Those boxes have no fabric to connect to which makes it appear to double the 
bw. The onboard 10G ports are the connections that would otherwise go to the 
scb's. 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 28, 2016, at 4:21 PM, Adam Vitkovsky <adam.vitkov...@gamma.co.uk> wrote:

>> Mike [mailto:mike+j...@willitsonline.com]
>> Sent: Thursday, July 28, 2016 5:09 PM
>> To: Adam Vitkovsky; juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net
>> Subject: Re: [j-nsp] juniper router reccomendations
>> 
>>> On 07/28/2016 12:50 AM, Adam Vitkovsky wrote:
>>> 
>>> And on how effective is the NPU's lookup process, that is how
>>> effective is the actual lookup algorithm with CPU cycles and memory
>>> accesses, some NPUs can even offload complex lookup tasks to a
>>> specialized chip.
>> 
>> I appreciate your presence on other forums, but I'm pretty sure nobody here
>> needs a basic explanation of how modern router platforms work. If you
>> missed it, the question was specifically about juniper and bang for the buck
>> and routing bgp on 10g and filtering.
>> 
>> Some folks helpfully suggested using strategies to to decrease the required
>> size of the FIB, potentially meaning a lower box could do that job. That has
>> some merit, as the OP was right in that for this job I don't really care 
>> about
>> timbuktu more as whats 'close' to my two ip transit providers. I know nothing
>> of juniper and I'm just wondering if
>> MX80 is enough box for this or if I need to go higher up in the food chain. 
>> The
>> one iptransit provider at my 'A' location appears to originate about 20
>> networks from various netblocks and this would be easy to statically enter
>> into config while accepting defaults from both, achieving the same net 
>> result.
> Ok let me dial back a notch then.
> You mentioned you need DoS filtering.
> Good DoS filters can get really complex and long (hence IDS/IPS systems 
> exist).
> Complex filters cripple router's performance.
> Bottom line, depending on the complexity of DoS filters and pps rate, going 
> with the cheapest box might not cut it.
> Hope you got my drift this time around.
> 
> But to answer your question filtering 10G in and routing 1G out, there's a 
> pretty good chance you'll be fine on MX80/MX104.
> Though as others have pointed out, how swift or scalable is the control-plane 
> is another thing to consider.
> 
> PS:
> Just out of interest, would you folks know if MX80 and MX104 have a Gen2 
> Trio? (80Gbps per single PFE seems like Gen2, unless they are doing something 
> "smart" with multiple LUs on one XM).
> 
> 
> adam
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>        Adam V

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