Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-12 Thread Mark Tinka


On 13/Apr/15 00:15, Hamish McGlinn wrote:

 The ACX series is more of a hybrid. They are probably more likened to
 Layer 2 routers than switches. They are primarily designed as Mobile
 backhaul devices where integration into existing IP MPLS
 infrastructure would be a cost saving and design advantage. You can
 see this with the other models that have the TDM (E1/T1) interfaces.
 Those models use SAToP and CESoPSN to move TDM based circuits over an
 MPLS network. It's all rather clever really. The Ethernet ports on
 those models as well as the ethernet only models are an extension of
 that. They provide layer 2 interfaces where you don't really require
 layer 3 services (such as ethernet based mobile backhaul). So they are
 a switch, yes, but more than that. They utilise MPLS L2VPN/L2Circuits
 to move ethernet over the MPLS infrastructure. Hence why I thought it
 could be an alternative to terminating the layer 3 at the edge.

What you're referring to are the ACX500 through to the ACX4000 units.

The ACX5000 (5048 and 5096, respectively) are Metro-E switches (IP/MPLS
routers, really). Unlike the other ACX models, they do not come with any
non-Ethernet ports.

Mark.


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-12 Thread Mark Tinka


On 9/Apr/15 01:26, Hamish McGlinn wrote:

 As Tim said above, I too was thinking about the Juniper ACX. The 5048/5096
 model could suit your needs. They are primarily designed as layer 1(TDM)/2
 backhaul devices and i'm not sure they can do a full table. They do have
 full JunOS MPLS features. Could be a way to use MPLS-TE to move the layer 2
 back to a core location and terminate later 3 there. Would give you some
 flexibility over just doing ethernet stuff as I mentioned in the first
 paragraph.

The ACX5000 series are Ethernet-only switches.

They hold about 120,000 entries in FIB, and as of today despite all the
RAM, are only sold with support for 300,000 entries in RIB.

The chipset is not Juniper in-house, though; so make sure all your
features work.

Mark.


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-12 Thread Mark Tinka


On 9/Apr/15 03:01, Watson, Bob wrote:
 Dan,  The new asr920 by cisco would fit 4x10g SFP+ and 24 ports SFP or copper 
 1g line rate about 6 k list without license .  You can leverage netconf yang 
 model as its cisco edge or other flavor choice 

 You can unicast if you want more data as we've done EFI and evaluated them in 
 our labs 

But it only holds 20,000 IPv4 entries in FIB - quite paltry if he wants
a full table.

Then again, BGP-SD + selective routing into FIB could fix that.

Mark.


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-12 Thread Hamish McGlinn

 The ACX5000 series are Ethernet-only switches.

 They hold about 120,000 entries in FIB, and as of today despite all the
 RAM, are only sold with support for 300,000 entries in RIB.

 The chipset is not Juniper in-house, though; so make sure all your
 features work.


The ACX series is more of a hybrid. They are probably more likened to Layer
2 routers than switches. They are primarily designed as Mobile backhaul
devices where integration into existing IP MPLS infrastructure would be a
cost saving and design advantage. You can see this with the other models
that have the TDM (E1/T1) interfaces. Those models use SAToP and CESoPSN to
move TDM based circuits over an MPLS network. It's all rather clever
really. The Ethernet ports on those models as well as the ethernet only
models are an extension of that. They provide layer 2 interfaces where you
don't really require layer 3 services (such as ethernet based mobile
backhaul). So they are a switch, yes, but more than that. They utilise MPLS
L2VPN/L2Circuits to move ethernet over the MPLS infrastructure. Hence why I
thought it could be an alternative to terminating the layer 3 at the edge.

Hamish


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Tim Raphael
L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head. But 
then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had customers 
requesting a full table.

It sounds like the OP is looking for one device to do multiple roles where 
two/three different device types and/or sizes would fit better.


 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:18 pm, Dave Taht dave.t...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 So to return this to a more rational basis - why does an edge network
 need MPLS in the first place?



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Dave Taht
On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 2:37 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 I find this rather offensive as you clearly have no idea what I have 
 contributed to the OSS community or more specifically to the VyOS project.

 Among working, studying a masters degree and a little sleep to keep me sane, 
 I already do what I can.

