Re: gigabit router (was Re: Getting a "portable" /19 or /20)
Craig Partridge writes: [on gigabit routers from small collections of off the shelf parts] | go ahead and build one. At minimum, we'll all learn something from your | experience and hey, you might succeed. Craig, for those of us with flaky memories, or who have just never run into DARPA stuff, do you have a pointer (e.g. URL) to your work in this area? Sean.
In message <20010411021318.74E5BC790B@cesium.clock.org>, Sean M. Doran writes:
Craig, for those of us with flaky memories, or who have just never run into DARPA stuff, do you have a pointer (e.g. URL) to your work in this ar ea?
Hi Sean: Not all of it, alas, has been published (some of the work is for corporate clients). However, on my web page (www.ir.bbn.com/~craig) is a pointer to our paper on a 50 Gbps router, which was one of the earliest multigigabit routers built. Other activities in this vein but not published include an ATM switch implemented on a PC (c. 1992), and much more recent work on route lookups, and various alterations to the packet forwarding path (e.g. for efficiency and packet tracing). Craig
I have an FYI on a piece of the 32.0.0.0/8 network, but I don't know if this is still IBM's territory or AT&T's. If anyone out there has got enable authority on boxes living on or between 32.71.191.0/24 through 32.224.0.0/12 please bounce me an email off list at bradly@sbrmc.org Thanks. -bradly
participants (3)
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Craig Partridge
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smd@clock.org
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Walters