The boxes do alright at low load levels. They do not have an asic tech like the 
F5s so choke on large amounts of traffic. Management is a bit immature and you 
will find yourself having to use the CLI and the Gui to accomplish most 
advanced tasks.

When we put them head to head A10 AX3200 vs F5 6400 ltm (note: 6400 was what we 
were looking to replace)

Test:
1000 concurrent users from Gomez's Networks Loadtesting platform hitting as 
fast as the requests would close, going through our standard vip config on the 
f5, and the A10 engineering teams 3 best efforts  to beat that config that 
balanced between two Identical Dell 1950 servers serving  a php page that 
responded with a random number (to avoid caching). The 6400 we used was in 
production at the time, and was older so we were expecting to get blown away, 
see the results here:

F5 - Peaked 160k completed transactions a minute sustained for 10 minutes, 0 
errors, 112ms average transaction response time
A10 - Held 60k completed transactions a minute sustained for 10 minutes, 0 
errors, 360ms average transaction response time

If anyone is interested in the graphs I think I can still pull them out of 
gomez. Though notable that this was all done a year ago, so things might be 
different now.

~J


-----Original Message-----
From: Welch, Bryan [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 8:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Experiences with A10 AX series Load Balancers?

Does anyone have any experiences good/bad/indifferent with this company and 
their products?  They claim 2x the performance at ½ the cost and am a bit leery 
as you can imagine.

We are looking to replace our aging F5 BigIP LTM's and will be evaluating these 
along with the Netscaler and new generation F5 boxes.




Regards,

Bryan


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