4:30pm Wed Apr 10 talk on NetFPGA platform in room CS 402
Andrew Moore (http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~awm22/) from U. Cambridge will be giving a one-hour tutorial on the NetFPGA (http://netfpga.org/) platform on Wednesday April 10. If you are interested in meeting with the speaker, follow up with me at jrex@cs.princeton.edu. Andrew's research focuses on Internet measurement, energy-aware networks, and software-defined networking. Speaker: Andrew Moore (University of Cambridge) Title: NetFPGA: The Flexible Open-Source Networking Platform Time: 4:30pm Wednesday April 10 Place: CS 402 Abstract: The NetFPGA is an open platform enabling researchers and instructors to build high-speed, hardware-accelerated networking systems. The NetFPGA is the de-facto experimental platform for line-rate implementations of network research and it continues with a new generation platform capable of 4x10Gbps. The target audience is not restricted to hardware researchers: the NetFPGA provides the ideal platform for research across a wide range of networking topics from architecture to algorithms and from energy-efficient design to routing and forwarding. The most prominent NetFPGA success is OpenFlow, which in turn has reignited the Software Defined Networking movement. NetFPGA enabled OpenFlow by providing a widely available open-source development platform capable of line-rate and was, until its commercial uptake, the reference platform for OpenFlow. NetFPGA enables high-impact network research. This seminar will combine presentation and demonstration; no knowledge of hardware programming languages (eg Verilog/VHDL) is required. A NetFPGA 10G card will be awarded as a door-prize amongst the seminar attendees.
participants (1)
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Jennifer Rexford