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Cisco Continues Open Standard Leadership With Support for EVPN VXLAN Overlay Protocol on Nexus 9000 Series Switches

SAN JOSE, CA — (Marketwired) — 02/06/15 — Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is extending its leadership in promoting open standards, interoperability and multi-vendor solutions for Software Defined Networking (SDN) technology. Cisco announced today that it is furthering its open standards approach to SDN, complementing its open (ACI) approach and extending standards-based interoperability for its switches with support for the protocol for overlay networks. Support for (Border Gateway Protocol – Ethernet Virtual Private Network) on the Cisco Nexus 9000 is scheduled to be available this month, with support for Cisco Nexus 7000 series switches and Cisco ASR 9000 series routers scheduled to be available in Q2 CY15.

Nexus 9000 support for the BGP EVPN protocol offers customers a choice of deployment options to achieve operational flexibility and paves the way for integration with third party overlay controllers. With BGP EVPN, the Nexus 9000 is now the industry–s most complete solution for data center and cloud networks, offering a choice of traditional topologies, overlays, and Cisco ACI for policy-based automation. IT organizations can run an EVPN VXLAN controller on a traditional Nexus 9000 switch in “standalone” mode. Or they can deploy Nexus 9000 switches in ACI mode with the APIC controller to take advantage of the ACI application policy model for capabilities such as: integrated overlay, virtual and physical network visibility, system telemetry, and health scores. Both solutions provide investment protection for customers whether by extending the ACI policy model across existing Nexus infrastructure or by support for BGP-EVPN across Nexus platforms.

Overlay networks provide the foundation for scalable multi-tenant cloud networks. VXLAN, developed by Cisco along with other virtualization platform vendors, has emerged as the most widely-adopted multi-vendor overlay technology. In order to advance this technology further, a scalable and standards-based control plane mechanism such as BGP EVPN is required. Using BGP EVPN as a control-plane protocol for VXLAN optimizes forwarding and eliminates the need for inefficient flood-and-learn approaches while improving scale. It also facilitates large scale deployments of overlay networks by removing complexity, fosters higher interoperability through open standard control plane solutions, and access to a wider range of cloud management platforms.

Further, by running an open cloud management platform, such as , on top of a BGP EVPN controller, organizations will be able to automate the creation, provisioning and management of their VXLAN-based overlay environments, including the ongoing management of endpoint address mappings, allowing native workload mobility support. This solution will significantly ease policy-based automation for overlay networks in multi-vendor environments.

Cisco BGP EVPN technology will support EVPN VXLAN technology across a range of topologies (spine-leaf, three-tier aggregation, full mesh), as well as interoperate with a wide range of Top of Rack (ToR) switches and WAN equipment.

The was developed by network providers Cisco, Alcatel-Lucent, Huawei and Juniper, along with network operators AT&T, Bloomberg and Verizon. is an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard, and the most scalable of all routing protocols. BGP is the routing protocol of the global Internet, as well as for Service Provider private networks.

In addition to EVPN support, Cisco has contributed to open source software on many fronts. Cisco collaborated with the open source community to release Group-Based Policy for OpenStack, a new, open source multi-vendor policy-based API. Group-Based Policy allows users to leverage OpenDaylight as well as vendor-specific controllers to achieve policy-based automation through OpenStack. Group-Based Policy is available now and will be supported by major OpenStack distributions, including Red Hat OSP 6.

Cisco also recently announced , a protocol for Layer 4-7 application services and security appliance insertion into overlay and cloud networks that Cisco is promoting through the IETF along with Citrix, Microsoft, Rackspace, Red Hat and others.

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Availability Disclaimer: Many of the products and features described herein remain in varying stages of development and will be offered on a when-and-if-available basis. This products and features are subject to change at the sole discretion of Cisco, and Cisco will have no liability for delay in the delivery or failure to deliver any of the products or features set forth in this document.

This release may be deemed to contain forward-looking statements, which are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements include, among others, statements regarding Cisco–s delivery of Application Centric Infrastructure, new professional services and an open partner ecosystem and the expected benefits for customers, Cisco–s expansion of its Nexus switching portfolio, and Cisco–s intention to acquire the remaining interest in Insieme Networks. Readers are cautioned that these forward-looking statements are only predictions and may differ materially from actual future events or results due to a variety of factors, including, among other things, the ability of Cisco to successfully introduce and to achieve the expected benefits of its application centric infrastructure and related services and partner ecosystem, the potential impact on the business of Insieme Networks due to the uncertainty about the acquisition, the retention of employees of Insieme Networks, the ability of Cisco to successfully integrate Insieme Networks and to achieve expected benefits, business and economic conditions and growth trends in the networking industry, customer markets and various geographic regions, global economic conditions and uncertainties in the geopolitical environment, overall information technology spending, the growth and evolution of the Internet and levels of capital spending on Internet-based systems, dependence on the introduction and market acceptance of new product offerings and standards; increased competition in Cisco–s product and service markets, including the data center, and other risk factors set forth in Cisco–s most recent reports on Form 10-K filed on September 9, 2014. Any forward-looking statements in this release are based on limited information currently available to Cisco, which is subject to change, and Cisco will not necessarily update the information.

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