Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-18 Thread Kinkie
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 9:40 PM, Bulger, Tim tim_bul...@polk.com wrote:
 If you use stackable switches, you can stack across cabinets (up to 3 with 1 
 meter Cisco 3750 Stackwise), and uplink on the ends.  It's a pretty solid 
 layout if you plan your port needs properly based on NIC density and cabinet 
 size, plus you can cable cleanly to an adjacent cabinet's switch if necessary.



Juniper claims their switches can do clustering using ethernet
cabling, yet a cluster behaves as a single-system-image
configuration-wise. Should allow for very flexible cabling and
operations-wise for TOR switches. I have never tried it however.

  /Kinkie



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-18 Thread Eugeniu Patrascu
On Wed, Nov 18, 2009 at 4:04 PM, Kinkie gkin...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 9:40 PM, Bulger, Tim tim_bul...@polk.com wrote:
 If you use stackable switches, you can stack across cabinets (up to 3 with 1 
 meter Cisco 3750 Stackwise), and uplink on the ends.  It's a pretty solid 
 layout if you plan your port needs properly based on NIC density and cabinet 
 size, plus you can cable cleanly to an adjacent cabinet's switch if 
 necessary.



 Juniper claims their switches can do clustering using ethernet
 cabling, yet a cluster behaves as a single-system-image
 configuration-wise. Should allow for very flexible cabling and
 operations-wise for TOR switches. I have never tried it however.


The Ex4200 can be stacked by the ethernet expansion ports, either 4 x
1G or 2 x 10G.
And yes, it behaves as single switch with multiple line cards.



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-15 Thread gordon b slater
On Fri, 2009-11-13 at 09:44 +0100, Tore Anderson wrote:
 * Jonathan Lassoff
 
  Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
  LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
  IP?
 
 FCoE comes to mind.
 

and in a similar vein, ATAoE ; either Coraid stuff  or the the free
one in the Linux kernel. Its heavily used in some shops that use virtual
farms with SANS as it's cheap/free and works over existing hardware but
only at layer 2.

I even run it at home (!) - and it's a surprisingly easy way to have a
shelf of storage hanging off the back of a server, with 4GB of cache for
each set of 4 disks per box. Stand too close can feel the wind from it,
especially if RAIDed.

Depends if there's much call for VM-ing in your shop in the future?

Gord
--



smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature


Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-15 Thread Simon Leinen
Tore Anderson writes:
 * Jonathan Lassoff
 Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
 LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
 IP?

 FCoE comes to mind.

Doesn't FCoE need even more than that, i.e. lossless Ethernet with
end-to-end flow control, such as IEEE DCB? As far as I understand,
traditional switched Ethernets don't fit the bill anyway.

On the other hand iSCSI should be fine with routed IP paths; though
Malte's mail suggests that there are (broken?) implementations that aren't.
-- 
Simon.



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Tore Anderson
* Jonathan Lassoff

 Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
 LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
 IP?

FCoE comes to mind.

-- 
Tore Anderson
Redpill Linpro AS - http://www.redpill-linpro.com/
Tel: +47 21 54 41 27



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Matthew Walster
2009/11/12 David Coulson da...@davidcoulson.net

 You could route /32s within your L3 environment, or maybe even leverage
 something like VPLS - Not sure of any TOR-level switches that MPLS
 pseudowire a port into a VPLS cloud though.


Just to let you know - the Juniper EX4200 series only support a single label
stack, and RSVP not LDP - plus they have a restricted BGP table size, so
VPLS is out of the question.

Matthew Walster


Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Randy Bush
i have seen no mention of arista as a tos switch/router, yet folk tell
me it is one of the hottest on the block today.  is there anyone who is
actuallly using it who would care to report?

randy



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Stefan
Good point about Arista - Doug Gourlay, of [ex-]Cisco fame, is probably the
person to ask all possible questions about those solutions.

