Much|like|our|blue furry anthropomorphic hedgehog friend who can run supersonic speeds, our networks today need to be fast and agile. Enter SONiC (Software for Open Networking in the Cloud). In the last few years SONiC has gained strong momentum in the community, and has been battle tested within some of the world's largest and most demanding cloud networks.
SONiC is a free and open-source network operating system (based on Debian Linux and developed by Microsoft and the Open Compute Project) that runs on network devices such as routers and switches from multiple vendors and ASICs. A key component of SONiC is the Switch Abstraction Interface (SAI) that enables ASIC and hardware abstraction and network operating systems portability.
With the introduction of the Open Compute Project (OCP), vendors collaborate on designs and specifications to enable a more efficient, scalable, and versatile consumption of hardware and software. This initiative broadens the spectrum for cloud and service provider transformations, hardware innovations, software evolutions, flexibility, lower costs, and better control of the network infrastructure. It allows cloud operators toshare the same software stack across hardware from multiple vendors. This also includes strong and long-lasting commitment to offer open APIs (Application Programming Interface) at every level of the networking stack and to allow service providers and web-scale customers to consume innovation in a way that best meets customer needs in a API first world.
Cisco 8000 series routers support disaggregating the hardware and software to provide a more robust, open ecosystem for service provider networks. As part of the disaggregation journey, Cisco supports installing SONiC on fixed form factors on the Cisco 8000 series routers.
The Cisco DevRel team is honored and thrilled to work with the Cisco MIG (Mass Infrastructure Group) team building the new home and documentation for SONiC at Cisco. Here you will find:
You can configure and try out this use case on emulated Cisco 8000v routers using Cisco 8000 Emulator Notebooks. Go to the new Cisco 8000 Emulator Sandbox for more.
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