Oleg, you raise valid concerns; and I recognize that I jumped in with a recommendation without asking the appropriate qualifying questions. (i.e., "What kind of question are you trying to answer?") Things that Netsys can do: * Collect and/or model observed BGP tables, and their redistribution into IGPs. * Evaluate and validate connectivity. * Quantify the size of the effective BGP tables. * Detect many BGP configuration errors * Provide explanations, and recommendations for resolution for some common configuration or connectiviy problems Things that it doesn't do: * Model/Estimate router memory requirements * Attempt to quantify transient conditions, or their effect on router CPU utilization I'm personally curious as to exactly what kind of question Jon is trying to answer ... Hope this helps. cheers --- Sean At 07:27 PM 7/10/98 +0400, Oleg Tabarovsky wrote:
Hmm, I'm not sure that Jon will be satisfied by pure modeling. I understand that he is willing to inject either random or actual core size routing tables into real lab network. Netsys will be not of much help in this case. (Say if you want to monitor CPU load figures depending on route flap or memory occupied by paths from 3 peers). Another issue: IMHO, Netsys is not right tool for modeling ISP networks at all. If you have arguments to convince me - I'll be glad to get them.
Jon Green originally wrote:
Does anyone know of a way to simulate about three BGP peers with full Internet routing tables in a lab environment? Preferably this would be something I could run on a Sparc.