[188817] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: 10G-capable customer router recommendations?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Michael Brown)
Sat Apr 16 10:11:24 2016
X-Original-To: nanog@nanog.org
Date: Sat, 16 Apr 2016 10:11:18 -0400
From: Michael Brown <michael@supermathie.net>
In-Reply-To: <20160416002456.GA22567@sizone.org>
To: Ken Chase <math@sizone.org>, NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces@nanog.org
"=E2=80=8E2 NIC module slots supporting 1/10/40G/Fiber/Copper/Bypass"
Get one of those with a server class processor and and it's a server that l=
ooks like a spiffy network appliance.=C2=A0
=E2=80=8E
=E2=80=8EVery general purpose if general purpose is what you need, quagga /=
openbgpd on =E2=80=8Ebsd, yes. And you can bake additional services onto i=
t.
M.
=C2=A0 Original Message =C2=A0
From: Ken Chase
Sent: Friday, April 15, 2016 20:26
To: NANOG
Subject: Re: 10G-capable customer router recommendations?
Does that lanner even do SFP+? Dont see it listed in the specs. Looks like =
4210 has
2x SFP+, though their 'performance' level products look more in line with '=
useful'.
http://www.lannerinc.com/products/x86-network-appliances/x86-rackmount-appl=
iances/fw-8877
As for the microtics, wonky user interface, so very unciscolike (i guess th=
ats
my problem - but the GUI thing feels like a toy), but for their midrange mo=
dels I found
their bgp convergence times pretty poor on their low end cpus...
What do you put on the lanner? OpenBGPd? Quagga? Also looking for a 10G sol=
ution
here, low power (than a full ASR stack..) is my goal for 5-6 full bgp feeds.
/kc
On Fri, Apr 15, 2016 at 07:45:39PM -0400, Michael Brown said:
>Not *exactly* what you're asking for, but a Lanner appliance (???http://ww=
w.lannerinc.com/products/network-appliances/x86-rackmount-network-appliance=
s/nca-5210) might suit your needs.
>
>M.
>
>?? Original Message ??
>From: David Sotnick
>Sent: Friday, April 15, 2016 16:19
>To: NANOG
>Subject: 10G-capable customer router recommendations?
>
>Hello masters of the Internet,
>
>I was recently asked to set up networking at a VIP's home where he has
>Comcast "Gigabit Pro" service, which is delivered on a 10G-SR MM port on a
>Comcast-supplied Juniper ACX-2100 router.
>
>Which customer router would you suggest for such a setup? It needs to do
>IPv4 NAT, DHCP, IPv4+IPv6 routing and have a decent L4 firewall (that also
>supports IPv6).
>
>The customer pays for "2Gb" service (Comcast caps this at 2G+10% =3D 2.2Gb=
ps)
>and would like to get what he pays for (*cough*) by having the ability to
>stream two 1Gbps streams (or at least achieve > 1.0Gbps).
>
>I'm tempted to get another ACX-2100 and do a 4x1Gb LACP port-channel to the
>customer switch, or replace the AV-integrator-installed Cisco SG300-52P
>(Cisco switch with e.g. an EX-3300 with 10Gb uplinks).
>
>Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
>
>-Dave
Ken Chase - math@sizone.org=20