How Infoblox Reinvents Network Services for the Multi-Cloud Era

April 21, 2025

Presented at Cloud Field Day in Santa Clara


Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to participate as a delegate at Cloud Field Day in Santa Clara. As delegates, we engaged directly with the presenting companies, offering feedback on what resonated, what needed clarification, and how their strategies could evolve.

The first presenter was Infoblox, a company that merges networking and security into a unified solution, more specifically they are focused on DDI — that’s DNS, DHCP, and IPAM. Other than an acronym of acronyms, what exactly is DDI?  I soon found out as Chief Product Officer Mukesh Gupta explained how this combination of “boring” network services is critical in today’s messy, manual, and fragmented hybrid multi-cloud environments.


What Really Is DDI and Why Does It Matter?

DDI is about managing the “naming,” “numbering,” and “locating” of everything connected to a network — whether it’s a laptop, server, phone, or cloud service. Specifically it is made up of three foundational network services:

  • DNS (Domain Name System): Translates human-readable domain names (like google.com) into IP addresses.
  • DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol): Automatically assigns IP addresses to devices on a network.
  • IPAM (IP Address Management): Manages the allocation, tracking, and planning of IP addresses across an organization.

These services form the invisible infrastructure behind every enterprise network. Mukesh described DDI as the “electricity” of networking — when it goes down, everything stops.


Multi-Cloud Challenges and DDI

Mukesh outlined three key trends currently reshaping enterprise infrastructure:

  1. Hybrid multi-cloud adoption
    Most organizations now operate across a mix of public cloud providers and on-premises infrastructure.
  2. SaaS-first, cloud-first strategies
    Enterprises are rapidly moving off legacy systems (especially post-VMware acquisition) in favor of cloud-native approaches.
  3. Increasing cybersecurity threats
    Attackers are more frequent, more sophisticated, and more damaging than ever before.

These trends introduce real complexity for DDI. Key challenges include:

  • Fragmented DNS systems across multiple clouds
  • Inconsistent APIs that make automation difficult and expensive
  • IP address conflicts due to disconnected systems
  • Stale DNS records that introduce security vulnerabilities

Real-world example:
A major New York bank allowed cloud teams to use native DNS tools. One day, a simple typo in a DNS entry brought down the entire bank for four hours, costing them millions.


Infoblox’s Answer: An Integrated Platform

To address these pain points, Infoblox introduced the Infoblox Universal DDI™ Product Suite. This integrated platforms provides a centralized, automated, and cloud-managed way to run critical network services (DNS, DHCP, IPAM) across complex hybrid and multi-cloud environments.

Key Features:

  • Unified management layer
    Manage DNS across on-prem, branch, and cloud from a single interface.
  • Universal IPAM & asset visibility
    Real-time insights into IP usage and resource status.
  • Conflict detection & stale record resolution
    Automatically identify and resolve subnet overlaps and outdated DNS entries.
  • Built-in security
    Use DNS as a security control point to detect and block threats.

The platform supports physical, virtual, and cloud-based DNS servers, and integrates with automation tools like Terraform and Ansible. It also maintains backward compatibility via API replication, ensuring existing workflows stay intact.


Security Through DNS

One of the most compelling elements of Infoblox’s platform is how it uses DNS as a security layer.

Since nearly every internet communication starts with a DNS query, Infoblox can analyze DNS traffic patterns to:

  • Detect ransomware activity
  • Prevent data exfiltration
  • Block malicious domains in real time

By combining DNS logs with threat intelligence feeds, Infoblox transforms a foundational service into a proactive security shield.


The Future is Unified DDI

As enterprises deepen their multi-cloud investments, unified management and visibility across distributed infrastructure becomes invaluable. Infoblox’s Universal DDI™ Product Suite delivers this allowing organizations to manage DNS, DHCP, and IP address assignments consistently across data centers, cloud providers, and edge environments — all from a single interface.

While DNS, DHCP, and IPAM may seem behind-the-scenes, they are essential to:

  • Prevent outages
  • Accelerate cloud operations
  • Strengthen enterprise security

In a world where spreadsheets and siloed tools can bring down billion-dollar operations, Infoblox’s Universal DDI is something definitely worth checking out.

Pau for now…


Cloud Beat: Talking to Founder of CloudVelocity

January 6, 2014

With the New year I’m finally getting to a backlog of cool interviews I did last quarter.   The first is the last of the interviews I conducted at Venture Beat’s CloudBeat back in September with the CTO and Founder of CloudVelocity, Anand Iyengar.  CloudVelocity provides automated cloud migration and disaster recovery software.  Take a listen to what Anand has to say.

Some of the ground Anand covers:

  • What is CloudVelocity?
  • What areas does it focus on?  (Hint: test/dev, migration, disaster recovery)
  • How Anand and the other founders came up with the idea for CloudVelocity
  • What’s on the agenda as they move forward

Extra-credit reading

  • CloudVelocity: Launch apps to cloud with no change to code – Network World

Pau for now….


Talking to RightScale about “myCloud” and their work with Zynga

June 9, 2011

Earlier this week at CloudExpo, I talked to both Peder Ulander of Cloud.com and Rich Wolski of Eucalyptus about their involvement with RightScale‘s myCloud solution.  Yesterday I thought I would go straight to the source so I got a hold of RightScale’s VP of business development, Josh Fraser.

Besides the myCloud announcement, Josh also told me about their work with Zynga.  Zynga, as detailed in a recent InformationWeek article, has a hybrid cloud model.  Zynga uses the Amazon public cloud to test new games and then if the game is a hit and when its demand has leveled off, they pull it back into their Z-cloud private cloud.  RightScale manages across the two clouds.

Some of the ground Josh covers

  • What is RightScale
  • [0:26] Their myCloud announcement, widening their focus beyond public clouds to include private and hybrid.  Who they’re partnering with, what myCloud is composed of and their free version.
  • [2:38] Working with Zynga, managing across both Zynga’s private Z-cloud and the public cloud they use at Amazon.
  • [4:09] Working with Amdocs who is running enterprise grade workloads in a private cloud managed by RightScale.

Extra-credit reading

Pau for now…