My sincere apologies. At the time, that kickstarter was failing, and I
was mindblown that nobody had seen the potential of it, and I had
spent 3 days, trying to convince more people to throw in, as I had
already thrown in all I could.

My comment was directed far more at the universe than yourself and was
more in the context of my prior bufferbloat-related rant earlier in
the day, which I have spent 4 years on, mostly full time, and mostly
unpaid.

I am still sad that nobody threw in for that get one give one program
(who pays for the software engineers?), and that it took events like
heartbleed to get the LF´s core infrastructure inititative funded,
and, well, frankly, it is a long, long list of things that bug me that
have accumulated... that I will try to keep off this list.


 Tim

 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:42 am, Dave Taht dave.t...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 Correct. But hopefully not far off now that there are x86 packages for 
 simple MPLS operations. With a bit of luck an RSVP or LDP implementation 
 isn't far behind.

So to return this to a more rational basis - why does an edge network
need MPLS in the first place?



-- 
Dave Täht
Open Networking needs **Open Source Hardware**

https://plus.google.com/u/0/107942175615993706558/posts/N8mZ5F5iSPU


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Tim Raphael
You’ll be looking at a Juniper MX or a Cisco ASK9K I think.

The MXs are targeted as being full-features edge routers. An MX5 will take a 
full feed just fine and do all the *VPN you want.
If you’re talking about multiple full feeds then you’ll need a MX240 with one 
of the higher-power REs for a decent reconvergence time.


 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:42 pm, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com 
 mailto:raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head. But 
 then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had customers 
 requesting a full table.
 
 
 I have one customer who needs an L3VPN for some shared private routes along 
 with a full table in inet.0. There are ways of accomplishing this creatively 
 but I'm looking for devices that can handle these types of requests that 
 permit us some level of sanity. 



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE [TOPIC DRIFT!]

2015-04-09 Thread Barry Shein

On April 9, 2015 at 09:11 raphael.timo...@gmail.com (Tim Raphael) wrote:
  VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed very 
  actively and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty stable too 
  imo.
  
  http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page

SPEAKING of OSS routers...

Does anyone know of a single OSS project which supports the usual BGP
etc kind of things (routing) AND virtual hosting, the terminology is
muddled, but one IP in, chooses among one or more IPs for
load-balancing (not to be confused with device load-balancing),
fail-over, round-robin, other policies? The typical web farm kind of
thing, but for other kinds of services also like mail, imap, etc.

I know one can piece together more than one project but then one has
to get them to play together and learn their quirks and so forth. For
example I don't think any Mikrotik (ok not strictly OSS but they seem
nice) supports the virtual host stuff unless I'm missing it.

I have some very old Alteons that do the virtual host stuff well
enough but they are very long in the tooth (no IPv6, BGP is so old
it's useless to the point of scary, etc.)

P.S. No particular need for fancy WAN interfaces, ethernet
presentations are fine.

-- 
-Barry Shein

The World  | b...@theworld.com   | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR, Canada
Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Watson, Bob
I think e in ren is edu not edge 
L3vpn or L2vpn for pseudo  back haul or l2 extensions 
State ren I assume to stand for regional education network so likely vrf would 
be public internet possibly Internet 2 , district traffic, maybe higher Ed 
access for night class and vice versa.  

One way to achieve 10g mpls plus full table and stay under 10k you may be 
better served to break out pre-agg role for mpls and private L3 hand off and 
for Internet peering step a hop back and peer at agg with a heavy duty juniper 
or cisco box over a l2vpn extension to the CE 

Sent from my iPad

 On Apr 9, 2015, at 9:26 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head. But 
 then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had customers 
 requesting a full table.
 
 It sounds like the OP is looking for one device to do multiple roles where 
 two/three different device types and/or sizes would fit better.
 
 
 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:18 pm, Dave Taht dave.t...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 So to return this to a more rational basis - why does an edge network
 need MPLS in the first place?
 


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE [TOPIC DRIFT!]

2015-04-09 Thread Baldur Norddahl
You can do this for free with equal cost multi path routing. You announce
the same IP from multiple servers with eg. OSPF.
Den 09/04/2015 19.34 skrev Barry Shein b...@world.std.com:


 On April 9, 2015 at 09:11 raphael.timo...@gmail.com (Tim Raphael) wrote:
   VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed very
 actively and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty stable
 too imo.
  
   http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page

 SPEAKING of OSS routers...

