nanog mailing list archives

Re: High throughput bgp links using gentoo + stipped kernel


From: Nick Khamis <symack () gmail com>
Date: Sun, 19 May 2013 10:58:54 -0400

On 5/18/13, Michael McConnell <michael () winkstreaming com> wrote:
Hello Nick,

Your email is pretty generic, the likelihood of anyone being able to provide
any actual help or advice is pretty low. I suggest you check out Vyatta.org,
its an Open Source router solution that uses Quagga for its underlying BGP
management, and if you desire you can purpose a support package a few grand
a year.

Cheers,
Mike

--

Michael McConnell
WINK Streaming;
email: michael () winkstreaming com
phone: +1 312 281-5433 x 7400
cell: +506 8706-2389
skype: wink-michael
web: http://winkstreaming.com

On May 18, 2013, at 9:39 AM, Nick Khamis <symack () gmail com> wrote:

Hello Everyone,

We are running:

Gentoo Server on Dual Core Intel Xeon 3060, 2 Gb Ram
Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82571EB Gigabit Ethernet
Controller (rev 06)
Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82573E Gigabit Ethernet
Controller (rev 03)

2 bgp links from different providers using quagga, iptables etc....

We are transmitting an average of 700Mbps with packet sizes upwards of
900-1000 bytes when the traffic graph begins to flatten. We also start
experiencing some crashes at that point, and not have been able to
pinpoint that either.

I was hoping to get some feedback on what else we can strip from the
kernel. If you have a similar setup for a stable platform the .config
would be great!

Also, what are your thoughts on migrating to OpenBSD and bgpd, not
sure if there would be a performance increase, but the security would
be even more stronger?

Kind Regards,

Nick





Hello Michael,

I totally understand how my question is generic in nature. I will
defiantly take a look at Vyatta, and weigh the effort vs. benefit
topic. The purpose of my email is to see how people with similar
setups managed to get more out of their system using kernel tweaks or
further stripping on their OS. In our case, we are using Gentoo.

Nick.


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