nanog mailing list archives

Re: Dual Homed BGP for failover


From: Randy Carpenter <rcarpen () network1 net>
Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2011 16:28:01 -0500 (EST)


I would be hesitant to do full tables on an SRX210, particularly if you only have an SRX210B with 512MB of RAM. I'm not 
sure what filtering would do in terms of memory usage, because I have not tried it. I generally put a separate edge 
device in to handle the upstream and BGP, and use the SRX purely for firewall.  You can even have completely redundant 
edge routers and redundant firewalls, and mesh them with iBGP.  This is the setup we are using in our office (2 Cisco 
2821 routers on the edge, and 2 Juniper SRX240H firewalls right behind them). Since each of the 2 uplinks we have are 
ethernet, I have both routers connected to both providers. This gives us ultimate redundancy at very low cost.

-Randy

--
| Randy Carpenter
| Vice President - IT Services
| Red Hat Certified Engineer
| First Network Group, Inc.
| (800)578-6381, Opt. 1
----

----- Original Message -----
On 1/18/2011 1:00 PM, William Herrin wrote:
IMO, that would be a mistake. Taking significantly less than a full
table severely limits your options for balancing traffic between the
links.


It should also be noted that taking a full table, doesn't mean you
have
to use the full table. Apply filters to smaller routes or long ASPATHs
that you don't want, and then assign preferences, communities,
prepends,
etc as necessary for the routes you actually accept.

This means your sync time is longer and you'll have more updates, but
it
will still keep the local routing table much lower.


Jack


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