Cisco UCS is missing, also - looking at the Nexus deployment as ToR solution
(2K + 5K, even 1KV, considering the needs for virtualization, also) with all
benefits of both traditional ToR and E/MoR will definitely shed some light
in the debate on whether L3 in ToR makes any sense at all (e..g how would
you VMotion across racks?!? - how you you sync SANs across L3 in the DC
(tunnel?!?), etc.).

Here are some interesting articles associated with technologies in new DC
designs, for example, allowing some rethinking of the L3 question:

http://www.internetworkexpert.org/ - search for ToR and VMotion articles
(actually poke arond the whole blog - it is very good)
http://blogstu.wordpress.com/2009/10/05/fcoe-ecosystem/ (start from 1, of
course) ...etc.

***Stefan


On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 7:33 AM, Randy Bush ra...@psg.com wrote:

 i have seen no mention of arista as a tos switch/router, yet folk tell
 me it is one of the hottest on the block today.  is there anyone who is
 actuallly using it who would care to report?

 randy




Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread rodrick brown
I've been using Arista's 7124S in a ToR deployment for a new build out  
for a high frequency trading client I've been engaged with. For the  
aggregation layer I went with Cisco 4900m's and have had much success  
with this deployment especially with the Arista's.


Sent from my iPhone 3GS.

On Nov 13, 2009, at 8:33 AM, Randy Bush ra...@psg.com wrote:


i have seen no mention of arista as a tos switch/router, yet folk tell
me it is one of the hottest on the block today.  is there anyone who  
is

actuallly using it who would care to report?

randy





Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Joe Loiacono
From a colleague here at NASA (high-performance computing area):

We are currently using our three Arista switches as
an extremely economical way to get a 10G non-blocking
testbed for our various test areas.  We have every
intention of looking at them as an option for
their routing capabilities, but have been buried
with setup and testing of our testbed equipment and
getting ready for Super Computing 2009.  They seem
to have a number of very promising possibilities and
have so far proven to be very capable switches.

Paul Lang

Joe



From:
Randy Bush ra...@psg.com
To:
Matthew Walster matt...@walster.org
Cc:
nanog list nanog@nanog.org
Date:
11/13/2009 08:34 AM
Subject:
Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR



i have seen no mention of arista as a tos switch/router, yet folk tell
me it is one of the hottest on the block today.  is there anyone who is
actuallly using it who would care to report?

randy





Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Cord MacLeod

On Nov 13, 2009, at 4:14 AM, Matthew Walster wrote:


2009/11/12 David Coulson da...@davidcoulson.net

You could route /32s within your L3 environment, or maybe even  
leverage

something like VPLS - Not sure of any TOR-level switches that MPLS
pseudowire a port into a VPLS cloud though.



Just to let you know - the Juniper EX4200 series only support a  
single label
stack, and RSVP not LDP - plus they have a restricted BGP table  
size, so

VPLS is out of the question.


If you wanted something to do this, it's called an MX series.  The ex  
is a switch... l3, but still a switch.




Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-13 Thread Shane Ronan
Disagree, the EX is a very capable L3 router for LANs.


On Nov 13, 2009, at 1:17 PM, Cord MacLeod wrote:

 On Nov 13, 2009, at 4:14 AM, Matthew Walster wrote:
 
 2009/11/12 David Coulson da...@davidcoulson.net
 
 You could route /32s within your L3 environment, or maybe even leverage
 something like VPLS - Not sure of any TOR-level switches that MPLS
 pseudowire a port into a VPLS cloud though.
 
 
 Just to let you know - the Juniper EX4200 series only support a single label
 stack, and RSVP not LDP - plus they have a restricted BGP table size, so
 VPLS is out of the question.
 
 If you wanted something to do this, it's called an MX series.  The ex is a 
 switch... l3, but still a switch.
 




Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Raj Singh
Guys,

I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack switches and 
what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer 3 to top of  rack do 
you guys have any links to published white papers on it?

