I have no horse in this race, however one need only look at the NYIIX
outages list to see how well the Brocade/Extreme SLX platform works on
at-scale service provider networks...
On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 2:55 PM Blake Hudson wrote:
>
>
> Chris Welti wrote on 11/1/2018 10:03 AM:
> > Nicolas Fevrier
Chris Welti wrote on 11/1/2018 10:03 AM:
Nicolas Fevrier has a very detailed blog post on how Cisco handles the prefixes
on their Broadcom Jericho based NCS 5500 gear.
https://xrdocs.io/cloud-scale-networking/tutorials/2017-08-03-understanding-ncs5500-resources-s01e02/
I'm pretty sure the pri
- Original Message -
From: "Daniel Corbe"
To: "Julien Goodwin"
Cc: "nanog list"
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 9:51:14 PM
Subject: Re: Brocade SLX Internet Edge
I’m just going to echo what a few others have been saying. Brocade (now
Extreme) have com
Nicolas Fevrier has a very detailed blog post on how Cisco handles the prefixes
on their Broadcom Jericho based NCS 5500 gear.
https://xrdocs.io/cloud-scale-networking/tutorials/2017-08-03-understanding-ncs5500-resources-s01e02/
I'm pretty sure the principle is more or less the same for the Jeric
Hey,
They all do in principle the same thing. There are memories for
longest path lookup and memories for exact lookup. I believe the trick
is to put specific prefix size, like /24 to exact lookup table,
relieving the LPM table stress greatly. Then in parallel ask both, and
take more specific resu
I think Extreme is doing the same thing with their Extreme OptiScale™ that
Arista is doing with their Arista FlexRoute™ and EOS NetDB™. They are both
using Broadcom Jericho /Qurman with extenal TCAM, but still has a hardware
limitiation on route table size. Then in software they filer right?
Quest
Thanks for everyone who responded on and off list.
As a small company that is happy to still be in business the pricing is too
good to ignore. A "gently used" ASR-9006 is something like $45k for one plus a
shelf spare. A brand new SLX 9540 is something like $30k for one plus a shelf
spare.
Hi,
I do have some 9540s near exchange points, but they are not 100%
productive right now, basically waiting for the next software release
this month and a maintenance window. In my eyes the device is filling
the gap between the CES/CER series and the MLX/SLX9850. It will be also
interesting
I’m just going to echo what a few others have been saying. Brocade (now
Extreme) have come a long way since the Foundry days; and the SLX isn’t
based on the old Netiron code. The platform is a completely different
animal.
I’ve been a happy Brocade customer for a while now.
On 01/11/18 09:55, Brandon Martin wrote:
> On 10/31/18 6:37 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
>> If you buy brocade, be sure to also by a license for securecrt so that
>> backspace works over ssh...
>> also, just don't do brocade... ever.
>
> Works fine for me using OpenSSH in most Linux-y terminal em
On 10/31/18 6:37 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
If you buy brocade, be sure to also by a license for securecrt so that
backspace works over ssh...
also, just don't do brocade... ever.
Works fine for me using OpenSSH in most Linux-y terminal emulators
(Konsole, Linux console, Gnome terminal).
On 10/31/18 6:30 PM, Ryan Hamel wrote:
140K IPv6 equates to about 560K IPv4 routes, leaving the end user with 940K
IPv4, which is not a lot of ceiling space considering we're at 741K IPv4 + and
60K IPv6 (240k IPv4 equivalent) now (941K total). This will leave you with
559K. I am not sure what
From: Christopher Morrow [mailto:morrowc.li...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 3:38 PM
To: Ryan Hamel
Cc: lists.na...@monmotha.net; nanog list
Subject: Re: Brocade SLX Internet Edge
If you buy brocade, be sure to also by a license for securecrt so that
backspace works over ssh...
also
un...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Brandon Martin
> Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 3:08 PM
> To: nanog@nanog.org
> Subject: Re: Brocade SLX Internet Edge
>
> On 10/31/18 4:56 PM, Aaron wrote:
> > It won't hold a full table. 256,000 IPv4 and 64,000 IPv6 routes.
>
> Tha
---
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Brandon Martin
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2018 3:08 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Brocade SLX Internet Edge
On 10/31/18 4:56 PM, Aaron wrote:
> It won't hold a full table. 256,000 IPv4 and 64,000 IPv6 routes.
That was changed earlie
On 10/31/18 4:56 PM, Aaron wrote:
It won't hold a full table. 256,000 IPv4 and 64,000 IPv6 routes.
That was changed earlier this year AFAIK. The website was slow to get
updated but has been updated now. Current claim is 1.5M IPv4 and 140k
IPv6. You need the "advanced feature license" to ge
That won’t hold a full table - so performance isn’t relevant.
-Ben
> On Oct 31, 2018, at 1:01 PM, Kevin Burke wrote:
>
> Does anyone have any success with the Brocade SLX 9540 or similar? Its going
> to be taking full BGP tables from two Tier1's and some peering.
>
> The specs and sales re
Last I heard (before switching shops), not yet it won’t.
Best regards.
> Le 31 oct. 2018 à 21:56, Aaron a écrit :
>
> It won't hold a full table. 256,000 IPv4 and 64,000 IPv6 routes.
>
>
>> On 10/31/2018 3:01 PM, Kevin Burke wrote:
>> Does anyone have any success with the Brocade SLX 9540 o
It won't hold a full table. 256,000 IPv4 and 64,000 IPv6 routes.
On 10/31/2018 3:01 PM, Kevin Burke wrote:
Does anyone have any success with the Brocade SLX 9540 or similar? Its going
to be taking full BGP tables from two Tier1's and some peering.
The specs and sales rep says its fine, but t
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