 Does anyone know of a single OSS project which supports the usual BGP
 etc kind of things (routing) AND virtual hosting, the terminology is
 muddled, but one IP in, chooses among one or more IPs for
 load-balancing (not to be confused with device load-balancing),
 fail-over, round-robin, other policies? The typical web farm kind of
 thing, but for other kinds of services also like mail, imap, etc.

 I know one can piece together more than one project but then one has
 to get them to play together and learn their quirks and so forth. For
 example I don't think any Mikrotik (ok not strictly OSS but they seem
 nice) supports the virtual host stuff unless I'm missing it.

 I have some very old Alteons that do the virtual host stuff well
 enough but they are very long in the tooth (no IPv6, BGP is so old
 it's useless to the point of scary, etc.)

 P.S. No particular need for fancy WAN interfaces, ethernet
 presentations are fine.

 --
 -Barry Shein

 The World  | b...@theworld.com   |
 http://www.TheWorld.com
 Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR,
 Canada
 Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Daniel Rohan
On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com
wrote:

 L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head.
 But then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had
 customers requesting a full table.



I have one customer who needs an L3VPN for some shared private routes along
with a full table in inet.0. There are ways of accomplishing this
creatively but I'm looking for devices that can handle these types of
requests that permit us some level of sanity.


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Josh Baird
You could possibly look at rolling vMX (if it's even available yet) on x86
hardware.  It's licensed by throughput and feature set.  If you are doing
L3VPN, I think you would need the advanced license.  This may fit within
your budget.

On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 10:50 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com
wrote:

 You’ll be looking at a Juniper MX or a Cisco ASK9K I think.

 The MXs are targeted as being full-features edge routers. An MX5 will take
 a full feed just fine and do all the *VPN you want.
 If you’re talking about multiple full feeds then you’ll need a MX240 with
 one of the higher-power REs for a decent reconvergence time.


  On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:42 pm, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
  On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com
 mailto:raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
  L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head.
 But then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had
 customers requesting a full table.
 
 
  I have one customer who needs an L3VPN for some shared private routes
 along with a full table in inet.0. There are ways of accomplishing this
 creatively but I'm looking for devices that can handle these types of
 requests that permit us some level of sanity.




Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Dave Taht
On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head. But
 then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had customers
 requesting a full table.

Well my interpretation was that IPv4 address space had become so scarce that
other methods were becoming more needed even on the high end edge networks.


 It sounds like the OP is looking for one device to do multiple roles where
 two/three different device types and/or sizes would fit better.

But that seems more plausible.



 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:18 pm, Dave Taht dave.t...@gmail.com wrote:

 So to return this to a more rational basis - why does an edge network
 need MPLS in the first place?





-- 
Dave Täht
Open Networking needs **Open Source Hardware**

https://plus.google.com/u/0/107942175615993706558/posts/N8mZ5F5iSPU


RE: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread timrutherford
I didn’t research the full feature list, but you might take a quick look at 
Mikrotik.

www.mikrotik.com



-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Tim Raphael
Sent: Thursday, April 9, 2015 10:51 AM
To: Daniel Rohan
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

You’ll be looking at a Juniper MX or a Cisco ASK9K I think.

The MXs are targeted as being full-features edge routers. An MX5 will take a 
full feed just fine and do all the *VPN you want.
If you’re talking about multiple full feeds then you’ll need a MX240 with one 
of the higher-power REs for a decent reconvergence time.


 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:42 pm, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 
 On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com 
 mailto:raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 L3VPN hand off is the only thing I can think of from the top of my head. But 
 then, there would be no need to have a full table unless you had customers 
 requesting a full table.
 
 
 I have one customer who needs an L3VPN for some shared private routes along 
 with a full table in inet.0. There are ways of accomplishing this creatively 
 but I'm looking for devices that can handle these types of requests that 
 permit us some level of sanity. 




Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Tim Raphael
I find this rather offensive as you clearly have no idea what I have 
contributed to the OSS community or more specifically to the VyOS project.

Among working, studying a masters degree and a little sleep to keep me sane, I 
already do what I can.

