Cheapest is ipsec and there's plenty of options there. There's cheaper companies that do macsec support. Arista is the other option on major vendor options but there's a bunch of yumcha ones you can get if you don't mind some foreign government's having your keys :-p
On Wed, 8 Apr 2020, 5:30 pm Alex Samad, <a...@samad.com.au> wrote: > Quick check of my network vendor , the equipment that has it is out of > price range :( > > A > > On Wed, 8 Apr 2020 at 15:43, Phillip Grasso <phillip.gra...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> macsec is your best bet. Lots of vendors support it and is reasonably >> mature. better if you pick one that allows dual keys, no downtime with >> rotating keys or certs. Watch out bunch of platforms will HALVE or worse >> the performance of your gear by turning on macsec. e.g. cisco rosco >> >> On Tue, 7 Apr 2020 at 10:36, Alex Samad <a...@samad.com.au> wrote: >> >>> Hi >>> >>> I find myself in the situation that I need to look at purchasing some DC >>> to DC. But I find I am not that well informed about whats available. what >>> people are doing as best practise. >>> >>> Quick google doesn't fill me with lots of options. >>> >>> >>> So packetlight is the current recommended vendor (their 2000 option). >>> Just looking to see whats to judge next to it >>> >>> Alex >>> _______________________________________________ >>> AusNOG mailing list >>> AusNOG@lists.ausnog.net >>> http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog >>> >>
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