There are two distinctly different PFR features. 
Pfr2. Circa 2010-present used automate IPsla probes and attempted to control 
protect and load balance traffic by adjusting route costs.  It could also route 
 specific traffic classes over different paths.  

Pfr3 is a much much different animal.  This is built into the border router 
input forwarding path.  Uses the perfmon features of the routers to track 
latency loss drop jitter etc. 

We are rolling this out this year. 
First for brownout detection. Then to  shift some traffic off mpls and onto 
Internet. 

Pfr3 is very dmvpn oriented.   Doesn't 'need' dmvpn, but it's clear that's 
where the focus is.  Dmvpn allows a common overlay on mpls and Internet and pfr 
does the smart quality aware routing. 
This is Ciscos new iwan architecture. Lots of focus. 

What we have found. ....
Only one wan facing link/tunnelper router/ per vrf.  This is a real pita for 
me, but probably not for service providers as each client would likely be 
vrf'd. 


Watch Jean Marc latest Berlin Cisco live pitches.  Always good.  
Lots of other iwan info there as well. 


Sent from my iPhone

> On Mar 24, 2016, at 1:09 PM, Arie Vayner <ar...@vayner.net> wrote:
> 
> Cisco has put a lot of effort into this functionality in the last 2 years.
> I would suggest looking at IWAN:
> http://www.cisco.com/c/dam/en/us/td/docs/solutions/CVD/Jan2015/CVD-IWANDesignGuide-JAN15.pdf
> 
> Arie
> 
>> On Thu, Mar 24, 2016 at 9:57 AM Saku Ytti <s...@ytti.fi> wrote:
>> 
>>> On 24 March 2016 at 18:34, Joel M Snyder <joel.sny...@opus1.com> wrote:
>>> I designed it into a network of about 90 sites (global, not US) and it
>> was
>>> not a resounding success.  The management was ugly, but more importantly
>> it
>>> just didn't play well with others and at some clear points wasn't
>> working at
>>> all.  It was pulled out in favor of a WAN opt solution (Cisco WaaS
>> appliance
>>> in that case).  I reviewed it again and did some testing for a larger
>>> network of 400+ sites recently, but the feature set wasn't measuring up
>> to
>>> the requirements and the customer stuck Riverbeds ahead of the IOS boxes
>> and
>>> is quite happy with the results.
>> 
>> Looks like PfR is lot more than just IP SLA udp jitter/icmp probe +
>> tracking. My comments were strictly on that, I've not done the
>> controller based PfR.
>> 
>> --
>>  ++ytti
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