Tech Titans Back OpenFlow Networking Standard

The world’s largest data center operators are joining forces to back an open networking standard, a move they say will accelerate innovation and make it easier to manage their far-flung networks. Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo have teamed with telecom giants Verizon and Deutsche Telekom to form a foundation to back the OpenFlow standard.

Rich Miller

March 22, 2011

5 Min Read
DataCenterKnowledge logo in a gray background | DataCenterKnowledge

connectivity

connectivity

The world’s largest data center operators are joining forces to back an open networking standard, a move they say will accelerate innovation and make it easier to manage their far-flung networks.

Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo have teamed with telecom giants Verizon and Deutsche Telekom to form the Open Networking Foundation (ONF), which will advance the development of a new open source networking protocol called OpenFlow.

The group's goal is to boost Software-Defined Networking (SDN), which separates the programming of routers and switches from the underlying hardware. This approach could simplify the management of global networks of data centers, making it easier to redirect traffic around hardware failures. It may also bring energy savings by making it easier to identify underused devices and shut them off until they are needed again.

From the Academy to the Data Center

The OpenFlow standard is the result of a six-year research collaboration between Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley, and allows users to manage network equipment using software that can run on servers that communicate with switches, rather than directly on the switch or router.

"OpenFlow really has the potential to be a very important shift in how people look at networks," said Urs Hoelzle, Senior Vice President of Engineering at Google, who will be the president and chairman of the ONF. "It can help make complicated networks simpler. Software-Defined Networking will allow networks to evolve and improve more quickly than they can today. Over time, we expect SDN will help networks become both more secure and more reliable."

OpenFlow support can be added to commercial Ethernet switches, routers and wireless access points and provides a standardized hook to allow users to customize features of their network - without requiring vendors to expose the inner workings of their devices.

Network Vendors Join Foundation

With the largest purchasers of network equipment now throwing their support behind SDN, networking vendors have greater motivation to add support for OpenFlow. That's reflected in the ONF membership list. Look beyond the six founders, and the membership reads like a Who's Who of the networking world: Cisco, Brocade, Juniper Networks, HP, Broadcom, Ciena, Riverbed Technology, Force10, Citrix, Dell, Ericsson, IBM, Marvell, NEC, Netgear, NTT and VMware.

"With broad industry support from technology leaders and networking experts, the ONF brings new opportunities and flexibility to the future of networking," said Jonathan Heiliger, ONF Founding Board Member and Vice President of Technical Operations at Facebook. "We’re actively encouraging new members to join us in this endeavor."

The new foundation's first task will be to lead the ongoing development of the OpenFlow standard and encourage its adoption by freely licensing it to all member companies. ONF will then begin the process of defining global management interfaces.

"In the first year, ONF will focus most of its attention on the OpenFlow standard," said Nick McKeown of Stanford University, who helped develop OpenFlow and will be a board member of ONF. "It will look like a small standards body, with user groups bringing people together around interoperability and compliance. There will be many discussions with vendors about how to fit their capabilities into the data center company's needs. Beyond that will be a discussion leading to higher-level interfaces and abstractions."

Seeking Simpler Networks

Software-Defined Networking has been happening for some time, mostly at large data center companies like Google that have built custom solutions to centralize their network management. But the process left them yearning for a better way.

"Networks are very complicated," said Hoelzle . "One of the reasons these networks are complicated is that they have a lot of protocols and they don't always play well together. OpenFlow breaks that model. In the OpenFlow network, all the intelligence will be in a central point, so it's easier to do complex things. Deciding what to do when an element fails is now trivial. It pushes millions of lines of code out to the network."

Scott Shenker, a professor at Cal-Berkeley and an ONF board member, called OpenFlow a response to broadly felt pain.  "Most of the companies we talked to were experiencing the same frustrations," said Shenker. "We started talking to a lot of companies, and it became very obvious that everyone was thinking along similar lines. The biggest thing about the data center is the scale and the detailed need for control."

Business Model is 'Broken'

Amazon Web Services is not among the ONF members. But Amazon researcher James Hamilton has been a prominent voices in calling for a better approach to data center networking.

"The network equipment business model is broken," said Hamilton. “We love the server business model where we have competition at the CPU level, more competition at the server level, and an open source solution for control software. In the networking world, it’s a vertically integrated stack and this slows innovation and artificially holds margins high. It’s a mainframe business model."

A broad shift to open networking would disrupt that model. While the network equipment vendors are participating in the consortium, they have much at stake. Making it easier to replace a portion of network switches with commodity servers could mean fewer switches sold. But Stanford's McKeown believes there are areas where the equipment vendors can benefit from OpenFlow, especially in the need for network operating systems.

"The network-wide OS could come from many sources," said McKeown. "Big data center operators might develop their own. But the equipment vendors are really well placed to do this as well."

Cabling image by Sugree via Flickr.

Subscribe to the Data Center Knowledge Newsletter
Get analysis and expert insight on the latest in data center business and technology delivered to your inbox daily.

You May Also Like