I couldn't find anything that said the 7500 is end-of-life/support/etc... This is all I found on their site regarding the 7500: End-of-Sale/End-of-Life: FEIP2-DSW-2TX & FEIP2-DSW-2FX 09/Jul/2003 End of Sale/End of Life: SA-ENCRYPT Services Adapter 31/Mar/2003 End of Sales - VIP2-50, No. 1868 20/Aug/2002 End of Sales: Route Switch Processor 2, No. 1866 20/Aug/2002 End of Sales: SRPIP-OC12, No. 1867 20/Aug/2002 I know it doesn't answer your question, but it appears that the 7500 is still on the list. -jay
-----Original Message----- From: Ray Wong [mailto:rayw@rayw.net] Sent: Monday, September 15, 2003 2:07 PM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: list thoughts on "unsupported" hardware?
I realize this isn't arguing about Windows patch mechanisms, but recently realized I've never answered this issue to my own satisfaction... How long do we keep upgrading and using network hardware once it's fallen off the support lists? The Cisco 7500 finally went off back in Feb of this year, as I recall. 3rd party upgrades, and used parts, are still readily available.
(Actually, does anyone have suggestions on vendors for said upgrades and parts? I've noticed a lot more discounting than in the past, but usually from vendors I have no experience with).
A client I've recently taken on happens to be relying on a 7500 for their border. In reality, their current use could fit on a 2621/2650, though they have been much larger in the past (there's a small pile of DS3 cards sitting on the shelf). They're still relying on a single provider for connectivity, etc.
So, does anyone have any thoughts on how long we should be letting our poorer customers/employers live with products that are officially off the support lists? Clearly there will be (i.e. IOS) image support for quite some time. Is keeping (tested) spares around sufficient to justify actually spending some money to fit the newer/larger images? Newer/still current hardware seems much more a no-brainer, but advocating spending a thousand bucks to avoid spending 5x that on a more current fire-sale item is a little less clear, to me.
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Ray Wong rayw@rayw.net