Infrastructure/Networking

Aruba Injects AIOps Into Network Management

Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) company, this week launched a platform that leverages artificial intelligence (AI) to identify and remediate networking issues before they have an impact on end users.

Patrick LaPorte, senior director of cloud and software solutions marketing, said the Aruba Edge Services Platform (ESP) applies algorithms to data collected for customer networks and aggregated by Aruba in the cloud. That approach enables the company to apply AIOps to automate the management of both software-defined wide area networks (SD-WANs) and Wi-Fi access points.

Aruba has been making a case for converging the management of SD-WANs and Wi-Fi access points in remote offices for a couple of years now. With the downturn in the economy brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, the need to reduce the total cost of networking is even more pressing, LaPorte said.

The Aruba ESP platform further reduces the total cost of networking by augmenting network administrators with AIOps capabilities that will enable a smaller team to centrally manage via the cloud a much larger number of network services being delivered to remote offices, he said.

At the same time, Aruba enables IT organizations to implement zero-trust network security by providing built-in support for role-based access, dynamic segmentation of network services and identity-based intrusion detection to authenticate, authorize and control every user and device connected to the network, said LaPorte.

The Aruba approach to AIOps revolves around Aruba Central, a cloud service based on Kubernetes the company relies on to manage networking equipment that runs ArubaOS services. Aruba claims to have more than 65,000 customers using Aruba Central to manage network services.

Aruba Central has been enhanced to include AI Search, a data discovery service based on a natural language processing (NLP) engine that enables IT teams to employ English-language queries to extract user and device information from the data lake created by Aruba ESP. The company has also added user-centric analytics to better identify client, application and network performance issues.

Aruba has also added a faster Aruba CX 6200 Switch Series that includes built-in analytics and automation capabilities.

Finally, Aruba has launched Developer Hub, which provides access to its application programming interfaces (APIs) and documentation to applications that leverage the Aruba ESP platform.

The way network services are being managed and delivered to remote offices is dramatically changing as applications become more distributed. At the same time, the entire definition of what constitutes a remote office in the age of COVID-19 is being transformed as more employees work from home. Aruba is addressing that challenge by making it easier to set up network tunnels between home offices and remote offices managed by Aruba Central, said LaPorte.

As networking continues to evolve there is no doubt IT organizations will be relying more on automation and AI to deliver network services as scale. Less clear is the degree to which IT organizations will be willing to standardize on networking equipment from a single vendor to achieve that goal. In theory, IT organizations can reduce their total cost by standardizing on a single vendor. In practice, however, many IT environments are comprised of a dizzying array of networking equipment from multiple vendors.

Regardless of what path forward is chosen, it’s already apparent the current networking status quo will not hold for much longer.

Mike Vizard

Mike Vizard is a seasoned IT journalist with over 25 years of experience. He also contributed to IT Business Edge, Channel Insider, Baseline and a variety of other IT titles. Previously, Vizard was the editorial director for Ziff-Davis Enterprise as well as Editor-in-Chief for CRN and InfoWorld.

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