[c-nsp] ASR performance

2008-04-07 Thread MKS
Hi list

I was wondering if somebody has had the chance to play with the new
ASR? From the introduction of ESP it's suppose to terminate 8000
subscribers on ESP5 and 16000 on ESP10, (32000 on ESP20)?

Has somebody had the chance to actually test PPPoE termination
performance on this box? e.g. number_of_subscribers vs. throughput vs.
load  ?

Thanks in advance
MKS





http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/routers/ps9343/qa_c67-449980.html
Q. Where are the 5- and 10-Gbps ESPs positioned in a service
provider's broadband network?
A. The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router serves as a broadband aggregation
router that terminates 8,000 to 16,000 subscriber sessions; supports
features such as Cisco Session Border Controller (SBC) for voice over
IP (VoIP), video Telepresence services, and hardware-assisted Firewall
for security; and requires Gigabit Ethernet or 10 Gigabit Ethernet
uplink capability.

The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router is ideally suited for deployment as a
Point-to-Point Termination and Aggregation (PTA) device, L2TP Access
Concentrator (LAC), or L2TP Network Server (LNS).
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Re: [c-nsp] ASR performance

2008-04-07 Thread Brad Gould
As a p.s. to this post - does anyone know if the ASR has ISG on the 
roadmap?  I've found zero mention of ISG with regards to the ASR (which 
does limit its use in DSL aggregation).

Brad


MKS wrote:
 Hi list
 
 I was wondering if somebody has had the chance to play with the new
 ASR? From the introduction of ESP it's suppose to terminate 8000
 subscribers on ESP5 and 16000 on ESP10, (32000 on ESP20)?
 
 Has somebody had the chance to actually test PPPoE termination
 performance on this box? e.g. number_of_subscribers vs. throughput vs.
 load  ?
 
 Thanks in advance
 MKS
 
 
 
 
 
 http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/routers/ps9343/qa_c67-449980.html
 Q. Where are the 5- and 10-Gbps ESPs positioned in a service
 provider's broadband network?
 A. The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router serves as a broadband aggregation
 router that terminates 8,000 to 16,000 subscriber sessions; supports
 features such as Cisco Session Border Controller (SBC) for voice over
 IP (VoIP), video Telepresence services, and hardware-assisted Firewall
 for security; and requires Gigabit Ethernet or 10 Gigabit Ethernet
 uplink capability.
 
 The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router is ideally suited for deployment as a
 Point-to-Point Termination and Aggregation (PTA) device, L2TP Access
 Concentrator (LAC), or L2TP Network Server (LNS).
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-- 
Brad Gould, Network Engineer
Internode
Level 5, 150 Grenfell Street, Adelaide 5000
P: 08 8228 2999  F: 08 8235 6999
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; http://www.internode.on.net/
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Re: [c-nsp] ASR performance

2008-04-07 Thread Ben Steele
ISG and SBC both have embedded support on the ASR, look forward to  
seeing some test results :)

Ben

On 08/04/2008, at 9:23 AM, Brad Gould wrote:

 As a p.s. to this post - does anyone know if the ASR has ISG on the
 roadmap?  I've found zero mention of ISG with regards to the ASR  
 (which
 does limit its use in DSL aggregation).

 Brad


 MKS wrote:
 Hi list

 I was wondering if somebody has had the chance to play with the new
 ASR? From the introduction of ESP it's suppose to terminate 8000
 subscribers on ESP5 and 16000 on ESP10, (32000 on ESP20)?

 Has somebody had the chance to actually test PPPoE termination
 performance on this box? e.g. number_of_subscribers vs. throughput  
 vs.
 load  ?

 Thanks in advance
 MKS





 http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/routers/ps9343/qa_c67-449980.html
 Q. Where are the 5- and 10-Gbps ESPs positioned in a service
 provider's broadband network?
 A. The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router serves as a broadband aggregation
 router that terminates 8,000 to 16,000 subscriber sessions; supports
 features such as Cisco Session Border Controller (SBC) for voice over
 IP (VoIP), video Telepresence services, and hardware-assisted  
 Firewall
 for security; and requires Gigabit Ethernet or 10 Gigabit Ethernet
 uplink capability.

 The Cisco ASR 1000 Series Router is ideally suited for deployment  
 as a
 Point-to-Point Termination and Aggregation (PTA) device, L2TP Access
 Concentrator (LAC), or L2TP Network Server (LNS).
 ___
 cisco-nsp mailing list  cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
 https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
 archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/

 -- 
 Brad Gould, Network Engineer
 Internode
 Level 5, 150 Grenfell Street, Adelaide 5000
 P: 08 8228 2999  F: 08 8235 6999
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]; http://www.internode.on.net/
 ___
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 archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/

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