Thanks,
Raj Singh




RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Paul Stewart
We are heading towards that type of deployment beginning next year with
Juniper EX4200 switches in a redundant configuration.  This will be pure
Layer2 in nature on the switches and they will uplink to Juniper
M10i's for layer3... the power savings, space savings etc over
traditional Cisco 6500 chassis (plus all the cabling between cabinets
which is in our case a nightmare) made this a pretty easy choice... and
price too..;)

Somewhere on Juniper's website in the product info section they have
deployment whitepapers on this kind of stuff if that's of interest

Hope this helps..

Paul


-Original Message-
From: Raj Singh [mailto:raj.si...@demandmedia.com]
Sent: November-12-09 2:49 PM
To: 'nanog@nanog.org'
Subject: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

Guys,

I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack switches
and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer 3 to top of
rack do you guys have any links to published white papers on it?

Thanks,
Raj Singh








The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which 
it is addressed and contains confidential and/or privileged material. If you 
received this in error, please contact the sender immediately and then destroy 
this transmission, including all attachments, without copying, distributing or 
disclosing same. Thank you.



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Steve Feldman


On Nov 12, 2009, at 2:48 PM, Raj Singh wrote:


Guys,

I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack  
switches and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing  
layer 3 to top of  rack do you guys have any links to published  
white papers on it?


Dani Roisman gave an excellent talk on this subject at NANOG 46 in  
Philadelpha:


  
http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog46/abstracts.php?pt=MTQwOCZuYW5vZzQ2nm=nanog46

Steve




RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Raj Singh
We are actually looking at going Layer 3 all the way to the top of rack and 
make each rack its own /24. This provides us flexibility when doing maintenance 
(spanning-tree). Also, troubleshooting during outages is much easier by using 
common tools like ping and trace routes.

I want to make sure this is something other people are doing out there and want 
to know if anyone ran into any issues with this setup.


Thanks,
Raj Singh   |Director Network Engineering
_
Demand Media | eNom, Inc.
Direct: 425.974.4679
15801 NE 24th St.
Bellevue, WA 98008
raj.si...@demandmedia.com


-Original Message-
From: Paul Stewart [mailto:pstew...@nexicomgroup.net] 
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 11:53 AM
To: Raj Singh; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

We are heading towards that type of deployment beginning next year with
Juniper EX4200 switches in a redundant configuration.  This will be pure
Layer2 in nature on the switches and they will uplink to Juniper
M10i's for layer3... the power savings, space savings etc over
traditional Cisco 6500 chassis (plus all the cabling between cabinets
which is in our case a nightmare) made this a pretty easy choice... and
price too..;)

Somewhere on Juniper's website in the product info section they have
deployment whitepapers on this kind of stuff if that's of interest

Hope this helps..

Paul


-Original Message-
From: Raj Singh [mailto:raj.si...@demandmedia.com] 
Sent: November-12-09 2:49 PM
To: 'nanog@nanog.org'
Subject: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

Guys,

I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack switches
and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer 3 to top of
rack do you guys have any links to published white papers on it?

Thanks,
Raj Singh




 



The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which 
it is addressed and contains confidential and/or privileged material. If you 
received this in error, please contact the sender immediately and then destroy 
this transmission, including all attachments, without copying, distributing or 
disclosing same. Thank you.



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Seth Mattinen
Steve Feldman wrote:
 
 On Nov 12, 2009, at 2:48 PM, Raj Singh wrote:
 
 Guys,

 I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack
 switches and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer
 3 to top of  rack do you guys have any links to published white papers
 on it?
 
 Dani Roisman gave an excellent talk on this subject at NANOG 46 in
 Philadelpha:
 
  
 http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog46/abstracts.php?pt=MTQwOCZuYW5vZzQ2nm=nanog46
 


I'd always wondered how you make a subnet available across racks with L3
rack switching. It seems that you don't.

~Seth



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Brandon Ewing
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 12:19:36PM -0800, Seth Mattinen wrote:
 
 I'd always wondered how you make a subnet available across racks with L3
 rack switching. It seems that you don't.
 
