Hi Ytti / Colton, ASR9001-RP cisco ASR9K Series (P4040) processor with 8388608K bytes of memory. P4040 processor at 1500MHz, Revision 3.0
This box ist only available as SE (service enhanced) version. A9K-RSP440-SE cisco ASR9K Series (Intel 686 F6M14S4) processor with 12582912K bytes of memory. Intel 686 F6M14S4 processor at 2135MHz, Revision 2.174 There is a TR (transport) version with half the memory: http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/routers/asr-9000-series-aggregation-services-routers/data_sheet_c78-674143.html A9K-RSP880-SE cisco ASR9K Series (Intel 686 F6M14S4) processor with 33554432K bytes of memory. Intel 686 F6M14S4 processor at 1904MHz, Revision 2.174 There is a TR (transport) version with half the memory: http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/products/collateral/routers/asr-9000-series-aggregation-services-routers/datasheet-c78-733763.html As AS9001 and AS9006/9010 have a different cpu architecture as MX104 and MX240/480/960 the comparison is not easy just by the type of the cpu itself. -- Sebastian Becker s...@lab.dtag.de > Am 18.02.2016 um 16:06 schrieb Saku Ytti <s...@ytti.fi>: > > > On 18 February 2016 at 16:21, Colton Conor <colton.co...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hey Colton, > >> What processor is in the Cisco 9001, and how does it compare to a MX104 in >> terms of speed and BGP Performance? > > ASR9001 is P4040 on RP, lower single core performance than MX104 > P5021. But the problem this thread addresses is not a problem IOS-XR > has. > >> What about a Cisco 9010 ASR9K Route Switch Processor with 440G/slot Fabric >> and 6GB? > > RSP440 is 4 core Intel, at about 2GHz. I'm actually sure which > specific Intel CPU. > > -- > ++ytti > _______________________________________________ > juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp