virtualUKNOF July 2020

Europe/London
Cathy Almond (Internet Systems Consortium), Chris Russell (UKNOF), Fearghas McKay (Flexoptix // UKNOF), Keith Mitchell (UKNOF)
Description

The UK Network Operators' Forum is currently only running virtual meetings.

The second virtualUKNOF will be co-hosted by UKNOF and LONAP on 20 July (14:30 - 16:30 BST).

UKNOF events offer an OPEN environment for anyone within or interested in the Internet Industry. Network with industry colleagues, participate in knowledge sharing and freshen up on best practice around network operations and security.

For more information about UKNOF itself, please visit our primary site.

Social Media hashtag: #virtualUKNOF

Mattermost Chatroom: UKNOF on chat.uknof.org.uk (sign-up here)

Meeting co-host LONAP are giving away some T-shirts. If you would like one, please fill in the form at: <https://www.lonap.net/bbq>. NOTE: These will only be delivered to UK addresses.


UKNOF PATRONS 2020

PRINCIPAL
BT LONAP

 

PREMIUM

CenturyLink IPv4 Market group
Flexoptix RIPE NCC

We are currently looking for additional Patrons to support UKNOF. Contact us on patron@uknof.org.uk


SPONSORS

Arista Rahi

 

We are currently looking for additional Sponsors to support UKNOF (the link gives details of a specific virtualUKNOF sponsorship package). Contact us on sponsor@uknof.org.uk


PARTNERS

Bogons Portfast

Participants
  • Adam Clark
  • Aidan Whyte
  • Alan Barnett
  • Albert Kofi Kwansah Ansah
  • Aled Morris
  • Alex F
  • Alex Harrison
  • Alex Howells
  • Alex Richards
  • Alexandra Kulikova
  • Alexandra Vos
  • Andrew Campling
  • Andrew Goodbourn
  • Andrew Khoo
  • Andrew Mulheirn
  • Andrew Smith
  • Andy Davidson
  • Andy Fidler
  • Anne Bates
  • Anthony Turner
  • Barney Sowood
  • Barry O'Donovan
  • Bartosz Miklaszewski
  • Basil Fillan
  • Ben Ben
  • Ben Carter
  • Ben Nicklin
  • Ben Ward
  • Ben White
  • Bijal Sanghani
  • Bill Hulley
  • Bob Sleigh
  • Brandon Butterworth
  • Brandon Spendlove
  • Brendan Black
  • Brett Carr
  • Brian Nisbet
  • Cameron Sharp
  • Cathy Almond
  • Charlie Madelaine
  • Chigbo Ibegbu
  • Chris Bagnall
  • Chris Bridle
  • Chris Cousins
  • Chris Humphreys
  • Chris Lawrence
  • Chris Russell
  • Clare White
  • Colin Peckham
  • Collin Kurre
  • Collin Willis
  • Cooper Lees
  • Craig Arnold
  • Craig Aspey
  • Craig Hopkins
  • Damien Ransome
  • Dan Cicioiu
  • Daniel Foster
  • Daniel Greaves
  • Daniel Piekacz
  • Daniel Smith
  • Darren Storer
  • Dave Wilson
  • David Barker
  • David Croft
  • David Freedman
  • David Malone
  • David Murray
  • David Richardson
  • David Sharpe
  • David Stockdale
  • David Sullivan
  • David Whitehead
  • David Wilkinson
  • Delfi Ramirez
  • Denesh Bhabuta
  • Didier Sorel
  • Dunc Lockwood
  • Ed Daniel
  • Eduardo Duarte
  • Edward Dore
  • Eileen Gallagher
  • Elliot Sandell
  • Eric Yan
  • Euan Galloway
  • Fady Abdelhafez
  • Fearghas Mckay
  • Femi Dakobiri
  • Fergal Cunningham
  • Gareth Bowen
  • Gary Hawkins
  • Gary Steers
  • George Horton
  • Giles Davis
  • Giovanni Aversa
  • Hal Ponton
  • Hamlesh Motah
  • Hazel Smith
  • Henri GröNroos
  • Holly Ruff
  • Ian Anderson
  • Ian Batten
  • Ian Chilton
  • Ian Dickinson
  • Ian Goodall
  • Inga Turner
  • Jack Sephton
  • Jaco Engelbrecht
  • Jake Lee
  • Jakub Kozioł
  • James Bensley
  • James Blessing
  • James Burnett
  • James Goode
  • James Obrien
  • James Stapley
  • James Whitnall
  • Jamie Lesley
  • Jennifer Holmes
  • Jethro Binks
  • Jett Jackson
  • Jody Botham
  • Joe Abley
  • Joe Mcdougall
  • Joe Waite
  • Jon Ruano
  • Jon Vooght
  • Joshua Hanley
  • Junaid Choudhary
  • Kaushik Dadi
  • Keith Mitchell
  • Kevin Gee
  • Kurt McLester
  • Lance Davis
  • Lee Benas
  • Lee Dann
  • Leo Vegoda
  • Lesego Leseka
  • Liam Drew
  • Lou Ashtonhurst
  • Lovkesh Wadhwa
  • Luke Sheldrick
  • Marco Slater
  • Marek Isalski
  • Mariano Julia
  • Mario Puig
  • Mark Boyce
  • Mark Castle
  • Mark Hudson
  • Mark Prior
  • Mark Simcock
  • Mark Tearle
  • Martin Atkinson
  • Martin Clare
  • Martin Levy
  • Martin Saunders
  • Martina De Mas
  • Mat Ford
  • Matt Bearpark
  • Matt Brown
  • Matthew Balyuzi
  • Matthew Jepp
  • Matthew Melbourne
  • Matthew Mercer
  • Menno Schepers
  • Michael Daly
  • Michael Dougherty
  • Mick O'Donovan
  • Mike Hellers
  • Mikko Kiukkanen
  • Mirjam KüHne
  • Mufaddal Presswala
  • Nat Lasseter
  • Neil Lathwood
  • Nick Fothergill
  • Nick Portch
  • Nick Ryce
  • Nico Cartron
  • Nigel Titley
  • Nitin Raj
  • Oleksiy Semenyaka
  • Oliver Elliott
  • Oliver Leaver-Smith
  • Olivier Benghozi
  • Paul Edwards
  • Paul Hughes
  • Paul Parsons
  • Paul Thornton
  • Paul Todd
  • Paul Westhead
  • Pedro Reis
  • Pete Foster
  • Peter Braidwood
  • Peter Hicks
  • Peter Stevens
  • Peter Taphouse
  • Petr Marciniak
  • Phil Kennedy
  • Picky Airi
  • Q ‍♀️
  • Ralf Weber
  • Ray Bellis
  • Ray Belshaw
  • Rebecca Class-Peter
  • Rene Neumann
  • Richard Halfpenny
  • Richard Irving
  • Richard Savage
  • Rob Blake
  • Rob Cowan
  • Rob Evans
  • Rob Harrison
  • Robert Lister
  • Robert Mckay
  • Robin Williams
  • Roland Perry
  • Ruben Garbade
  • Russ Bicknell
  • Ryan Mcconechy
  • Sai Bharath Kumar Nownepati
  • Sam Defriez
  • Sam Mitchell
  • Sam Richardson
  • Sam Smith
  • Samuel Panicker
  • Sara Dickinson
  • Scott Millmaker
  • Sean Farrell
  • Shane Mc Cormack
  • Shaun Courtney
  • Shinoj Pittandavida
  • Simon Beevers
  • Simon Lockhart
  • Simon Luff
  • Simon Ringland
  • Sreenath Kamatham
  • Stavros Patiniotis
  • Stephen Pointer
  • Steve Glendinning
  • Steve Jones
  • Steve Karmeinsky
  • Steve Seymour
  • Steven Clarke
  • Steven Hayes
  • Steven Knighting
  • Stuart Clark
  • Stuart Clark
  • Stuart Pearson
  • Stuart Steele
  • Sushil Arya
  • Swapneel Patnekar
  • Tema Hassan
  • Thomas Gould
  • Thomas Jepp
  • Tim Bray
  • Tim Butcher
  • Tim Chown
  • Tim Lightfoot
  • Tim Rodgers
  • Tim Thornton
  • Tim Wadhwa-Brown
  • Tom Bird
  • Tom Hill
  • Tom Kuznicki
  • Tomas Morales Mendoza
  • Tony Hoyle
  • Vijay Kumar
  • Will Hargrave
  • William Wager
  • ÉTienne Labaume
virtualUKNOF admin
    • 14:15 14:30
      Webinar room opens - while waiting, grab a drink and mingle with your peers at https://chat.uknof.org.uk 15m
    • 14:30 14:33
      Introduction and Welcome 3m
      Speaker: Keith Mitchell (UKNOF)
    • 14:33 14:35
      Welcome by co-host LONAP 2m
      Speaker: Richard Irving (LONAP)
    • 14:35 14:55
      The Janet Network during COVID-19 20m

      First things first -- I'm more than happy to drop this in favour of non-pandemic content.

      Having said that, I've had a few observations on how our traffic has changed during working and studying from home, and what we're still doing to facilitate that (touching briefly on students of UK universities studying further abroad).

      Draft slides from presenting something similar earlier this week are attached, but can be changed as required. As-is, this took 15 minutes and change.