 ~Seth

It's possible, with prior planning.  You can have the uplinks be layer 2
trunks, with a layer 3 SVI in the trunk acting as your actual routed uplink.

Requires much planning in advance regarding what vlans are trunked where,
etc.  Allows one to do layer 3 termination at top of rack for single
servers, but offer vlans that span multiple layer 3 switches with HSRP at
distribution as an option for systems/services that require a common
broadcast domain.

-- 
Brandon Ewing(nicot...@warningg.com)


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RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Bulger, Tim
If you use stackable switches, you can stack across cabinets (up to 3 with 1 
meter Cisco 3750 Stackwise), and uplink on the ends.  It's a pretty solid 
layout if you plan your port needs properly based on NIC density and cabinet 
size, plus you can cable cleanly to an adjacent cabinet's switch if necessary.

Slightly off-topic.. Consider offloading 100Mb connections like PDUs, DRAC/iLO, 
etc. to lower cost switches to get the most out of your premium ports.

-Tim

-Original Message-
From: Seth Mattinen [mailto:se...@rollernet.us] 
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 3:20 PM
To: 'nanog@nanog.org'
Subject: Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

Steve Feldman wrote:
 
 On Nov 12, 2009, at 2:48 PM, Raj Singh wrote:
 
 Guys,

 I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack
 switches and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer
 3 to top of  rack do you guys have any links to published white papers
 on it?
 
 Dani Roisman gave an excellent talk on this subject at NANOG 46 in
 Philadelpha:
 
  
 http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog46/abstracts.php?pt=MTQwOCZuYW5vZzQ2nm=nanog46
 


I'd always wondered how you make a subnet available across racks with L3
rack switching. It seems that you don't.

~Seth



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Brandon Galbraith
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 2:40 PM, Bulger, Tim tim_bul...@polk.com wrote:

 If you use stackable switches, you can stack across cabinets (up to 3 with
 1 meter Cisco 3750 Stackwise), and uplink on the ends.  It's a pretty solid
 layout if you plan your port needs properly based on NIC density and cabinet
 size, plus you can cable cleanly to an adjacent cabinet's switch if
 necessary.

 Slightly off-topic.. Consider offloading 100Mb connections like PDUs,
 DRAC/iLO, etc. to lower cost switches to get the most out of your premium
 ports.


Agreed. We use Netgear gigabit unmanaged switches for what Tim suggests to
save the higher-cost-per-port switchports for server gear.

-brandon



 -Tim

 -Original Message-
 From: Seth Mattinen [mailto:se...@rollernet.us]
 Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 3:20 PM
 To: 'nanog@nanog.org'
 Subject: Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

 Steve Feldman wrote:
 
  On Nov 12, 2009, at 2:48 PM, Raj Singh wrote:
 
  Guys,
 
  I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack
  switches and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer
  3 to top of  rack do you guys have any links to published white papers
  on it?
 
  Dani Roisman gave an excellent talk on this subject at NANOG 46 in
  Philadelpha:
 
 
 
 http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog46/abstracts.php?pt=MTQwOCZuYW5vZzQ2nm=nanog46
 


 I'd always wondered how you make a subnet available across racks with L3
 rack switching. It seems that you don't.

 ~Seth




-- 
Brandon Galbraith
Mobile: 630.400.6992
FNAL: 630.840.2141


Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Nick Hilliard

On 12/11/2009 20:40, Bulger, Tim wrote:

Slightly off-topic.. Consider offloading 100Mb connections like PDUs,
DRAC/iLO, etc. to lower cost switches to get the most out of your
premium ports.


Not just that, you can also use lower cost switches to move your management 
fully out-of-band with respect to your production traffic.  This can work 
well in times of catastrophe.


Nick



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread David Coulson

Seth Mattinen wrote:

I'd always wondered how you make a subnet available across racks with L3
rack switching. It seems that you don't.
You could route /32s within your L3 environment, or maybe even leverage 
something like VPLS - Not sure of any TOR-level switches that MPLS 
pseudowire a port into a VPLS cloud though.


