
“We want to make it easier to build and manage complex networks, and some of that is taking away a lot of the busy work. The skill set of the network engineer is going to evolve quite a bit, making it possible for network engineers to worry less about the tactical details and the busy work and more on architecture and orchestration and decision making,” Beevers says.
Network operations professionals face significant challenges with configuration drift, says Shamus McGillicuddy, research director for the network management practice at Enterprise Management Associates (EMA), and “many companies try to build automation for config compliance to deal with it.” Still, spotting drift is a difficult challenge, especially for large, multi-vendor networks.
“NetBox Labs is offering an enterprise-grade approach to config compliance with its Assurance capability. It discovers actual configs in the field, reports on which production configs are out of compliance with the NetBox model and provides workflows to plan for mitigation of those config drifts,” McGillicuddy says. Assurance could help with enterprise organizations looking to deploy more automation in their environments, he says, because it provides better visibility into network changes. The type of tool could also drive other efficiencies.
“First, it eliminates a lot of manual toil for engineers who are tasked with remediating config drift. Second, it potentially replaces some custom automation tooling that can be time-consuming to maintain,” McGillicuddy says.
NetBox Assurance is delivered through NetBox Enterprise or NetBox Cloud, with NetBox Cloud being the more popular commercial offering. Assurance is a commercial product that requires either the enterprise or cloud platform to work, and it is not available via NetBox’s open-source version. The enterprise version is an on-premises offering, and the cloud version provides a fully managed solution.
NetBox Assurance is available now.