On Thu, 2009-10-29 at 13:06 -0500, Butch Evans wrote: 
> So, the short answer is:  Keep the number of interfaces around (or
> below) 100 or so.

I should add that I DO have customers who have well over 150 ROUTERS
with multiple interfaces in a single area.  This limit is not a "hard
limit".  The other reality is that when you reach that number of
routers, it is very likely that a network should be relatively easy to
reconfigure into multiple areas.

-- 
********************************************************************
* Butch Evans                   * Professional Network Consultation*
* http://www.butchevans.com/    * Network Engineering              *
* http://www.wispa.org/         * Wired or Wireless Networks       *
* http://blog.butchevans.com/   * ImageStream, Mikrotik and MORE!  *
********************************************************************



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
WISPA Wireless List: [email protected]

Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
http://lists.wispa.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless

Archives: http://lists.wispa.org/pipermail/wireless/

Reply via email to