nanog mailing list archives

RE: gigabit router (was Re: Getting a "portable" /19 or /20)


From: <alex () yuriev com>
Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2001 18:16:44 -0400 (EDT)


Vendors have known how to solve this problem for many years.
Failure to do so is a poor implementation and has nothing to do
with centralized forwarding being better/worse than distributed
forwarding.

Yet another person who does not understand the KISS principle. I am
sure in theory it all works great, though I am seeing way too many
comments similiar to:

"The connectivity issues have been resolved.  This appears to be the
same CEF related issues we experienced Monday evening, and we have a
case open with Cisco.  As we get more information from Cisco, we will
be passing it along."

Just because Cisco cannot implement it correctly does not mean the concept
is flawed, any more then we should go back to rip because ospf isn't
simple and cisco had a bug in it once...

If you do not give a child matches, the child is less likely to start the
fire then if you give child matches. If you do not explain to the child that
it should try playing with fire before he/she realizes what kind of effect
that fire may have, the child is less likely to try it.

Link state protocols should die. 

Cisco has tons of bugs in OSFP + CEF and OSPF + dCEF implementations. They
are called "strange CEF things". Should me a router vendor and I will show
you that it has broken routing protocols.
 
There is absolutily nothing wrong with the concept of distributing the
forwarding table, so long as care is taken to insure synchronization, and
you are not using a broke-ass IPC and a broke-ass bus which wasn't ever
designed for it when you make the copy.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with a concept of communism, none the less
it is better not to try implementing it.

We are not talking about concepts here - we are talking aboung engineering
robust routers. 

"Math is hard, lets go shopping" -Barbie
"Hate the vendor, not the routes" -Unknown

Alex



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