nanog mailing list archives

Re: Juniper's artificial feature blocking (was legacy /8)


From: Rubens Kuhl <rubensk () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2010 14:12:48 -0300

On Sun, Apr 4, 2010 at 4:33 PM, Michael Sokolov
<msokolov () ivan harhan org> wrote:
Tore Anderson <tore.anderson () redpill-linpro com> wrote:

Juniper.  If you want to run OSPFv3 on their layer 3 switches, you need
a quite expensive "advanced" licence.  OSPFv2, on the other hand, is
included in the base licence.

Really?  My level of respect for Juniper has just dropped a few notches
after reading this NANOG post - I didn't know that they were engaged in
such DRM-like feature blocking practices.

(...)

The reason I ask is because I've been considering building my own PIM
for their J-series, a PIM that would terminate Nokia/Covad's flavor of
SDSL/2B1Q at the physical layer and present an ATM interface to JunOS,
optionally supporting NxSDSL bonding with MLPPPoA.  I have no love for
routers that aren't 100% FOSS, but I couldn't find any other existing
router platform which could be extended with 3rd-party physical
interface modules, and designing and building my own base router chassis
is not a viable option if I want to actually have something built before
the Sun swells into a red giant and engulfs the Earth.

At least for IPv6 features, that feature gap only happens with Juniper
EX. All other Juniper gear has, according to them, IPv6 feature parity
within all license levels and packages.



Rubens


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