#NANOG84 Hackathon: No plan survives first contact with go-getter students ๐งโ๐๐จโ๐๐ฉโ๐
Austin, 12โ13 February 2022
So there I was, ready to do battle in my blue corner of the ring. Together with Anton Karneliuk from Karneliuk.com โ author of pyGNMI among other things โ we got started on a multi-vendor NAPALM driver using gNMI as a backend.
Working around the clock in our different time zones, in full blown follow-the-moon style, we managed to get a basic NAPALM get_facts working for both Arista cEOS and Nokia SR Linux, at some point late Saturday night.
Working together to build the Internet of tomorrowยฎ
On Sunday a group of students from University of Colorado Boulder joined the party, and it quickly became apparent that our hacking plans would have to change. Because important as multi-vendor compatibility issues are, inter-generation transfer of knowledge is even more critical. We already barely understand the networks we have built today โ how could we ever expect the next generation to keep things running if we donโt help them understand what we did?
Long story short: I teamed up with Dinesh Kumar Palanivelu and he ended up submitting his first Pull Request: A small step for a man, but a huge win for the NANOG community!
Thanks again Dinesh, Anton and the rest of the community โ I had a great time, and hope to hack with you again in Montreal in June (NANOG85)