I would like recommendations on the following software/hardware elements 
required to run an access network. Assume you are building a greenfield network 
using a combination of access technologies such as DSL, GPON, AE, and WiFi.

IPAM / DDI Solution: Needs full support for IPv6, Customer VLANs, RFC 1918, 
VRF, Overlapping Address Space, integration with DNS, DNSSEC, Integration with 
DHCP, and integration with ARIN. Looks like there are both open source and 
commercial solutions available according to old NANOG posts. Which cater to 
service providers? Who are the leaders in this space? Does anyone have 
experience with dealing with multiple vendors?

Subscriber Management/BRAS/BNG: Redback was the big player back in the day, but 
I believe they are no longer. Juniper has their Subscriber Management feature 
pack on their MX routers, and Cisco has their Broadband Network Gateway on 
their ASR routers. Besides these two vendors I am not sure what other solutions 
are out there. I believe both of these solutions communicate upstream to 
external radius servers and DHCP servers. Is anyone using Subscriber 
Management, or is there another way of doing it?

CMDB: A centralized database to keep track of all assets within the network 
would be nice. I would assume this would need to tie in with the IPAM solution 
and billing systems.

I would also like to hear thoughts on the per customer VLAN model. Most of the 
whitepapers recommend a per customer VLAN for greenfield networks, but that 
seems like a management and documentation nightmare. The systems described 
above must be able to manage and maintain per customer VLANs in an automated 
fashion for this approach to work and scale.

If you had your choice starting from the ground up how would you deploy an 
access network today?

Reply via email to