nanog mailing list archives

Re: real hardware router VS linux router


From: Joel Jaeggli <joelja () bogus com>
Date: Thu, 19 Feb 2009 08:58:24 -0800

Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
On Feb 19, 2009, at 10:54 AM, Bill Blackford wrote:

In scaling upward. How would a linux router even if a kernel guru were
to tweak and compile an optimized build, compare to a 7600/RSP720CXL
or a Juniper PIC in ASIC? At some point packets/sec becomes a
limitation I would think.

I've asked this before and been told you can get PCI cards with multiple
GigE ports, or even build specialized PCI cards that look like PICs.

So I congratulated them on re-inventing Juniper.

multiport network interfaces substantially predate the existence of asic
based l3 forwarding. I can just barely remember what a router looked
like in 1991, but our compaq and sun pedestal servers certainly had them.

we have variously and in use today as standardized formfactors in
embedded network optimized pc platforms.

cpci (6u eurocard) - which is neither compact nor pci but I digress
pmc
xmc
atca
amc
standard pci-e
mini-pci-e

when when consider that a gen2.0 8x pci-e point-to-point link can carry
~32Gbits/s symmetric the building blocks are certainly there for
multiport interfaces and 4xge or 2x10Gbe per slot interfaces are
relatively de riguer in pc based filewall/ips/network appliance platforms...


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