nanog mailing list archives
Re: The Making of a Router
From: Warren Bailey <wbailey () satelliteintelligencegroup com>
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 2013 17:21:11 +0000
Not to mention the fact that this "router" will require support. The build before buy people are silly. Let the smart router guys do their thing and use their box accordingly. When it breaks call to inform them it broke and they will fix it. Diy projects are a nightmare to support. Sent from my Mobile Device. -------- Original message -------- From: Eric Clark <cabenth () gmail com> Date: 12/26/2013 8:00 AM (GMT-09:00) To: Faisal Imtiaz <faisal () snappytelecom net> Cc: nanog () nanog org Subject: Re: The Making of a Router I also wonder about re-inventing the wheel. The router part is easy, you could even do that with a windows box (that's a joke). Obviously capital cost is part of it, but the man hours involved in doing what you're talking about, especially since you are talking about a telco.... whatever you come up with has to be pretty darn reliable... Certainly would be interested in a little more information about the use case. Eric On Dec 26, 2013, at 8:46 AM, Faisal Imtiaz <faisal () snappytelecom net> wrote:
I am a believer of not having to re-invent the wheel... Having said that.. have you looked at 'purpose built appliances' e.g. http://www.lannerinc.com/ http://us.axiomtek.com/ If you are looking for a full router.... Consider such as these... http://www.linktechs.net/ http://www.maxxwave.com/ and there are a few others but the concept is the same Personally, I am not a believer in making a single device be the do all / end all of everything.. While one can do everything on a big server .. however breaking things out e.g. voip trans-coding and routing make maintenance, availability, and ability to create redundancy much more practical. Regards Faisal Imtiaz Snappy Internet & Telecom ----- Original Message -----From: "Nick Cameo" <symack () gmail com> To: nanog () nanog org Sent: Thursday, December 26, 2013 11:33:13 AM Subject: The Making of a Router Hello Everyone, We are looking to put together a 2u server with a few PCIe 3 x8 (recommendations appreciated). The router will take a voip transcoding line card, and will act as an edge router for a telecom company. For things like BGP (Quagga, Zebra, all that lovely stuff!!!), static routes, and firewall capabilities we are thinking gentoo linux stripped for sure however, what about the BSDs? FreeBSD or OpenBSD. Any comments, feedback, does, and don'ts are much appreciated. Kind Regards, Nick.
Current thread:
- The Making of a Router Nick Cameo (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Faisal Imtiaz (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Eric Clark (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Warren Bailey (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Matt Palmer (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Nick Cameo (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Jay Ashworth (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Eric Clark (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Faisal Imtiaz (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Jared Mauch (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Seth Mattinen (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Faisal Imtiaz (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Seth Mattinen (Dec 26)
- Re: The Making of a Router Jared Mauch (Dec 26)