      Speaker: Rob Evans (Jisc)
    • 14:55 15:15
      Hyperlocal root & Localroot - Running a local copy of the DNS root zone 20m

      DNS(Domain Name System) is the crucial & ubiquitous fabric for the Internet. Despite the fact that there are 13 root servers (1084 instances in Anycast) all around the world, the resiliency & the security of the DNS has been an ongoing probing question. This presentation explores the following questions

      How do we increase the resiliency of the root servers ?
      How do we stop sending junk queries to the root servers ?
      How do we reduce the access time to the root servers ?
      How do we increase the privacy by hiding queries made to the root servers ?
      RFC7706/8806 provides us answers to these questions. Plus, I will demonstrate an interesting project (Localroot) which allows anyone to run a local copy of the DNS root zone.

      Speaker: Mr Swapneel Patnekar (Shreshta IT)
    • 15:15 15:25
      Transforming Network Automation at the Edge 10m

      on behalf of Rahi Systems by ZPE

      Speaker: Rene Neumann (ZPE Systems)
    • 15:25 15:35
      Break 10m
    • 15:35 15:40
      Level Up appeal - laptops and Internet access to disadvantaged children during the pandemic 5m

      I'll create some simple high level slides but this is the main content of the presentation:

      Background and problem:

      It’s become very apparent that the ‘new normal’ for school children now and in the future includes a considerable amount of learning at home using online resources. Unfortunately, some families can’t afford IT equipment to support their children studying at home, and right now these disadvantaged children are missing out. The government has made funds available to provide laptops and Internet access to some of these children, but that currently only includes children in social care which is a tiny fraction of the kids that need help.

      After liaising with schools in my home town of Horley (population around 22,000), I believe there are around 100 children with an urgent need for IT equipment to help them with their school work.

      What I've done:

      To help address this problem, I’ve set up a laptop appeal to encourage individuals and businesses to donate unwanted laptops. I take the laptop in, clean it, generally replace the hard drive, occasionally install more memory (RAM), install Windows 10 or CloudReady ChromeOS and power test it. I then give the laptop to one of the Horley schools for onward distribution to the families that need it most. Using old laptops rather than buying new ones takes more work, but we're reusing existing equipment which is significantly cheaper than buying new laptops and is better for the environment.

      Internet access:

      For families that need it, I'm also providing Internet access using mobile SIMs and 4G dongles.

      Data security concerns:

      Rightfully some doners have concerns over the security of their data, especially if the laptop was used for business purposes. To solve this problem I'm happy to take laptops that have had their hard drive removed, or I'm happy to remove the drive for the owner. Older laptops typically have slower hard disks, so replacing the disk with a modern solid-state drive (SSD) is cheap, quick to install and significantly speeds up the laptop for the new owner.

      Onward ownership of the device:

      Each laptop includes a letter from me explaining the laptop is now theirs to do with as they wish. I don't expect the device back, but I do ask that if the laptop isn't required anymore and still functions well to please return to me or the school as it may benefit another child.

      Call to action:

      I need help please in a few different areas:

      • Scale - I can't afford the time to do this outside of Horley, could you (the audience) start Level Up in your town?
      • Internet access - SIMs and dongles are expensive, could your service provider help in providing these? Or are there any other ideas on how to offer cheap, short term internet access (like BT WiFi for example)?
      • Laptops - I (and if we get this to scale, many others) need access to unwanted laptops - does your business have any they could spare please?
      Speaker: Mr Martin Saunders
    • 15:40 16:00
      Scaling your metro: the journey from 100 to 400G 20m

      I'll talk about the journey for upgrading our metro infrastructure from mid-2010s era 10G DWDM through to multiples of 100G to 400G. How can we cost-effectively expand networks with high bandwidth demands with spans in the 1-80km range?

      We can start with an overview of how we did things in the n*10G world and why this does not directly transition into 100G. Your technology and cost options for lighting 100G (direct detect / PAM4 / coherent) and why a timely migration to 400G technology might be an option.

      Speaker: Will Hargrave (LONAP)
    • 16:00 16:20
      MAC Randomisation - considering privacy features with unintended network consequences 20m

      This talk will outline the concept and history of device MAC randomisation, current phases and the potential for further enhancements and thoughts on considering privacy features with potential unintended consequences on the network and customer experience.

      Speakers: Andy Fidler (BT Plc), Mr Simon Ringland (BT Plc)
    • 16:20 16:40
      SD-WAN API's and Programmability 20m

      Starting with Postman collection examples on how to get started with Cisco vManage APIs then we will look at how to use vManage Aggregation APIs to generate reports on statistics related to loss/latency/jitter of SD-WAN overlay tunnels and we will also look at how to use APIs to trigger policy updates to change the preferred transport for certain application traffic. Finally we look at how to use Viptela Python SDK to simplify operations related to feature/device templates.

      Speaker: Mr Stuart Clark (Cisco DevNet)
    • 16:40 16:55
      Break 15m
    • 16:55 18:55
      Quiz by LONAP and BYO Pints n' Packets