Yeah, as long as you're using the NSE-150 and are using features supported by the PXF such that it's not punting to the RP, the performance is really good.

--am

Brian Feeny wrote:

I have used the 7304 in the past and was happy with it. In fact I still have a 6-port DS3 module for a 7304 which I need to find a home for if anyone has the need.

The 7304 originally had its own specific modules that went into it. But they also sell carrier card for it so you can use standard PA's, as well as the SPA's which is nice. Overall footprint is rather nice, and I use to use those 6-port DS3 cards which allowed for hefty DS3 termination.

Brian

On May 15, 2009, at 12:44 PM, Aaron Millisor wrote:

We ran into a similar quandary and have about the same amount of traffic as your network. When purchasing gear a year ago we decided against 7200's with an NPE-G2 as insufficient for the load. Have you looked at the 7304?

The Cisco 7304 with an NSE-150 processing engine on it offloads a lot of the packet processing to dedicated hardware, and doesn't have TCAM limitations for routes. You can hold several full feeds and do the amount of traffic you're talking about without breaking a sweat.

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/routers/ps352/prod_bulletin0900aecd8060aac5.html

It is capable of supporting both legacy port adapters (from your Flexwan or 7200 routers) and SPA cards with the right add-in modules, which IIRC is only a few hundred dollars.

I'd be glad to answer any questions you have about our implementation.

--am

David Storandt wrote:
We're stuck in an engineering pickle, so some experience from this
crew would be useful in tie-breaking...
We operate a business-grade FTTx ISP with ~75 customers and 800Mbps of
Internet traffic, currently using 6509/Sup2s for core routing and port
aggregation. The MSFC2s are under stress from 3x full route feeds,
pared down to 85% to fit the TCAM tables. One system has a FlexWAN
with an OC3 card and it's crushing the CPU on the MSFC2. System tuning
(stable IOS and esp. disabling SPD) helped a lot but still doesn't
have the power to pull through. Hardware upgrades are needed...
We need true full routes and more CPU horsepower for crunching BGP
(+12 smaller peers + ISIS). OC3 interfaces are going to be mandatory,
one each at two locations. Oh yeah, we're still a larger startup
without endless pockets. Power, rack space, and SmartNet are not
concerns at any location (on-site cold spares). We may need an
upstream OC12 in the future but that's a ways out and not a concern
here.
Our engineering team has settled on three $20k/node options:
- Sup720-3BXLs with PS and fan upgrades
- Sup2s as switches + ISIS + statics and no BGP, push BGP edge routing
off to NPE-G2s across a 2-3Gbps port-channel
- Sup2s as switches + ISIS + statics and no BGP, push BGP edge routing
off to a 12008 with E3 engines across a 2-3Gbps port-channel.
Ideas and constructive opinions welcome, especially software and
stability-related.
Many thanks,
-Dave


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