Ok well there are a number those as well.  The 55A2 and newer 57C3 also support 
a number of 100G ports.

I quite don’t fully understand the “verbose architecture” comment.  I’ve used a 
lot of router operating systems, Junos since 1999, SROS, XR, XE, you name it, 
and there isn’t a whole lot of difference between them in terms of 
configuration complexity and operations.  Obviously some just don’t have the 
feature set others do, but if you aren’t using the features then it doesn’t 
really matter.

There are at this point tens of thousands of NCS 540s deployed in that types of 
role, so I’m a bit curious if there was something specific in the config or 
other operations that was a show stopper issue?

Thanks,
Phil

From: Mark Tinka <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, February 23, 2023 at 9:58 PM
To: Phil Bedard <[email protected]>, Brian Turnbow <[email protected]>, Gert 
Doering <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] Internet border router recommendations and experiences

On 2/23/23 21:34, Phil Bedard wrote:
The original question was around an Internet border router with 10G support.   
We have devices like the 55A2-MOD-SE which is similar to some other vendor 
devices (somewhat of a reference Broadcom design) which we’ve seen be very 
popular in border router deployments where you do not need a ton of bandwidth.

I think the OP came back to clarify that they need a 100Gbps-based router.




XRd runs in a container with very little memory, it doesn’t always have to be 
“fat”.   In fact some of the smaller 540 systems have very little RP memory.

Not so much the memory footprint of the OS, but really, it's rather verbose 
architecture for high-touch areas like the Metro, for which the NCS540 was to 
replace the ASR920.

Mark.
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