Heh. Host naming discussions is like religion and politics at parties. It only leads to someone going home crying, red wine spilled all over their new dress, and a black eye. Not in that order. -r On Sat, Mar 13, 2010 at 10:47:28AM -0500, Paul Stewart wrote:
Hi Folks...
With many changes going on this year in our network, I figured it's a good time to revisit our naming conventions used in our networks.
Today, we use the following example:
Core1-rtr-to-ge1-1-1-vl20.nexicom.net
Core box #1, rtr=router, to=location, ge1-1-1=interface, vl20=vlan etc etc....
Going forward, I'd like to examine a better method to identify the devices.... does anyone have published standards on what they use or that of other networks and maybe even why they chose those methods? The core of the network is fairly easy for us to look at different changes where you have interfaces, subinterfaces, locations etc. to deal with.
But what do folks do for "aggregation devices" such as dial-up shelves, BAS devices etc?
Finally, we have a fair amount of gear (that we own) at customer premises that act as either a managed device or a demarcation point .... how to you name those today?
Open ended questions obviously - looking for many ideas.
;)
Paul
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