nanog mailing list archives

Re: The Making of a Router


From: Ray Soucy <rps () maine edu>
Date: Fri, 27 Dec 2013 19:13:05 -0500

It seems to be a pretty "hot button" issue, but I feel that modern hardware
is more than capable of pushing packets.  The old wisdom of "only hardware
can do it efficiently" is starting to prove untrue.  10G might still be a
challenge (I haven't tested), but 1G is not even close to being an issue.
 Depending on the target for your deployment, it might make sense to
whitebox a router or firewall instead of spending 20K on it.  Especially if
you're working with any kind of scale.

TL;DR I think the backlash against anything but big iron routing is
becoming an old way of thinking.



On Fri, Dec 27, 2013 at 6:56 PM, Jon Sands <fohdeesha () gmail com> wrote:

On 12/27/2013 4:23 PM, Matt Palmer wrote:

There *is* a world outside of Silly Valley, you know... a world where
money doesn't flow like a mighty cascade from the benevolent wallets of
vulture capitalists, into the waiting arms of every crackpot with an
elevator pitch. - Matt


Yes, and in that world, one should probably not start up a FTTH ISP when
one has not even budgeted for a router, among a thousand other things. And
if you must, you should probably figure out your cost breakdown beforehand,
not after. Baldur, you mention $200k total to move 10gb with Juniper (which
seems insanely off to me). Look into Brocades CER line, you can move 4x
10gbe per chassis for under 12k.

--
Jon Sands




-- 
Ray Patrick Soucy
Network Engineer
University of Maine System

T: 207-561-3526
F: 207-561-3531

MaineREN, Maine's Research and Education Network
www.maineren.net


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