Tim

 On 9 Apr 2015, at 10:42 am, Dave Taht dave.t...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 Correct. But hopefully not far off now that there are x86 packages for 
 simple MPLS operations. With a bit of luck an RSVP or LDP implementation 
 isn't far behind.
 
 Just sitting around whining and waiting for someone else to do the job
 is nowhere near as effective as chipping in and helping... or funding
 the efforts that exist.
 
 -- 
 Dave Täht
 Open Networking needs **Open Source Hardware**
 
 https://plus.google.com/u/0/107942175615993706558/posts/N8mZ5F5iSPU


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE [TOPIC DRIFT!]

2015-04-09 Thread Baldur Norddahl
There is no redirecting as all the hosts have the same IP (typically on the
loopback interface). Traffic goes back directly. You can even do priority
but I would not. You get host down detection as the route will be withdrawn.

You do not get server overload. On the other hand I am not sure I want such
feature.

I would use it to load balance the load balancers / web cache / ssl proxy
and it should be quite good for that purpose.

Regards

Baldur
Den 09/04/2015 21.48 skrev Barry Shein b...@world.std.com:


 On April 9, 2015 at 20:50 baldur.nordd...@gmail.com (Baldur Norddahl)
 wrote:
   You can do this for free with equal cost multi path routing. You
 announce
   the same IP from multiple servers with eg. OSPF.

 True, and thanks, but that's just the beginning of an implementation,
 you still need all the gunk that detects and reacts to down or
 overloaded hosts, whether you want to do MAC or IP level redirecting,
 how data travels back to the remote host (directly or via the box's
 IP, NAT-like?), priority management, firewall functions, statistics
 gathering, blame apportionment (if I build it myself who do I get to
 blame?), etc.

-b

   Den 09/04/2015 19.34 skrev Barry Shein b...@world.std.com:
  
   
On April 9, 2015 at 09:11 raphael.timo...@gmail.com (Tim Raphael)
 wrote:
  VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed
 very
actively and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty
 stable
too imo.
 
  http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page
   
SPEAKING of OSS routers...
   
Does anyone know of a single OSS project which supports the usual BGP
etc kind of things (routing) AND virtual hosting, the terminology is
muddled, but one IP in, chooses among one or more IPs for
load-balancing (not to be confused with device load-balancing),
fail-over, round-robin, other policies? The typical web farm kind of
thing, but for other kinds of services also like mail, imap, etc.
   
I know one can piece together more than one project but then one has
to get them to play together and learn their quirks and so forth. For
example I don't think any Mikrotik (ok not strictly OSS but they seem
nice) supports the virtual host stuff unless I'm missing it.
   
I have some very old Alteons that do the virtual host stuff well
enough but they are very long in the tooth (no IPv6, BGP is so old
it's useless to the point of scary, etc.)
   
P.S. No particular need for fancy WAN interfaces, ethernet
presentations are fine.
   
--
-Barry Shein
   
The World  | b...@theworld.com   |
http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR,
Canada
Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989
  *oo*
   



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-09 Thread Daniel Rohan
On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 7:25 AM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com
wrote:

 It sounds like the OP is looking for one device to do multiple roles where
 two/three different device types and/or sizes would fit better.


Yes, correct. And thanks for your work and suggestions.


Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Daniel Rohan
I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
on prem deployment at customer sites.

We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
devices to the customers that need them.

We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

-Dan


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Faisal Imtiaz
Mikrotik for OS, and Hardware choice would be to use an X86 appliance (Lanner 
Electronics, Axiomtek etc)
You should be able to get a cost effective box that will meet your performance 
requirements.
As to feature set, while most of them are their you should do some testing to 
see if feature set meets your requirements.

Most folks often forget that Mikrotik is OS and they also make Hardware (a 
variety of sizes for a variety of needs), and the OS can be deployed on 
standard or custom hardware server or appliances.

You can always go the 'Custom' Linux Route, using x86 boxes with your own 
distro, too bad that Vyatta OS took a different route under Brocade..



Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom

- Original Message -
 From: Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com
 To: NANOG nanog@nanog.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 8, 2015 6:46:40 PM
 Subject: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE
 
 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.
 
 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.
 
 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.
 
 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.
 
 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.
 
 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.
 
 -Dan
 


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Josh Reynolds

No MPLS though, if that is a requirement.

