nanog mailing list archives
MX 80 advantages and shortcomings
From: chavan sanjay <sanju_ddd () yahoo com>
Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2011 08:56:56 -0700 (PDT)
Hi Team, Can anyone enlighten me on the pros and cons of MX 80 platform Thanks Sanjay C.P. --- On Tue, 7/5/11, nanog-request () nanog org <nanog-request () nanog org> wrote: From: nanog-request () nanog org <nanog-request () nanog org> Subject: NANOG Digest, Vol 42, Issue 5 To: nanog () nanog org Date: Tuesday, July 5, 2011, 5:30 PM Send NANOG mailing list submissions to nanog () nanog org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit https://mailman.nanog.org/mailman/listinfo/nanog or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to nanog-request () nanog org You can reach the person managing the list at nanog-owner () nanog org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of NANOG digest..." Today's Topics: 1. cheapo UUFB solution for Cisco 7201 (Rogelio) 2. Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions (Curtis Maurand) 3. RE: Firewall Appliance Suggestions (Jean CLERY) 4. Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions (Peter Nowak) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2011 11:34:11 -0300 From: Rogelio <scubacuda () gmail com> Subject: cheapo UUFB solution for Cisco 7201 To: nanog () nanog org Message-ID: <CALJphbs6UBWKqGVW1EyvCL6pKGtCKjSYNZB=q70FxPOQ7D0CHA () mail gmail com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 I've got a Cisco 7201 with about 500 L2TPv2 tunnels, and I suspect that UUFB (unknown unicast flooding) is resulting in spiking (I put an ACL on to kill broadcast traffic, so I'm sure that's not related). I've googled and don't see anything for the 7201, just the 7600 series. :/ i.e. http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/routers/7600/ios/12.2SR/configuration/guide/blocking.html Anyone have any suggestions on (something cheap) that I can put in front of this box to spare it from (what I suspect) is a gateway that unicast floods when a MAC address has aged? To add to my challenges, I'm in Brazil and importing gear is insanely effing difficult. :/ -- Also on LinkedIn? Feel free to connect if you too are an open networker: scubacuda () gmail com ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 04 Jul 2011 17:40:56 -0400 From: Curtis Maurand <cmaurand () xyonet com> Subject: Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions To: nanog () nanog org Message-ID: <4E123368.7020602 () xyonet com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed On 6/30/2011 12:20 PM, Suresh Rajagopalan wrote:
Linux + iptables + fwbuilder On Thu, Jun 30, 2011 at 8:50 AM, Blake T. Pfankuch<blake () pfankuch me> wrote:Howdy, I am looking for something a little unique in a bit of a tough situation with some sticky requirements. First off, my requirements are a little weird and I can't bend them a whole lot due to stipulations being put on me. I am in need a firewall appliance which can be run on VMware vSphere, with IPSEC support for multiple Phase 2 negotiations within a single Phase 1. I am also in need of something that can support VLAN interfaces on the LAN side, and ideally something with multi zoning so I can keep LAN side networks separate from each without ridiculous firewall rules. Meaning build a zone for "Customer network 1" and it displays separately (ease of management and firewall config hopefully). I need a minimum of 10 "zones" on LAN side (/29 or /30), and NAT support for LAN to WAN (to dedicate all outbound connections to a single IP from a specific zone), ideally something extremely scalable (100-200 zones). And here
is the super fun part! I need something that is going to be web managed primarily as minions will be doing most of the day to day maintenance, or very simple CLI config. Willing to pay for something if need be, but looking for something that can easily handly 50-100mbit of throughput.
