewing the basics of Python and teaches you how Python can interact with both legacy and API-enabled network devices. As you make your way through the chapters, you will then learn to leverage high-level Python packages and frameworks to perform network engineering tasks for automation, monitoring, management, and enhanced security. In the concluding chapters, you will use Jenkins for continuous network integration as well as testing tools to verify your network. By the end of this book, you will be able to perform all networking tasks with ease using Python.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Traditional change-management process

For engineers who have worked in a large network environment, they know the impact of a network change gone wrong can be big. We can make hundreds of changes without any issues, but all it takes is one bad change that can cause the network to have a negative impact on the business.

There is no shortage of war stories about network outages causing business pain. One of the most visible and large-scale AWS EC2 outage in 2011 was caused by a network change that was part of our normal AWS scaling activities in the AWS US-East region. The change occurred at 00:47 PDT and caused a brown-out for various services for over 12 hours, losing millions of dollars for Amazon in the process. More importantly, the reputation of the relatively young service took a serious hit. IT decision makers will point to the outage as reasons to NOT migrate to AWS cloud...