Both the inside and outside interfaces are on the same  NPE-G1 card.

Thanks,

On 2/10/2014 10:40 AM, Alain Hebert wrote:
     I have one but I never ran that much BW thru mine.

     But the CPU usage is what will kill you.

     Also the entire platform is rate for 1.8Gbs aggregated which mean
depending on which interface you have, and which bus they are connected
to, 900Mbps might be its limit.

-----
Alain Hebert                                aheb...@pubnix.net
PubNIX Inc.
50 boul. St-Charles
P.O. Box 26770     Beaconsfield, Quebec     H9W 6G7
Tel: 514-990-5911  http://www.pubnix.net    Fax: 514-990-9443

On 02/10/14 10:30, Remco Bressers wrote:
On 02/10/2014 04:17 PM, Vlade Ristevski wrote:
We are looking to double the bandwidth on one of our circuits from 300Mbps to 
600Mbps. We currently use a Cisco 7206VXR with an NPE-G1 card. These seem like 
very popular routers so I'm hoping a few
people on this list have them deployed. If you or a customer have these 
deployed, how much bandwidth have you seen them handle? This will be handling 
dorm traffic at a college so it's mostly download.
The 7206 handles our 300 Mbps circuit just fine, but we are moving it to our 
600Mbps circuit. At peak we've seen the following numbers for that circuit:


   30 second input rate 559982000 bits/sec, 55809 packets/sec
   30 second output rate 55429000 bits/sec, 32598 packets/sec
      267756984712 packets input, 333325152556755 bytes, 0 no buffer

This is the interface that connects to our provider. As you can see its almost 
all download traffic. Our ASR1002 handles it without a sweat but I'm a little 
skeptical of whether the 7206 will hold up.
This depends on multiple variables. The 7200 is a single-CPU platform where CPU 
can go sky-high when using features like ACL's, QoS, IPv6 and you name it.. 
Also, changing from IOS 12.4 to 15 increased
our CPU usage with another 10%+. Stick to the bare minimum of features you 
really need and you will be fine.

Regards,

Remco Bressers
Signet B.V.







--
Vlad


Reply via email to