The Linux Foundation Forms Open Source Effort To Advance IO Services (linuxfoundation.org)
The Linux Foundation is announcing FD.io ("Fido"), a Linux Foundation Project. FD.io is an open source project to provide an IO services framework for the next wave of network and storage software. Early support for FD.io comes from founding members 6WIND, Brocade, Cavium, Cisco, Comcast, Ericsson, Huawei, Inocybe Technologies, Intel Corporation, Mesophere, Metaswitch Networks (Project Calico), PLUMgrid and Red Hat.
Architected as a collection of sub-projects, FD.io provides a modular, extensible user space IO services framework that supports rapid development of high-throughput, low-latency and resource-efficient IO services. The design of FD.io is hardware, kernel, and deployment (bare metal, VM, container) agnostic.
Architected as a collection of sub-projects, FD.io provides a modular, extensible user space IO services framework that supports rapid development of high-throughput, low-latency and resource-efficient IO services. The design of FD.io is hardware, kernel, and deployment (bare metal, VM, container) agnostic.
You don't have any Juniper or Cisco gear at any of your "mission-critical" sites?
If you do, there's plenty of Linux running underneath.
Pain is merely failure leaving the body
"Juniper uses FreeBSD & Cisco use their own proprietary operating system called ios (yup, same name as apple's mobile O/S)"
Cisco has a number of "operating systems":
- IOS, used on older router platforms and Catalyst switches (which are now limited mostly to use as access switches)
- IOS-XR which runs on high-end routers (CRS, ASR9K, C12K), which is based on QNX
-IOS-XE which runs on current entry-level to mid-range routers (ASR1K), which is Linux-based
-NX-OS which powers most current Cisco data-centre offerings (Nexus), which is Linux-based
If you have Cisco equipment and no Linux, your equipment is most likely all EOL or very close to it.