Hah, no not your client 🙂.  Their existing network is actually surprisingly 
stable, but it is bandwidth-constrained.  As well as the various other replies 
I've seen here and off-list (THANKS!), the only commercial product I've found 
so far that might have a hope of handling this is HPE/Aruba's Silverpeak line.  
We'll see what else comes out of the woodwork, though - if nothing else, it's a 
very interesting exercise!

Adam Thompson
Consultant, Infrastructure Services
[1593169877849]
100 - 135 Innovation Drive
Winnipeg, MB, R3T 6A8
(204) 977-6824 or 1-800-430-6404 (MB only)
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.merlin.mb.ca<http://www.merlin.mb.ca/>
________________________________
From: Fletcher Kittredge <[email protected]>
Sent: October 13, 2021 12:59
To: Adam Thompson <[email protected]>
Cc: nanog <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Increase bandwidth usage in partial-mesh network?


Hey! From the description it must be one of our clients!

Just beware if you go this route, a network that is probably already unstable 
and unreliable will become at least an order of magnitude worse. You can't fix 
ten lbs of stuff into a 4 lb stuff bag. The internet protocols do not tolerate 
congestion well.


On Wed, Oct 13, 2021 at 1:31 PM Adam Thompson 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Looking for recommendtions or suggestions...

I've got a downstream customer asking for help;  they have a private internal 
network that I've taken to calling the "partial-mesh network from hell": it's 
got two partially-overlapping radio networks, mixed with islands of isolated 
fiber connectivity.
Dynamic routing protocols (IS-IS, OSPF, EIGRP, etc.) generally will only select 
the _best_ path, they won't spread the load unless all paths are equal - and 
they are very unequal in this network, ECMP would likely fail horribly.
The network is becoming bandwidth-limited, so they're wanting to make use of 
all available paths, not just the single "best" path.  It's also remote and 
spread out, so adding new links or upgrading existing links is difficult and 
expensive.
Oh, and their routers are overdue for a refresh, so acquiring replacement h/w 
is now possible.

Has anyone come across any product or technology that can handle the 
multi-path-ness and the private-network-ness like a regular router, but also 
provides the intelligent per-flow path steering based on e.g. latency, like an 
SD-WAN device (and/or some firewalls)?

Here's hoping,
-Adam

Adam Thompson
Consultant, Infrastructure Services
[1593169877849]
100 - 135 Innovation Drive
Winnipeg, MB, R3T 6A8
(204) 977-6824 or 1-800-430-6404 (MB only)
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.merlin.mb.ca<http://www.merlin.mb.ca/>


--
Fletcher Kittredge
GWI
207-602-1134
www.gwi.net<http://www.gwi.net>

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