Great, thanks for all the feedback. These guys are only internet routers, basic edge filtering enabled and that's about it. We have DDOS services through ISP, so hopefully that'll help a bit if there is an attack that comes through.
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 5:58 PM, Bob McCouch <[email protected]> wrote: > Also note that in testing of basic CEF forwarding, I've pumped 300+ Mb/s > through a 1941. Wouldn't necessarily design to that (!), but fact is they > can do a fair amount. When Cisco "sizes" a 1941 for a 10 Mb circuit or > whatever, they're doing that assuming you've turned on pretty much every > service and protocol possible. > > > On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 5:46 PM, Ryan Jensen <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi All, >> I'm about to bring up peerings with two ISPs. Today, I have two peerings >> with 1 ISP, only sending me 1 default route. >> I'm dropping a circuit and bringing in another ISP circuit. I have a >> requirement to load-balance across the two circuits, hence the need for >> full tables. Let BGP do its thing and pick the best path to the >> destination. >> >> Question: >> I have a pair of 2921, one on each circuit, each with maxed 2.5gb Ram. >> Am I crazy to think these routers will handle the full tables? My current >> ISP just told me we're looking at just a bit over 490k routes. >> _______________________________________________ >> Free CCIE R&S, Collaboration, Data Center, Wireless & Security Videos :: >> >> iPexpert on YouTube: www.youtube.com/ipexpertinc >> > > _______________________________________________ Free CCIE R&S, Collaboration, Data Center, Wireless & Security Videos :: iPexpert on YouTube: www.youtube.com/ipexpertinc
