nanog mailing list archives

Re: New Switches with Broadcom StrataDNX


From: Jeff Tantsura <jeff.tantsura () ericsson com>
Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2016 16:46:39 +0000

Hi,

Some points:
1.DNX SDK is significantly different from SGX, adopted by Cumulus and such, yet to be done, and this is not negligible 
amount of work
2.if you are not interested in capacity but in scale, there’re other BCM chips, perhaps more suitable
3.you don’t have to have all the forwarding entries populated in silicon, as an example - take a look at 
http://sdn-internet-router-sir.readthedocs.org, code at https://github.com/dbarrosop/sir, one could also leverage 
approach we have taken in EVPN - decoupling RIB from FIB completely
4.NG silicon will do 1M+ LPM's

Cheers,
Jeff







On 1/19/16, 06:29, "NANOG on behalf of Colton Conor" <nanog-bounces () nanog org on behalf of colton.conor () gmail 
com> wrote:

I was hoping this new Broadcom chip would be able to support enough routes
to hold a full BGP table, and be used for something like cumulus linux. I
have no need for 100G, but 10G and 40G on a platform with deeper buffers
sounds nice.

On Tue, Jan 19, 2016 at 1:01 AM, Phil Bedard <bedard.phil () gmail com> wrote:

The BCM88670 (Jericho) is what powers the new Cisco NCS55XX devices. The
processor is linerate above around 100 bytes per packet without external
TCAM, supports 256K IPv4/64K IPv6 FIB entries (or mixed amounts).  These
chips are being used for high scale 100G, the initial NCS5508 linecard is a
36x100G QSFP28 one.

Juniper has chosen to use their own silicon for most of their dense 100G
platforms, but you’ll see these chips used by pretty much everyone else I
imagine at some point in the next year.



Phil

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces () nanog org> on behalf of Colton Conor <
colton.conor () gmail com>
Date: Sunday, January 17, 2016 at 18:15
To: NANOG <nanog () nanog org>
Subject: New Switches with Broadcom StrataDNX

Does anyone know when the switching and router vendors will release their
new models with the Broadcom BCM88370 and BCM88670 chips? It looks like
these chips could be used as a carrier grade router and/or metro E device.

More information here:
http://www.broadcom.com/press/release.php?id=s902223

and here:

http://www.nextplatform.com/2015/03/19/new-dune-chips-enable-heftier-switches/


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