Cisco Hosts Customer Webcast: Cisco Transforms the Data Center

Cisco will host a webcast presentation to discuss its strategy for transforming the data center.

Join John Chambers, chairman and chief executive officer, Cisco; Sue Bostrom, executive vice president and chief marketing officer; Rob Lloyd, executive vice president-designate of Worldwide Operations, and other Cisco executives for this online Internet event.

Date: Monday, March 16, 2009

Time: 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. PT

To attend, register at: Cisco Transforms the Data Center

Read the full story on cisco.com…

Fluke claims fix for Cisco WAAS issues

FlukeThe latest version of Fluke Networks’ Visual Performance Manager can diagnose and fix performance problems in Cisco’s WAAS application acceleration, as well as measuring the ROI achieved by WAAS, Fluke has claimed.

The software also applies expert guidance and rules to help network administrators get to the root of a problem faster, and provides red/yellow/green dashboards or “heat charts” to show executive managers how problems affect the performance of critical network applications, the company said
Ten top problems network techs encounter: Download now

VPM version 5 can compare the accelerated and non-accelerated performance of an application, and drill through to see exactly how WAAS is accelerating WAN traffic, said Fluke business development manager Doug Roberts. It has some similarity with technology from NetQoS, he noted.

Read the full article on NetworkWorld.com

How to analyze Cisco NetFlow with FREE tool

NetFlow is a network protocol developed by Cisco Systems to run on Cisco IOS-enabled equipment for collecting IP traffic information. It’s proprietary and supported by platforms other than IOS, such as Juniper routers or FreeBSD and OpenBSD. Cisco routers that have the Netflow feature enabled generate netflow records; these are exported from the router in User Datagram Protocol (UDP) or Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) packets and collected using a netflow collector. Other vendors provide similar features for their routers but with different names Jflow or cflowd from Juniper Networks, NetStream from Huawei Technology or Cflowd from Alcatel-Lucent. Since my knowledge is mainly in Cisco’s devices area, I will focus on Netflow. A NetFlow record can contain a wide variety of information about the traffic in a given flow, like Version number, Sequence number, Input and output interface indices, Number of bytes and packets observed in the flow, Source & destination IP addresses, Source and destination port numbers, IP protocol, ToS and other… By analyzing flow data, a picture of traffic flow and traffic volume in a network can be built. Cisco Netflow have multiple version from which v5 is the most used at the moment being.

After this brief explanation of what is Netflow, let’s focus on the topic of this article. Lately I was searching for a tool that can analyze NetFlow flow and return to me an acceptable picture of what’s going on in the network. There are a lot in the market and I tried many of them, which offers free trials (maybe someday I will write some reviews about them), but for now I was really searching for something without any cost involving as it was for my private use.

The NetFlow analyzer software that I was looking for, should  be able to:
1. Display graphical format of traffic (graphs, picture…)
2. Allow me to analyze as many devices / interfaces I want
3. Allow to export some reports based on the network activity collected
4. …and the most important for me, to be FREE

As I said before, I tried some tools, with great capabilities (e.g. NetFlow Analyzer from ManageEngine) but they were having limitations that disturbed me (e.g. limitation to only 2 interfaces on the tool from ManageEngine).  Searching, I arrived to Scrutinizer NetFlow Analyzer produced by Plixer International. This tool offers exactly what I was searching for, and it is free. Now the ugly part (there is always a part like this…) is that the tool is keeping all information for 24 hours. The good part is that you can export logs on a daily basis (24 hours). E.g I had to monitor traffic for some device for 72 hours, so daily I have exported the logs and the end of the monitoring period I compared all the data. Well, it’s not so nice this limitation of 24 hours. I would prefer 48 or 72 hours, because usually this is the minimum time for monitoring a connection, device or interface. If you buy a license all this limitations are removed. As I said from begining I was searching something for private use…so, this tool was perfect for me. Anyway I believe big companies can afford to buy this tool if they test it and see that fit with their needs.

Anyway, skipping over this 24 hours limitation, the tool give you the ability to gather information from as much devices / interfaces as you want. The reports are presented in nice graphical format, with lots of details. You can download Scrutinizer NetFlow Analyzer from their site, by clicking here. On the download page, you will have the possibility to download the free version (with 24 hours limitation) or the trial version which will give you all features for a certain limited period of time. For the trial version you have to complete a form and they will issue you a trial license.

For an example how to do a basic netflow configuration on a Cisco router and how to operate Scrutinizer Netflow Analyzer please see the presentation below. For the test environment I used an old Cisco 2600 router and my notebook with Scrutinizer Netflow Analyzer installed.

Please note before watching this presentation: FirstDigest.com is not affiliated in any way with Plixer International and ManageEngine and this is not a “pay per post” article. I just wanted to share with you something that I belive it can be useful.

scrutinizer netflow analyzer

Cisco quietly downsizing through outsourcing

CiscoWhen Cisco celebrated the fifth anniversary of its New England Development Center in Boxborough, Mass., last fall – a ceremony attended by Massachusetts Congresswoman Niki Tsongas and a representative from Gov. Deval Patrick’s office – the company was quietly preparing to move several jobs from there and other locations to contractors in India and elsewhere, mostly in the company’s Network Management Technology Group (NMTG).

In Cisco parlance, a “limited restructuring” was underway, under the radar.

These “LRs,” as Cisco sources call them, are a way for the company to cut costs by reducing workforce in small, incremental moves without having to publicly announce or disclose the actions in compliance with U.S. Department of Labor regulations, like the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN). These specific NMTG LRs are separate from the planned reduction of 1,500 to 2,000 positions Cisco announced during its earnings call last month, which, the company says, complied fully with WARN and other federal labor regulations.

Read the full article on NetworkWorld.com