Book Image

Mastering Python Networking - Third Edition

By : Eric Chou
Book Image

Mastering Python Networking - Third 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 Mastering Python Networking, Third edition, 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 new edition is completely revised and updated to work with Python 3. In addition to new chapters on network data analysis with ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana, and Beats) and Azure Cloud Networking, it includes updates on using newer libraries such as pyATS and Nornir, as well as Ansible 2.8. Each chapter is updated with the latest libraries with working examples to ensure compatibility and understanding of the concepts. Starting with a basic overview of Python, the book teaches you how it can interact with both legacy and API-enabled network devices. You will learn to leverage high-level Python packages and frameworks to perform network automation tasks, monitoring, management, and enhanced network security followed by Azure and AWS Cloud networking. Finally, you will use Jenkins for continuous integration as well as testing tools to verify your network.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
16
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17
Index

Network Monitoring with Python – Part 1

Imagine you get a call from your company's network operations center at 2:00 a.m. in the morning. The person on the other end says: "Hi, we are facing a difficult issue that is impacting production services. We suspect it might be network related. Can you check this for us?" For this type of urgent, open-ended question, what would be the first thing you do? Most of the time, the thing that comes to mind would be: What changed in the time between when the network was working and when something went wrong? Chances are you would check your monitoring tool and see if any of the key metrics changed in the last few hours. Better yet, you may have received monitoring alerts for any metrics that deviated from the normal baseline numbers.

Throughout this book, we have been discussing various ways to systematically make predictable changes to our network, with the goal of keeping the network running as smoothly as possible...