Kinda makes L3 and spanning tree sound like a great option, doesn't it?



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Malte von dem Hagen
Hej,

Am 12.11.2009 21:04 Uhr schrieb Raj Singh:
 We are actually looking at going Layer 3 all the way to the top of rack and
 make each rack its own /24.

what a waste of IPs and unnecessary loss of flexibility!

 This provides us flexibility when doing maintenance (spanning-tree).

If you use a simple setup for aggregation, you do not need xSTP. Even including
redundancy, RTG (big C: flex-link) will be sufficient. Spanning the L2 over more
than one rack is dirty when you do L3 on the TORs, because you need to build a
Virtual Chassis or VPLS tunnels (not sure if EX4200 does that as of today).

 Also, troubleshooting during outages is much easier by using
 common tools like ping and trace routes.

Oh, c'mon. Yes, Layer 2 is a wild jungle compared to clean routing, but tracing
isn't that magic there. You have LLDP, mac-address-tables, arp-tables...

 I want to make sure this is something other people are doing out there and
 want to know if anyone ran into any issues with this setup.

From the design POV, it is a clean and nice concept to do L3 on the
TOR-switches, but in real life, it's not working very well. Everytime I played
with such, with every vendor I've seen, there is just always the same 
conclusion:

Let routers route and let switches switch.

Switches which are supposed to do routing never scale, provide almost always
immature implementations of common L3 features and run into capacity problems
just too fast (too small tables for firewall roules, route entries, no full IPv6
capabilities, sometimes expensive licenses needed for stuff like IS-IS...).

I understand the wish to keep broadcast domains small and network paths
deterministic and clean, but the switches you can buy today for
not-too-much-money aren't ready yet.

So my hint is: Look at model #4 from the mentioned NANOG presentation.

My 2 Euro-Cents,

.m



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Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread David Coulson

Raj Singh wrote:
We are actually looking at going Layer 3 all the way to the top of rack and make each rack its own /24. This provides us flexibility when doing maintenance (spanning-tree). Also, troubleshooting during outages is much easier by using common tools like ping and trace routes. 
I'm confused where STP fits into this. If you're doing /24s to each 
switch, why even bring STP into the picture? Do /31s to each TOR switch 
and use OSPF or ISIS. I don't know too many people who have not had an 
awful experience with STP at some point.




Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Jonathan Lassoff
Excerpts from David Coulson's message of Thu Nov 12 13:07:35 -0800 2009:
 You could route /32s within your L3 environment, or maybe even leverage 
 something like VPLS - Not sure of any TOR-level switches that MPLS 
 pseudowire a port into a VPLS cloud though.

I was recently looking into this (top-of-rack VPLS PE box). Doesn't seem
to be any obvious options, though the new Juniper MX80 sounds like it
can do this.  It's 2 RU, and looks like it can take a DPC card or comes
in a fixed 48-port GigE variety.

I like the idea of doing IP routing to a top-of-rack or edge device, but
have found others to be skeptical.

Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
IP?

--j



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread David Coulson

Jonathan Lassoff wrote:

I was recently looking into this (top-of-rack VPLS PE box). Doesn't seem
to be any obvious options, though the new Juniper MX80 sounds like it
can do this.  It's 2 RU, and looks like it can take a DPC card or comes
in a fixed 48-port GigE variety.
  
The MX-series are pretty nice. That should be able to do VPLS PE, 
however I've never tried it - MX240 did it pretty well last time I 
tried. I've no clue how the cost of that switch compares to a cisco 4900 
or something (not that a 4900 is anything special - L3 is all in software).

Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
IP?
  
The biggest hurdle we hit when trying to do TOR L3 (Cisco 4948s w/ /24s 
routed to each one) was devices that either required multiple physical 
Ethernet connections that we typically use LACP with, or any 
environments that do IP takeover for redundancy. Both are obviously 
easily worked around if you run an IGP on your servers, but that was 
just insanely complex for our environment. It's hard to convince people 
that a HP-UX box needs to work like a router now.


