National TeleConsultants (NTC) is a media and broadcast systems specialist that has designed and integrated major facilities for FOX, The Walt Disney Company, DIRECTV, and many others. With the goal of improving design process, accuracy, and efficiency, they have developed a solution to address the intricacies of documenting large-scale, hybrid media IP infrastructures: Ndox a robust, browser-based solution that provides a centralized repository for all aspects of system design.
The solution is NTC’s answer to a problem that has been increasingly challenging in recent years: designing, documenting, and configuring technology infrastructure at large media facilities. As technology centers and production facilities move toward cloud, virtualization, and IP technology, traditional methods of documenting and building systems and networks with spreadsheets, drawings, and hardware configuration by hand have become untenable. For a modern facility—composed of hundreds of pieces of hardware, tens of thousands of IP addresses, and miles of cable—documenting connections in a spreadsheet format simply does not scale.
The engineering specialist employs its browser-based documentation platform in designing and building the infrastructure for a new media center serving hundreds of television stations and distribution partners with a hybrid-cloud architecture, software-based media processing and support for 4K, UHD, and HDR. That’s the Ndox platform, a robust solution that provides a centralized repository for all aspects of system design.
A new design and documentation approach
What sets Ndox apart is that it goes well beyond the physical level and includes logical design elements such as virtual machine resources, IP addresses, and networking configuration. Ndox serves as the “trusted repository” for information throughout the system and has the powerful ability to directly drive downstream network configuration processes in addition to providing the necessary physical level documentation. This integrated approach organizes all data in one place, which greatly reduces the possibility of errors and provides centralized access to users across multiple business units and disciplines.
“The industry has changed a lot in terms of how things are designed, built, documented, and run,” says NTC Managing Partner Peter Adamiak. “We’ve moved beyond a world based solely on physical connectivity. In the past, you could look at drawings and understand how a system works. Today, logical and virtual designs are the norm and engineers require a new design and documentation approach. Ndox is NTC’s solution to this for our projects and clients.”
Most recently, NTC employed Ndox in designing and installing infrastructure for a new, very large-scale media center built for a major domestic media enterprise. This media center was created to manage and distribute programming to hundreds of affiliated television stations and more than 800 distribution partners nationwide. Its technical systems include a SMPTE ST 2110 IP core, hybrid-cloud architecture, software-based media processing, and support for new media standards such 4K, UHD, and HDR.
Access information with portable devices
Ndox proved itself as an integral part of NTC’s design and integration process for this new media center. With Ndox, NTC’s engineers were able to meticulously plan and organize IP addresses, networks and subnetworks, equipment layouts, devices, circuit connections, virtual machines, and other details easily and accurately, with everyone working in a shared database. This information was then shared with the integration team who could readily access the latest design information using portable devices (iPhones, iPads, etc.) from anywhere in the facility.
Ndox made the design and installation process more efficient and less prone to error. “Assembling the building blocks and defining physical connections in Ndox was seamless,” says Senior Engineer Lukas Odhner. “It also allowed us to describe the logical layer by assigning IP addresses, port channels, VLANs, and so on. All that information was immediately available to the people who were building it out. It’s been a very effective way to show how things were intended to connect and interact.”
Odhner adds that the platform includes highly detailed visualizations of racks and equipment for easy reference. “A technician can view each device, its model number, and pertinent information, and quickly determine where it is supposed be installed,” he explains. “No need to ask an engineer, ‘What is this?’ and ‘Where does it go?’”
Different tools and a different mindset
As an on-going operational tool, Ndox will help keep network systems at the new media center facility functioning properly by ensuring that the documentation matches the physical and logical reality. Odhner notes that one of the drawbacks to using spreadsheets for network documentation is that changes to the network are not automatically reflected. “If you’re keeping a list of VLANs in Excel and you change something on a switch manually without updating the spreadsheet, you have created a discrepancy,” he says. “With Ndox, the documentation drives the configuration; this automated deployment approach avoids these inconsistencies and ensures the network and its documentation stay in sync.”
In addition to new installations, Ndox can also be used to bring coherence and predictability to existing technical environments. “For facilities that are already built using traditional documentation, Ndox can be used to capture everything as it currently is and provide a roadmap for bringing systems into a desired future state,” Odhner explains.
Adamiak says that Ndox is an important innovation and one that should be viewed as a critical component in a broader solution to the ongoing management of media system infrastructures. Today’s hybrid networks are fundamentally different from the purely physical networks of the past. Managing them efficiently requires different tools and a different mindset. “One thing that NTC brings to the table is a thoughtful approach to best practices,” he explains.
“We have many years of experience with infrastructures of different types and scales” Odhner continues, “and understand the nuances and how decisions made in configuration impact operations down the line. No two facilities are alike and no one strategy works for all. When we begin a new project, we start by learning all we can about the customer and their existing requirements. We have to deeply understand their needs before we begin the technical work of designing systems that will help them meet their goals into the future.”