On 04/08/2015 05:11 PM, Tim Raphael wrote:

VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed very actively 
and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty stable too imo.

http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page

Regards,

Tim Raphael


On 9 Apr 2015, at 8:14 am, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:

Mikrotik for OS, and Hardware choice would be to use an X86 appliance (Lanner 
Electronics, Axiomtek etc)
You should be able to get a cost effective box that will meet your performance 
requirements.
As to feature set, while most of them are their you should do some testing to 
see if feature set meets your requirements.

Most folks often forget that Mikrotik is OS and they also make Hardware (a 
variety of sizes for a variety of needs), and the OS can be deployed on 
standard or custom hardware server or appliances.

You can always go the 'Custom' Linux Route, using x86 boxes with your own 
distro, too bad that Vyatta OS took a different route under Brocade..



Faisal Imtiaz
Snappy Internet  Telecom

- Original Message -

From: Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com
To: NANOG nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Wednesday, April 8, 2015 6:46:40 PM
Subject: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
on prem deployment at customer sites.

We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
devices to the customers that need them.

We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

-Dan





Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Tim Raphael
VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed very actively 
and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty stable too imo.

http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page

Regards,

Tim Raphael

 On 9 Apr 2015, at 8:14 am, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:
 
 Mikrotik for OS, and Hardware choice would be to use an X86 appliance (Lanner 
 Electronics, Axiomtek etc)
 You should be able to get a cost effective box that will meet your 
 performance requirements.
 As to feature set, while most of them are their you should do some testing to 
 see if feature set meets your requirements.
 
 Most folks often forget that Mikrotik is OS and they also make Hardware (a 
 variety of sizes for a variety of needs), and the OS can be deployed on 
 standard or custom hardware server or appliances.
 
 You can always go the 'Custom' Linux Route, using x86 boxes with your own 
 distro, too bad that Vyatta OS took a different route under Brocade..
 
 
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com
 To: NANOG nanog@nanog.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 8, 2015 6:46:40 PM
 Subject: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE
 
 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.
 
 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.
 
 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.
 
 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.
 
 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.
 
 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.
 
 -Dan
 


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Hamish McGlinn
Is it a necessity to terminate the layer 3 at the edge? You could get a
10Gbps switch and move it all back to a central location where you have
your high end routers. It would then be terminated as a VLAN and be a
router on a stick kind of topology. Could be a cheaper way to do it without
taking MPLS all the way out to the edge.

As Tim said above, I too was thinking about the Juniper ACX. The 5048/5096
model could suit your needs. They are primarily designed as layer 1(TDM)/2
backhaul devices and i'm not sure they can do a full table. They do have
full JunOS MPLS features. Could be a way to use MPLS-TE to move the layer 2
back to a core location and terminate later 3 there. Would give you some
flexibility over just doing ethernet stuff as I mentioned in the first
paragraph.


Hamish

On Thu, Apr 9, 2015 at 10:46 AM, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:

 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.

 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.

 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

 -Dan



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Dave Bell
Mikrotik? I believe they support all these features other than maybe
flowspec, and you can get a box with a 10G SFP+ port for around $500.

On 8 April 2015 at 23:46, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:
 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.

 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.

 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

 -Dan


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Tim Raphael
Correct. But hopefully not far off now that there are x86 packages for simple 
MPLS operations. With a bit of luck an RSVP or LDP implementation isn't far 
behind.

Regards,

Tim Raphael

 On 9 Apr 2015, at 9:14 am, Josh Reynolds j...@spitwspots.com wrote:
 
 No MPLS though, if that is a requirement.
 
 On 04/08/2015 05:11 PM, Tim Raphael wrote:
 VyOS is a community fork of Vyatta and is still being developed very 
 actively and it pushing ahead with many new features! It's pretty stable too 
 imo.
 
 http://vyos.net/wiki/Main_Page
 
 Regards,
 
 Tim Raphael
 
 On 9 Apr 2015, at 8:14 am, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:
 
 Mikrotik for OS, and Hardware choice would be to use an X86 appliance 
 (Lanner Electronics, Axiomtek etc)
 You should be able to get a cost effective box that will meet your 
 performance requirements.
 As to feature set, while most of them are their you should do some testing 
 to see if feature set meets your requirements.
 