Any Ideas? Thanks! Blake Pfankuch
Vyatta. They have an appliance on their website. --Curtis ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2011 00:58:51 +0200 From: "Jean CLERY" <jean.clerymrs () gmail com> Subject: RE: Firewall Appliance Suggestions To: "'Curtis Maurand'" <cmaurand () xyonet com>, <nanog () nanog org> Message-ID: <F7819E52D830406983C30BC43FAD7E3D@ezekiel> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Hi Blake Try www.netasq.com Regards, Jean CLERY -----Message d'origine----- De?: Curtis Maurand [mailto:cmaurand () xyonet com] Envoy??: lundi 4 juillet 2011 23:41 ??: nanog () nanog org Objet?: Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions On 6/30/2011 12:20 PM, Suresh Rajagopalan wrote:
Linux + iptables + fwbuilder On Thu, Jun 30, 2011 at 8:50 AM, Blake T. Pfankuch<blake () pfankuch me>
wrote:
Howdy, I am looking for something a little unique in a bit of a
tough situation with some sticky requirements. First off, my requirements are a little weird and I can't bend them a whole lot due to stipulations being put on me. I am in need a firewall appliance which can be run on VMware vSphere, with IPSEC support for multiple Phase 2 negotiations within a single Phase 1. I am also in need of something that can support VLAN interfaces on the LAN side, and ideally something with multi zoning so I can keep LAN side networks separate from each without ridiculous firewall rules. Meaning build a zone for "Customer network 1" and it displays separately (ease of management and firewall config hopefully). I need a minimum of 10 "zones" on LAN side (/29 or /30), and NAT support for LAN to WAN (to dedicate all outbound connections to a single IP from a specific zone), ideally something extremely scalable (100-200 zones). And here is the super fun part! I need something that is going to be web managed primarily as minions will be doing most of the day to day maintenance, or very simple CLI config. Willing to pay for something if need be, but looking for something that can easily handly 50-100mbit of throughput.
Any Ideas? Thanks! Blake Pfankuch
Vyatta. They have an appliance on their website. --Curtis ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2011 00:50:45 -0400 From: Peter Nowak <pnowak () batblue com> Subject: Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions To: Blake T. Pfankuch <blake () pfankuch me> Cc: "NANOG \(nanog () nanog org\)" <nanog () nanog org> Message-ID: <1B8D4E1C-BA43-4257-89DA-7D6EBB154927 () batblue com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii They don't have a VM yet - coming soon - but you may take a look at Palo Alto Networks. Having just a regular stateful firewall is not a good idea anymore... Peter Nowak On Jul 1, 2011, at 12:35 AM, Blake T. Pfankuch wrote:
Normally I would agree with you as far as separate instances, however this will be in a situation where we pay ridiculous amounts for cpu and memory, so a single instance is what we are shooting for (remember those ridiculous requirements). I am planning to do some further testing with vyatta and pfsense. Thanks you all for the on list and off list responses! -----Original Message----- From: Sargun Dhillon [mailto:sargun () sargun me] Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 9:56 PM To: George Bonser Cc: Blake T. Pfankuch; NANOG (nanog () nanog org) Subject: Re: Firewall Appliance Suggestions ----- Original Message -----From: "George Bonser" <gbonser () seven com> To: "Blake T. Pfankuch" <blake () pfankuch me>, "NANOG (nanog () nanog org)" <nanog () nanog org> Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2011 11:30:53 AM Subject: RE: Firewall Appliance SuggestionsWilling to pay for something if need be, but looking for something that can easily handly 50-100mbit of throughput. Any Ideas? Thanks! Blake PfankuchI might also look at Vyatta. They have appliances or you can run the software on your own hardware.I would not go with Vyatta if you're doing anything complex. The number of random bugs I've hit with their software are numerous. In the right hands, it's a powerful tool. And it seems to fit your solution really well. If I were in your shoes, I would install two instances that would handle the "edge" of the cluster, and then an instance per customer (lightweight, they sell a VMWare image). Then use dynamic routing to direct traffic to the customer (assign each customer their own ASN, and peer with their instance). So, worse case scenario, the NOC monkey only breaks one customer's gear. -- Sargun Dhillon VoIP (US): +1-925-235-1105
Peter Nowak Manager, Technical Services Bat Blue Corporation | Integrity . Privacy . Availability p. 212.461.3322 x3020 | f. 212.584.9999 | w. www.batblue.com Bat Blue's AS: 25885 | BGP Policy | Peering Policy Bat Blue's Legal Notice Receive Bat Blue's DSB Intelligence Report Bat Blue is proud to be the Official WiFi Provider for ESPN's X-Games ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ NANOG mailing list NANOG () nanog org https://mailman.nanog.org/mailman/listinfo/nanog End of NANOG Digest, Vol 42, Issue 5 ************************************
Current thread:
- MX 80 advantages and shortcomings chavan sanjay (Jul 05)
- Re: MX 80 advantages and shortcomings sthaug (Jul 05)
- Re: MX 80 advantages and shortcomings Paul Stewart (Jul 05)
- Re: MX 80 advantages and shortcomings Chuck Anderson (Jul 05)
- Re: MX 80 advantages and shortcomings Joel Jaeggli (Jul 05)