YANG Data Models in the Industry: Current State of Affairs (March 2018)
Just after IETF 101 in London, let’s analyze the current state of affairs in the YANG Data Models world. Note also the previous “YANG Data Models in the Industry: Current […]
Just after IETF 101 in London, let’s analyze the current state of affairs in the YANG Data Models world. Note also the previous “YANG Data Models in the Industry: Current […]
When you travel frequently, there are certain things that you know. You don’t recall how you learn them, but you just know. For example, half asleep from the jet-lag, walking […]
Back from CiscoLive two weeks ago, a mad networking week with 14500 people, where I presented “YANG Data Modeling and NETCONF: Cisco and Industry Developments” with Carl Moberg. Part of […]
For years, the IETF has been driving the industry transition from an overloaded Software Defined Networking (SDN) buzzword to data modeling-driven management. With a SDN pragmatic definition in mind, such […]
The YANG team delivered again at the IETF 100 hackathon. With our goal to help YANG model users and designers, we developed new automation tools. As a reminder, we have been […]
In the world of data model-driven management, what is important is the set of YANG data modules from which APIs are deduced. Indeed, from a high level point of view, […]
The IETF 99 is now over. Building on this tradition to write a blog explaining the progress for this YANG Catalog (here is the blog for the IETF 98), let […]
The IETF 98 is now over. This was a successful IETF meeting in multiple ways, one of which is the IETF hackathon, two days of hacking on Saturday/Sunday. Before delving into […]
This blog describes some of the opensource tools around YANG. While there exist some tools around the YANG language validation, I want to cover the bigger landscape of data modeling-driven […]
Let me start with some good news. Not only we recently approved RESTCONF (right now in the RFC editor queue), but we published the IPv4 and IPv6 base routing models […]