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- What Is Hierarchical Design?
- Typical Hierarchical Design Patterns
- Virtualization
- Final Thoughts on Applying Modularity
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This chapter is from the book
Final Thoughts on Applying Modularity
Network modularization provides clear and obvious points at which to configure and manage policy, clear trade-offs between state and stretch, and predictable reactions within the network to specific changes in the network topology. The general rules for using hierarchical design are as follows:
- Break the network into modules, using information hiding to divide module from module. Layer edges exist only where information is hidden.
- Assign each module as few functions as possible to promote clarity and repeatability in configurations, and reduce the unintended consequences of complex policy interactions.
- Build networks using hub-and-spoke configurations of modules.
- All modules at a given layer within a network should have similar functionality to promote ease of troubleshooting and reduce configuration complexity.
- Build solid redundancy at module interconnection points.
Overall, remember to be flexible with the modularization. Rather than focusing on a single design pattern as the solution to all design problems, focus on finding the best fit for the problem at hand.
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