Facebook is for losers. Forums are for closers. ;) On Apr 16, 2016 9:21 AM, "Mike Hammett" <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
If you were on FB, the TBW page would be a great venue. ;-)
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com
Midwest Internet Exchange http://www.midwest-ix.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Josh Reynolds" <josh@kyneticwifi.com> To: "Andrew Thrift" <andrew@networklabs.co.nz> Cc: "NANOG" <nanog@nanog.org> Sent: Saturday, April 16, 2016 9:12:13 AM Subject: Re: 10G-capable customer router recommendations?
You might ask Normis about that :) It has nothing to do with fastpath, and isn't scheduled to be fixed until 7.x when many features are rewritten to take advantage of multiple tile cores.
Currently each port is pinned to a single cpu (affinity) due to latency and performance reasons - but yes there are drawbacks when your per core clock is still in 1GHz territory.
If you want to talk more about this, we can discuss.offlist or on the Mikrotik forum. On Apr 16, 2016 12:51 AM, "Andrew Thrift" <andrew@networklabs.co.nz> wrote:
This has not been the case for at least a year now.
Most Mikrotik routers now support FastPath/FastTrack. This is kind of like CEF in Cisco land.
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Fast_Path
http://wiki.mikrotik.com/wiki/Manual:Wiki/Fasttrack On 16/04/2016 10:07 am, "Josh Reynolds" <josh@kyneticwifi.com> wrote:
Can't do more than 1Gbps per flow. Not suitable for this application. On Apr 15, 2016 5:03 PM, <mike.lyon@gmail.com> wrote:
Check out the Mikrotik Cloud Core routers, they make them with SFP+ support now. I have one of them with 10g deployed right now.
-Mike
On Apr 15, 2016, at 14:52, Aaron <aaron@wholesaleinternet.net> wrote:
Not a lot of 10G capable CPEs out there. For our 10G residential customers we install Brocade ICXs.
Aaron
On 4/15/2016 3:18 PM, David Sotnick wrote: Hello masters of the Internet,
I was recently asked to set up networking at a VIP's home where he has Comcast "Gigabit Pro" service, which is delivered on a 10G-SR MM port on a Comcast-supplied Juniper ACX-2100 router.
Which customer router would you suggest for such a setup? It needs to do IPv4 NAT, DHCP, IPv4+IPv6 routing and have a decent L4 firewall (that also supports IPv6).
The customer pays for "2Gb" service (Comcast caps this at 2G+10% = 2.2Gbps) and would like to get what he pays for (*cough*) by having the ability to stream two 1Gbps streams (or at least achieve > 1.0Gbps).
I'm tempted to get another ACX-2100 and do a 4x1Gb LACP port-channel to the customer switch, or replace the AV-integrator-installed Cisco SG300-52P (Cisco switch with e.g. an EX-3300 with 10Gb uplinks).
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
-Dave
-- ================================================================ Aaron Wendel Chief Technical Officer Wholesale Internet, Inc. (AS 32097) (816)550-9030 http://www.wholesaleinternet.com ================================================================