Book Image

Mastering Python Networking

Book Image

Mastering Python Networking

Overview of this book

This book begins with a review of the TCP/ IP protocol suite and a refresher of the core elements of the Python language. Next, you will start using Python and supported libraries to automate network tasks from the current major network vendors. We will look at automating traditional network devices based on the command-line interface, as well as newer devices with API support, with hands-on labs. We will then learn the concepts and practical use cases of the Ansible framework in order to achieve your network goals. We will then move on to using Python for DevOps, starting with using open source tools to test, secure, and analyze your network. Then, we will focus on network monitoring and visualization. We will learn how to retrieve network information using a polling mechanism, ?ow-based monitoring, and visualizing the data programmatically. Next, we will learn how to use the Python framework to build your own customized network web services. In the last module, you will use Python for SDN, where you will use a Python-based controller with OpenFlow in a hands-on lab to learn its concepts and applications. We will compare and contrast OpenFlow, OpenStack, OpenDaylight, and NFV. Finally, you will use everything you’ve learned in the book to construct a migration plan to go from a legacy to a scalable SDN-based network.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Title
Humble Bundle
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
12
OpenStack, OpenDaylight, and NFV

Flask and lab setup


In this chapter, we will use virtualenv to isolate the environment we will work in. As the name indicates, virtualenv is a tool that creates a virtual environment. It can keep the dependencies required by different projects in separate places while keeping the global site-packages clean. In other words, when you install Flask in the virtual environment, it is only installed in the local virtualenv project directory, not the global site-packages.

The chances are you may have already come across virtualenv while working with Python before, so we will run through this process quickly. If you have not, feel free to pick up one of many excellent tutorials online, such as http://docs.python-guide.org/en/latest/dev/virtualenvs/. We will need to install virtualenv first:

# Python 3
$ sudo apt-get install python3-venv
$ python3 -m venv venv

# Python 2
$ sudo apt-get install python-virtualenv
$ virtualenv venv-python2

Then, activate and deactivate it in order to be in and out of...