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1© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 1
Co-Sponsored by Intel®
Extending Your Data Center Reach with OTV & LISP
Brian FarnhamTechnical Marketing EngineerCisco Systems, Inc.
2© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Distributed Data Center Goals• Seamless workload mobility• Distributed applications • Pool and maximize global resources • Business Continuity
Interconnect Challenges• Complex operations• Transport dependant • Bandwidth management• Failure containment
Geographically Disperse Data
Centers
Distributed Data Centers
3© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Distributed Data Centers
Many physical sites - One logical Data Center
Layer 2 Ethernet Extension
Ethernet LAN Extension over any Network• Ethernet in IP “MAC routing” • Multi -datacenter scalability
Simplified Configuration & Operation• Seamless overlay - No network re-design• Single touch site configuration• Provisioning Automation
High Resiliency • Failure domain isolation• Seamless Multi-homing
Maximizes available bandwidth• Automated multi-pathing• Optimal multicast replication
Any Workload, Anytime, AnywhereUnleashing the full potential of compute virtualization
4© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Intra Data Center Layer 2 Networking
End of Row
Middle of Row
L2L2L3
ClustersV-Motion
V-Motion Clusters• Clusters and VMotion operate well within L2
• Build larger L2 networks for improved access layer load balance
5© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Unbinding Vmotion and Clustering
Access Pod 1
L2
L2L3
Access Pod 2 • Clusters, VMotion require L2
extensions to go across access pods
• Improves Manageability
• Dynamic Annexation
• Portability & Expansion
6© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Live Migration of VMs from one DC to Another
Data Center A Data Center B Ethernet Extension
Any Transport
Long Distance VMotion
This represents a significant advancement for virtualized environments by simplifying and accelerating long-distance workload
migrations.
Ben Matheson, Senior Director, Global Partner
Marketing, VMware
Nexus7000
Nexus7000
OTV
7© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Active/Active and Disaster Recovery Sites
L2
L3
DR
IP
Main CampusRemote Site< 80 KM
Disaster Recovery> 80 KM
8© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
Ease of Provisioning-Problem Primary data center maxed out (space, cooling and power)
-Requirement Seamlessly extend clusters and workload across data centers
-Challenge Rapidly establish DCI between data centers
• No new transport provisioning required (Dark fiber, MPLS, etc)• Eliminate months of re-design effort • Significant operations and provisioning cost savings (no new protocols )
Solution: OTV – Establish DCI in 5 minutes!
Deploy over existing Network
4 configuration commands per site
No Re-design Required
Ethernet Overlay
One Logical Data Center
Automatic Fault Isolation
9© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
OTV at a Technical GlanceEthernet traffic between sites is encapsulated in IP: “MAC in IP”
Dynamic encapsulation based on MAC routing table
No Pseudo-Wire or Tunnel state maintained
Communication between MAC1 (site 1) and MAC2 (site 2)East
SiteEastSite
WestSiteWestSite
OTV OTV
MAC IF
MAC1 Eth1
MAC2 IP B
MAC3 IP B
IP A IP B
Encap Un-Encap
MAC1 MAC2IP A IP B MAC1 MAC2
MAC1 MAC2
MAC IF
MAC1 IP A
MAC2 Eth 1
MAC3 Eth 2
IP packet Ethernet Frame
LISP: Location Identity Separation Protocol
Internet
Device IPv4 or IPv6 address represents identity and
location
Today’s Internet BehaviorLoc/ID “overloaded” semantic
x.y.z.1 When the device moves, it gets a new IPv4 or IPv6 address for its new identity and
location
w.z.y.9
Device IPv4 or IPv6 address represents
identity only.
When the device moves, keeps its IPv4 or IPv6 address.
It has the same identity
LISP BehaviorLoc/ID “split”
Internet
a.b.c.1
e.f.g.7
Only the location changes
x.y.z.1
x.y.z.1
Its location is here!
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© 2013 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.Presentation_ID Cisco Public
• Layer 2 extensions represent a challenge for optimal routing
• Challenging placement of gateway and advertisement of routing prefix/subnet
WAN
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HSRPActive
HSRPStandby
HSRP Filter
HSRPActive
HSRPStandby
East-West /Server-Server
Egress:South-North / Server-Client
Egress:South-North / Server-Client
Ingress:North-South / Client-Server
Ingress:North-South / Client-Server
Fixing Sub-optimal Routing
Visit Cisco Booth D209Twitter: @ciscoDC, #vmworld
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CiscoDC
Youtube: http://www.youtubecisco.com/datacenter
Cisco DCC Blog: http://blogs.cisco.com/datacenter
Slideshare: http://slideshare.com/CiscoDataCenter
Community: : https://communities.cisco.com/community/technology/datacenter
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/ciscosystems/data-center
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com search “Cisco Data Center” group
Google +: http://goo.gl/irm4b
In Collaboration with Intel®
Intel, the Intel logo, Xeon and Xeon inside are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and other countries.
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© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential© 2010 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Cisco Confidential 13