So now we have a datacenter full of 4948s doing pure L2 and spanning 
tree... What a waste :-)





Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Malte von dem Hagen
Hi,

Am 12.11.2009 22:29 Uhr schrieb Jonathan Lassoff:
 Are there any applications that absolutely *have* to sit on the same
 LAN/broadcast domain and can't be configured to use unicast or multicast
 IP?

yes. There are at least some implementations of iSCSI and the accompanying
management services (e.g., for redundancy) that do not work well via routed
connections. Generally, storage services may be difficult being routed.

Further, some aspects of VMware (clusters) including management need L2
connectivity, for example when you want to dynamically shift VMs from one
hardware node to another transparently and so on and so forth.

The same applies to several load balancing and/or redundancy/failover 
mechanisms.

rgds,

.m



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RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread George Bonser
I believe the issue will become a moot point in the next 12 months when
vendors begin to ship switches with TRILL.

TRILL is basically a layer 2 routing protocol that will replace spanning
tree.  It will allow you to connect several uplinks, utilize all the
bandwidth of the uplinks, prevent loops, and find the best path to the
destination through the switch fabric.  Think of it like OSPF for layer
2.

It should be shipping within the next 6 to 9 months.



-Original Message-
From: Raj Singh [mailto:raj.si...@demandmedia.com] 
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 11:49 AM
To: 'nanog@nanog.org'
Subject: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

Guys,

I am wondering how many of you are doing layer 3 to top of rack switches
and what the pros and cons are. Also, if you are doing layer 3 to top of
rack do you guys have any links to published white papers on it?

Thanks,
Raj Singh





RE: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread George Bonser
I believe TRILL will render this discussion moot.  It should be shipping
on gear from various vendors within the next year.



-Original Message-
From: Malte von dem Hagen [mailto:m...@hosteurope.de] 
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 1:09 PM
To: Raj Singh
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

Hej,

Am 12.11.2009 21:04 Uhr schrieb Raj Singh:
 We are actually looking at going Layer 3 all the way to the top of 
 rack and make each rack its own /24.

what a waste of IPs and unnecessary loss of flexibility!





Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Łukasz Bromirski

On 2009-11-12 22:37, David Coulson wrote:


The MX-series are pretty nice. That should be able to do VPLS PE,
however I've never tried it - MX240 did it pretty well last time I
tried. I've no clue how the cost of that switch compares to a cisco 4900
or something (not that a 4900 is anything special - L3 is all in software).


For both 4948/4948-10GE and 4900M L3 is in hardware. For
4948/4948-10GE IPv6 is in software, for 4900M it's in hardware.

--
Everything will be okay in the end. |  Łukasz Bromirski
 If it's not okay, it's not the end. |   http://lukasz.bromirski.net



Re: Layer 2 vs. Layer 3 to TOR

2009-11-12 Thread Olof Kasselstrand
I would suggest doing a VC with the TOR switches. That way you can
have one switch for a lot of racks (I believe 10 would be the upper
limit if using Juniper). If you have a VC  you could do L3 and L2
where needed on every rack that the VC covers.

// Olof

2009/11/13 Łukasz Bromirski luk...@bromirski.net:
 On 2009-11-12 22:37, David Coulson wrote:

 The MX-series are pretty nice. That should be able to do VPLS PE,
 however I've never tried it - MX240 did it pretty well last time I
 tried. I've no clue how the cost of that switch compares to a cisco 4900
 or something (not that a 4900 is anything special - L3 is all in
 software).

 For both 4948/4948-10GE and 4900M L3 is in hardware. For
 4948/4948-10GE IPv6 is in software, for 4900M it's in hardware.

 --
 Everything will be okay in the end. |                  Łukasz Bromirski
  If it's not okay, it's not the end. |       http://lukasz.bromirski.net