 Most folks often forget that Mikrotik is OS and they also make Hardware (a 
 variety of sizes for a variety of needs), and the OS can be deployed on 
 standard or custom hardware server or appliances.
 
 You can always go the 'Custom' Linux Route, using x86 boxes with your own 
 distro, too bad that Vyatta OS took a different route under Brocade..
 
 
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com
 To: NANOG nanog@nanog.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 8, 2015 6:46:40 PM
 Subject: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE
 
 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.
 
 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.
 
 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.
 
 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.
 
 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.
 
 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.
 
 -Dan
 


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Tim Jackson
Woops, missed the full tables requirement there.. Never mind.
On Apr 8, 2015 4:18 PM, Tim Jackson jackson@gmail.com wrote:

 Cisco ASR902 or Juniper ACX..
 On Apr 8, 2015 3:48 PM, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:

 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.

 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end.
 Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.

 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3
 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

 -Dan




Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Tim Jackson
Cisco ASR902 or Juniper ACX..
On Apr 8, 2015 3:48 PM, Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com wrote:

 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.

 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.

 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.

 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.

 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.

 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.

 -Dan



Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Dave Taht
On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 6:36 PM, Tim Raphael raphael.timo...@gmail.com wrote:
 Correct. But hopefully not far off now that there are x86 packages for simple 
 MPLS operations. With a bit of luck an RSVP or LDP implementation isn't far 
 behind.

Just sitting around whining and waiting for someone else to do the job
is nowhere near as effective as chipping in and helping... or funding
the efforts that exist.

-- 
Dave Täht
Open Networking needs **Open Source Hardware**

https://plus.google.com/u/0/107942175615993706558/posts/N8mZ5F5iSPU


Re: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE

2015-04-08 Thread Watson, Bob
Dan,  The new asr920 by cisco would fit 4x10g SFP+ and 24 ports SFP or copper 
1g line rate about 6 k list without license .  You can leverage netconf yang 
model as its cisco edge or other flavor choice 

You can unicast if you want more data as we've done EFI and evaluated them in 
our labs 


Bob Watson 


 On Apr 8, 2015, at 7:15 PM, Faisal Imtiaz fai...@snappytelecom.net wrote:
 
 Mikrotik for OS, and Hardware choice would be to use an X86 appliance (Lanner 
 Electronics, Axiomtek etc)
 You should be able to get a cost effective box that will meet your 
 performance requirements.
 As to feature set, while most of them are their you should do some testing to 
 see if feature set meets your requirements.
 
 Most folks often forget that Mikrotik is OS and they also make Hardware (a 
 variety of sizes for a variety of needs), and the OS can be deployed on 
 standard or custom hardware server or appliances.
 
 You can always go the 'Custom' Linux Route, using x86 boxes with your own 
 distro, too bad that Vyatta OS took a different route under Brocade..
 
 
 
 Faisal Imtiaz
 Snappy Internet  Telecom
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Daniel Rohan dro...@gmail.com
 To: NANOG nanog@nanog.org
 Sent: Wednesday, April 8, 2015 6:46:40 PM
 Subject: Multi-gigabit edge devices as CPE
 
 I work at a state REN and we are seeking a lead for a new edge device for
 on prem deployment at customer sites.
 
 We currently deploy two classes of routers-- a high end and a low end. Both
 the high end and the low end use some of the standard edge features:
 MPLS-TE, MBGP, flowspec, vrf, PIM, etc. We deliver full tables over these
 devices to the customers that need them.
 
 We recently finished a new ethernet procurement and have a large number of
 sites (~200) moving from 1Gbps in bandwidth to 1-10Gb in bandwidth. Our
 currently deployed low-end router can't handle these speeds and we can't
 afford to place our high end router at 200+ sites.
 
 So, we're looking for a middle tier router to deploy. Something with 2+
 SFP+ ports, software that can handle the aforementioned features, and
 something with an API that we can leverage for programmatic management.
 
 So far we've not found anything that checks all the boxes. Layer 3 switches
 seem like obvious choices, but lack some of the features and RIB/FIB we
 need at the edge. Other devices like the Juniper MX5/10 certainly meet the
 requirements, but are priced way beyond what we can afford.
 
 Any suggestions for devices we might have overlooked? Preferably in the
 less than 10K per unit price point. If such a magical device exists.
 
 -Dan