I'm not sure about that. Not sure about the legal action side but the stolen source part I think there's some background to.


-----Original Message----- From: John Gill
Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 5:36 PM
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] just installed a Huawei...

I don't think foundry was sued or stated that they stopped shipping
stolen IOS source.

John Gill
cisco


On 7/27/11 4:52 PM, Scott Granados wrote:
How does this differ from what Foundry did? :) The CLI in the fast iron
or server iron gear for example is pretty damn similar. The "router bgp"
commands were absolutely the same and the only difference was the way
that foundry named interfaces. (ethernet x/x instead of distinguishing
between gig / fast E etc). Route-maps, basic routing, and I'd say 95% of
the interface was a rip off of IOS. Even down to show ver.:)

Something about Flattery or some such!

Scott




-----Original Message----- From: Tom Storey
Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 4:20 PM
To: scubac...@gmail.com
Cc: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] just installed a Huawei...

Huawei got into a bit of trouble a couple of years back. Cisco sued them
for
copying their CLI, claiming that it gave them an unfair cost advantage by
requiring less investment in training, or some such. But they also found
that the Huawei manuals contained large slabs of text copied seemingly word
for word (bar s/Cisco/Huawei) from Cisco manuals/website.

Can you post a full config (sans passwords/etc) so we can really see how
"different" it is? Maybe some CLI outputs too? :-)


On 26 July 2011 05:51, Rogelio <scubac...@gmail.com> wrote:

Not sure if it's any interest of this group, but I just installed a
Huawei CX600 router this last week.

It's like Cisco quality (garbage!) for the price that Cisco should be
(low!). The commands are very similar (e.g. switchport -> portswitch,
no shut -> undo shut, etc), and you configure it almost identical to
what you'd expect on a Cisco.

The worst part about the Huawei is probably the documentation. It's
scattered all over the place, so if you want something simple (like
telnet access), it's in a completely different PDF than if you want,
say, VLAN configuration commands. Finding it all is a huge scavenger
hunt.

But hey...for like a 1/4 of the price or whatever (so I've heard), I'd
say it's worth it. :b


--
Also on LinkedIn? Feel free to connect if you too are an open
networker: scubac...@gmail.com

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