nanog mailing list archives

Re: Arista Routing Solutions


From: Saku Ytti <saku () ytti fi>
Date: Sun, 24 Apr 2016 09:25:47 -0700

On 24 April 2016 at 09:08, Colton Conor <colton.conor () gmail com> wrote:

Hey,

I guess you are right the QFX10002-36Q is probably a better comparison. But
let's be honest, Juniper is not going to sell a QFX10002-36Q for less than
$20k like Arista will do for a semi- similar box. Even with a high discount
(like 90 percent off list), the Juniper QFX10002-36Q at $360k list price
comes nowhere close on the price point. Cisco, Juniper, ALU, etc are all not
going to see a low cost high density fixed switch because that would
cannibalize on their sales on the larger platforms. I really think Arista is
kind of unique here as they don't have another routing platform to
cannibalize, so they are competitively pricing their platform.

20k seems a stretch, that's like 94.5% discount, it's not unheard off.
If you have volume, I would imagine it being doable.

So I guess the question becomes, what features are missing that Arista does
not currently have? They seems to be adding more and more features, and
taking more market share. Here is a list of features supported:
https://www.arista.com/en/support/product-documentation/supported-features I
have not personally used Arista myself, but I like what I am seeing as far
as price point, company culture, and repruatation in the market place. I
know their switching is solid, but I am not sure about their routing.

Yeah they are ccertainly much behind in features, but if you don't
need those features, it's probably actually an advantage. For my
use-cases Arista's MPLS stack is not there.

Arista claims to have much, much faster BGP convergence time than all the
other vendors.

I wouldn't be surprised, but honestly the competition does not set the
bar high there.

-- 
  ++ytti


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