Oops, sorry about that guys...I swear I did a find on the word routes and nothing came up. I'll have to go back and check...maybe even partial routes isn't a good idea.
Thanks! Morgan On Fri, May 2, 2014 at 2:50 PM, Doug McIntyre <[email protected]> wrote: > On Fri, May 02, 2014 at 02:12:48PM -0700, Morgan McLean wrote: > > Anybody know what sort of routes an EX4550 could take? Can't find much on > > their specs aside from 2gb memory. Would probably be in a VC setup. > > > > Considering taking partials or just using two defaults for a customer > that > > wants to announce ip space and have a couple providers -- they only push > > maybe 100mbit so no use in getting new gear. > > ? It is in the datasheet. > > http://www.juniper.net/us/en/local/pdf/datasheets/1000414-en.pdf > > * Maximum number of IPv4 unicast routes in hardware: 14,000* > * Maximum number of IPv4 multicast routes in hardware: 4,000 > * Maximum number of IPv6 unicast routes in hardware: 3,400* > * Maximum number of IPv6 multicast routes in hardware: 1,000 > * Uni-dimensional scale (shared table between v4 and v6) > > There isn't a software fallback path in a switch type device. You get > what you get. > > While you could potentially try to push it, things are almost > certainly going to fall down and break badly, so there isn't any point. > > Take defaults, as there is no partial that is going to fit. If you want > intelligent routing, you'll have to go to router hardware. > > _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp

