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Call for Volunteer Subject Matter Experts (SMEs)
The Linux Foundation (LF) is creating 1 ¼ day Tungsten Fabric training that will be offered as paid online and face-to-face courses. This is a call for SME volunteers to conduct train-the-trainer sessions with the team creating the training materials.
The course outline is provided below. Most chapters below will include lecture (slides/writeup) and hands-on labs. The labs will be on AWS. Each train-the-trainer session is expected to be 30-60 minutes long. The agenda for these train-the-trainer sessions will be:
Point the training material developer to slides/wiki/documentation that can be used to create slides.
Show the training material developer a demo of the hands-on lab. If needed, an AWS environment will be stood up before the call.
Please volunteer by putting your name below. If you are interested in contributing to a chapter which already has an SME listed, please add your name to that chapter's list.
| Chapter | SME (Insert Name) | Chapter Length | Status |
1 | Introduction to Tungsten Fabric - The TF project
- Community; benefits of TF
- Describe TF architecture and overlay network principles
- Explain components of TF
- Service Chaining
- Monitoring
- Multi Tenancy
- TF and Containers
| | 30 slides
| In proofreading |
Introduction to Tungsten Fabric Lab - Pre-lab: Install TF & Kubernetes and make sure the services are up and running.
- Lab-1: Create and deploy a Kubernetes pod and make sure the Virtual Networks (vrouters/gateways) are configured so that the pod can be accessed.
- As part of this lab exercise, the pods will be created in k8s and the corresponding configurations will be defined in services yaml file.
- TF uses the configuration defined in the service yaml file and creates virtual networks.
Labs: Create Simple Gateway
|
| 30 minute lab | In review & testing |
2 | Architecture Deep dive - Architecture Overview
- TF Control Plane
- TF Data Plane
- TF Management
- TF Basic Troubleshooting
- TF Security Policy Framework
| No SME required, we will refer to arch page | 30 slides | In proofreading |
3 | TF Configuration - Configuration techniques
- vRouter configuration
- Virtual networks configuration
- Network policy/security group configuration
- TF API
- Remote edge
| Sukhdev Kapur Shivayogi Ugaji | 20 slides
| In proofreading |
TF Configuration Lab |
| 45 minute lab | In review and testing |
4 | TF & External Networks - Connecting virtual and physical networks
- Floating IPs
- Simple virtual gateway configuration
- EVPN
| | 15 20 slides
| In proofreading |
TF & External Networks - Lab-3: Create and deploy a pod using Floating IP so that the pod can be accessed externally.
- This exercise could be combined with Lab-1 because the floating IPs are created automatically by TF upon deploying a service.
Labs: Creating floating IPs and gateways
|
| 45 minute lab | Being worked on |
5 | TF Network Services - Baremetal workloads
- BGP-as-a-service
- LBaaS (Load Balancer as a Service)
- vRouter deployment models (Kernel, DPDK, SRIOV, SmartNic)
- How to run the DPDK vRouter standalone and pass traffic
- vRouter performance monitoring
- DNS server
- Broadcast/multicast
- Device manager
TF and Docker containers
| | 20 25 slides
| In proofreading |
TF Network Services - Lab-4: Create multiple tenants (namespaces and pods) and deployments with access restrictions and show the communications/access through Load Balancer
Labs: Docker containers with TF TF using k8s for container networking
|
| 45 minute lab | In review and testing |
6 | Observing and Logging TF - Monitoring
- Logging
- Analytics
| | 15 slides | In proofreading |
Observing and Logging TF - (Optional) Demo/Recorded session of Logging/Monitoring
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