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Mastering Python Networking

You're reading from   Mastering Python Networking Your one-stop solution to using Python for network automation, programmability, and DevOps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839214677
Length 576 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Eric Chou Eric Chou
Author Profile Icon Eric Chou
Eric Chou
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Review of TCP/IP Protocol Suite and Python 2. Low-Level Network Device Interactions FREE CHAPTER 3. APIs and Intent-Driven Networking 4. The Python Automation Framework – Ansible Basics 5. The Python Automation Framework – Beyond Basics 6. Network Security with Python 7. Network Monitoring with Python – Part 1 8. Network Monitoring with Python – Part 2 9. Building Network Web Services with Python 10. AWS Cloud Networking 11. Azure Cloud Networking 12. Network Data Analysis with Elastic Stack 13. Working with Git 14. Continuous Integration with Jenkins 15. Test-Driven Development for Networks 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

VNet routing

As a network engineer, implicit routes added by the cloud provider have always been a bit uncomfortable for me. In traditional networking, we need to cable up the network, assign IP addresses, configure routing, implement security, and make sure everything works. It can be complex at times, but every packet and route is accounted for. For virtual networks in the cloud, obviously, the underlay network is already completed by Azure and some network configuration on the overlay network needs to happen automatically for the host to work at launch time, as we saw earlier.

Azure VNet routing is a bit different from AWS. In the AWS chapter, we saw the routing table implemented at the VPC network layer. But if we browse to the Azure VNet setting on the portal, we will not find a routing table assigned to the VNet.

If we drill deeper into the subnet setting, we will see a routing table drop-down menu, but the value it is displaying is None:

Figure 21: Azure...

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