Hello,

We bought one and regret it mightily every single day.

Ours specifically had bad memory in it, it took a year before they/we figured 
that out, lost our SNT over that year while it was acting insane [and we 
couldn't deploy it] and then even after they RMA'd the router because it was 
faulty the entire time we owned it we were provided an insane quote to renew 
our SNT. Had it 15 months now, it's routed exactly zero packets.

It's basically a 8 port 100GE router, all we wanted to do was configure it for 
3x100GE +10x10GE per 'slice' and that was impossible, instead they advised us 
that if we want 6x100GE ports we should configure the slices asymmetrically 
[i.e. one slice 4x100GE and the other slice 2x100GE+10x10g+10x10g] but that of 
course reduces redundancy if you planned on using port channels across the 
slices [assuming that the slices fail independently of one another which wasn't 
our case with the bad memory as all of the ports went down at the same time 
even though we were advised that the two slices were independent by TAC].

If I had it to do all over again I probably would've just purchased two Arista 
30x100GE switches [which with the right model can also do full tables] for the 
same price as one 9902.

If I couldn't do that I would probably just get whatever the smallest ASR99 is 
with 2x4 port 100GE line cards in it and just be done with it.

Thanks,
-Drew

-----Original Message-----
From: cisco-nsp <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Shawn L via 
cisco-nsp
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2024 11:57 AM
To: Cisco Network Service Providers <[email protected]>
Subject: [c-nsp] Thoughts on the ASR9902?

We're in the process of looking for another small (form-factor) router that 
will be able to handle multiple full BGP tables and has some 100G interfaces on 
it.  We're currently using an ASR9901, which is working fine, but Cisco in 
their infinite wisdom has just put that on the end-of-sale list.

On our last call, they proposed the 9902 as a reasonable replacement for the 
9901.  On paper it looks ok -- typical 'new' Cisco "you can use this port, or 
those 2 ports, but not both", etc.  The other thing that I don't really like is 
that it can have 2 route processors.  But, they're not interconnected in the 
back plane.  So if you put both processors in, you basically have 2 routers in 
one chassis, each with their own sets of ports.  Unfortunately, there's not a 
lot of other options in the 9k range that aren't large-scale chassis routers.

It sounds like it's a fairly new platform, but wondering if anyone has any 
hands-on experience with them yet.

Thanks

Shawn
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