Introduction
For many years, evaluating an Application Delivery Controller (ADC) was relatively simple. Organizations focused primarily on throughput metrics: how much Layer 4 or Layer 7 traffic a platform could process. If an ADC delivered sufficient performance, it was considered enterprise-ready. However, application delivery is significantly more complex today. Modern applications span hybrid and multi-cloud environments, nearly all traffic is encrypted, APIs generate massive volumes of Layer 7 requests, and AI-driven workloads create unpredictable traffic patterns. As a result, ADCs have evolved far beyond traditional load balancers. They now serve as critical control points for application performance, security, scalability, and availability across increasingly distributed infrastructures. What was once a networking component has become an essential part of the application architecture itself.
Encryption, Performance, and the New Processing Challenge
One of the most significant shifts affecting application delivery infrastructure is the explosive growth of encrypted traffic. While encryption improves security, it also places tremendous computational demands on ADC platforms. Modern ADCs must continuously decrypt SSL/TLS traffic, perform Layer 7 inspection, enforce security policies, maintain millions of active sessions, and deliver a seamless user experience without introducing noticeable latency. This new reality requires far more than raw throughput. High-core-count processing architectures, optimized traffic pipelines, and substantial memory resources have become essential for maintaining application responsiveness under heavy workloads. The challenge for organizations is no longer simply selecting an ADC that can achieve high benchmark numbers. Instead, they must determine whether the platform can maintain consistent performance when encryption, application inspection, security enforcement, and traffic management services operate simultaneously under production conditions. Platforms such as the Alteon 10400 reflect this broader industry shift. Unlike most ADCs that compete on generic throughput claims, Alteon is engineered to keep SSL processing and Layer 7 decision-making moving in parallel, rather than forcing traffic through a single bottleneck. Radware’s joint architecture is designed to preserve performance under encrypted workloads, so organizations can sustain security inspection and application delivery at scale without the usual performance collapse that appears when SSL demand spikes. In addition, the availability of the “Protect” license enables organizations to seamlessly extend protection capabilities to the cloud, allowing the Alteon 10400 to leverage cloud-based security resources when needed. This hybrid approach ensures that even during large-scale attacks or unexpected traffic surges, protection is not limited by on-premise capacity, but instead benefits from elastic cloud resources to maintain both performance and security.
Modern Connectivity Demands a New Interface Architecture
As application architectures evolve, data centers face a growing mismatch between server connectivity requirements and network aggregation speeds. Most application servers, security tools, and microservices platforms operate most efficiently with 25GbE connectivity, while aggregation layers and data center fabrics increasingly rely on 100GbE links to eliminate bottlenecks. The result is a need for ADC platforms that can efficiently bridge both worlds without introducing complexity or requiring additional infrastructure. Organizations are looking for solutions that provide high-density connectivity while maintaining flexibility to scale as traffic demands increase. This shift has increased the importance of interface design as a strategic consideration rather than a simple hardware specification. ADC platforms must support large-scale server connectivity while integrating efficiently into high-speed network fabrics. The Alteon 10400 follows this approach through a combination of 25GbE and 100GbE interfaces, but the practical advantage is that Radware can place application-facing services and fabric-facing aggregation on a platform built to avoid oversubscribing the SSL and L7 processing path. In other words, the value is not only the port mix, but the architecture that keeps interface speed from outrunning application processing.
Scaling Multi-Tenant Application Delivery Without Sacrificing Performance
Modern enterprises rarely operate a single application. Instead, they support dozens or even hundreds of applications, services, environments, and customers, each with unique security policies, performance requirements, and traffic patterns. Traditional approaches that dedicate hardware appliances to individual applications quickly become expensive, inefficient, and difficult to manage. Virtualization has emerged as a powerful solution, allowing multiple virtual ADCs (vADCs) to run on a single platform. However, successful consolidation requires substantial processing resources to ensure that one application or tenant cannot negatively impact another during traffic spikes, SSL-intensive workloads, or Layer 7 inspection processes. As a result, the ability to maintain predictable performance in multi-tenant environments has become one of the most important characteristics of a high-end ADC. Platforms such as the Alteon 10400 stand out when they can enforce workload separation through scheduling and resource isolation, so one tenant’s SSL bursts or policy-heavy traffic does not steal capacity from another. That kind of isolation is the difference between a platform that merely hosts multiple vADCs and one that actually preserves predictable behavior under contention. Radware’s architecture is intended to deliver tenant-level bandwidth, CPS, SSL, and isolation guarantees in multi-tenant scenarios, which is a materially stronger claim than simply saying the box “supports” virtualization.
Conclusion
Organizations investing in ADC infrastructure today are no longer purchasing a simple networking appliance. They are making strategic architectural decisions that will influence application performance, security, scalability, and operational efficiency for years to come. As application environments continue to grow more distributed, encrypted, and dynamic, ADC platforms must deliver far more than throughput alone. Success increasingly depends on the ability to provide consistent performance under heavy SSL workloads, support modern connectivity requirements, and efficiently scale across multi-tenant environments. In this new era of application delivery, the true value of a high-end ADC as Alteon 10400 lies not only in speed but in resilience, scalability, and the ability to maintain predictable performance as application demands continue to grow.