I've seen people use both Cisco and Juniper abbreviations for interface
capacities in a hostname/reverse DNS. Even both, in the same network.

For those who are using mikrotik and want to do "proper" professional
reverse DNS for routed backbone interfaces, I would strongly encourage you
to use cisco or juniper abbreviations, because the NOCs of other ISPs can
understand it easily when troubleshooting.

Such as: fa (FastEthernet) for 100Mbps, gi (GigabitEthernet) for 1000, te
(TenGigabitEthernet). po (portchannel)

Or the Juniper equivalents...  ge (gigabit), xe (ten gig), ae (aggregated
ethernet, the junos version of a portchannel)

On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 11:30 AM, Paul Stewart <[email protected]> wrote:

> Kind of funny - I’m working on updated naming conventions with my team at
> $$$job ….
>
> In former job, for network devices it was:
>
> xe-10-0-0-1  (10G interface, slot/proc/port, vlan # if appropriate)
> dis1/core1/acc1 (distribution/core/access device #1)
> toronto3 (city location #)
> domain name
>
> So xe-10-0-0-1.core3.toronto5.domain.com for example
>
> In current process, we want to elaborate on our current design to include
> the role, the priority/critical nature of the port, where it connects etc
> this way we can build automation around those names in other systems (ie.
> network monitoring)
>
> On Dec 2, 2016, at 1:58 PM, Eric Kuhnke <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Properly done DNS systems can deal with much longer hostnames than that,
> but from a human readability and usability perspective, I would use hyphens
> to separate things a bit. And do it hierarchically rather than one flat
> hostname.domain.
>
> Look at the reverse DNS entries for the 1, 10, 40 and 100Gb interfaces on
> major ISP backbone routers in a traceroute for examples.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 10:49 AM, That One Guy /sarcasm <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> beating this horse again.
>> Is there any component of DNS that would be problematic with a 16
>> character name?
>>
>> Im going with VLAN ID, Port type and number, Device type and number,
>> location
>> all are 4 characters
>>
>> VL01GE04RT01CBN0.domain
>>
>> This is
>> VLAN ID 1 default (will remove letters if VLAN goes beyond 99 or 999)
>> Gigabit Ethernet
>> Port number 1
>> Router 1
>> at CBN
>>
>> it just looks really long and cumbersome and im afraid one day some
>> standard im unaware of will hammer me, like a proper ICANN API instruction
>> for some newly required function will kill everyone in the room with lazes
>> if the entry exceeds 9 characters
>>
>> --
>> If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team
>> as part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.
>>
>
>
>

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