Re: Hardware for full mesh bgp
* Brad Knowles <brad.knowles@skynet.be> [2004-04-25 18:16]:
* Henning Brauer <hb-nanog@bsws.de> [2004-04-25 18:04]:
check this out: http://somewhere.whereever/pic.jpg eek. that should have been http://misc.bsws.de/img_1001.jpg Okay, so you've got the picture now. However, I'm sure that some
At 6:09 PM -0700 2004/04/25, Henning Brauer wrote: people are going to be interested in more details on the hardware -- you might want to tell them it's a Soekris net4501, or whatever.
it's a 4801.
Also, are you using the crypto accelerator for calculating the MD5 hashes?
no, we have no cards here currently.
yes, one can use freebsd as a router. and i think it's kick-ass that md5 tcp is being worked to freebsd's normal level of support. thank you! but we need to not lose sight that the flavors of isps is a bi-modal distribution; it's the labor/capex trade-off. in my daytime-job network, hi-touch is just not a scalable option, it's five nines and hands off. and i have to say that different commercial router vendors vary in quality and reliability. i rofl over the discussion here of using antique cisco 750Xes. in my personal research rack, it's a high-touch hodge-podge, commercial routers, freebsd routers, and small routing toys <http://wildlab.com/>. and this weekend i spent six++ hours cleaning up a mess due to the colo provider being too cheap to get both a/b power from the carrier hotel, so the one circuit made a mess. even in the developing economies, where labor is even cheaper than here in george's economic disaster, folk trying to build and maintain real commercial isps use real commercial routers. and yes, they cost too <bleeping> much, are too large, take too much power, and blow more heat than a vendor engineer blows smoke. randy
* Randy Bush <randy@psg.com> [2004-04-25 19:16]:
yes, one can use freebsd as a router. and i think it's kick-ass that md5 tcp is being worked to freebsd's normal level of support. thank you!
You're welcome, but our code goes to the OpenBSD reporsitory before the others can pick it up.
even in the developing economies, where labor is even cheaper than here in george's economic disaster, folk trying to build and maintain real commercial isps use real commercial routers. and yes, they cost too <bleeping> much, are too large, take too much power, and blow more heat than a vendor engineer blows smoke.
My main issue with those big commercial routers, especially those from this San Jose based company, is the quality of their software. -- Henning Brauer, BS Web Services, http://bsws.de hb@bsws.de - henning@openbsd.org Unix is very simple, but it takes a genius to understand the simplicity. (Dennis Ritchie)
You're welcome, but our code goes to the OpenBSD reporsitory before the others can pick it up.
whoops! apologies to openbsd!
My main issue with those big commercial routers, especially those from this San Jose based company, is the quality of their software.
quality? what quality? randy
participants (2)
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Henning Brauer
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Randy Bush