On 10/31/18 6:30 PM, Ryan Hamel wrote:
140K IPv6 equates to about 560K IPv4 routes, leaving the end user with 940K 
IPv4, which is not a lot of ceiling space considering we're at 741K IPv4 + and 
60K IPv6 (240k IPv4 equivalent) now (941K total). This will leave you with 
559K. I am not sure what the OP has for peering but with trying to keep 20% of 
TCAM space free, and keeping up with the current rate of rise according to 
CIDR-report, I'd say 4 years product lifetime if the OS has excellent TCAM 
management.

I'm actually in the process of spec'ing one of these (if indeed it's appropriate) for a limited full-Internet-routes application and indeed these are the questions I've been asking of my rep.

On "classic Netiron" (MLX, etc.) the numbers they often quoted were actually somewhat pessimistic in that they were one of their stock TCAM profiles, and you actually ended up with BOTH the IPv4 and IPv6 route counts simultaneously.


Considering how the device looks like a switch and the SLX9850 uses Broadcom 
sillicon, I'm thinking it must use the Jericho chipset or some variant to get 
that kind of performance. In the end, your mileage may vary.

I want to say it's a Qumran. They apparently have a bigger SLX pizzabox in the works that claims 4M IPv4 FIB and some stupid amount of buffering (8GB IIRC?). I know that's a Qumran, but that also seems like a truly huge amount of TCAM, so I dunno if that's with "typical aggregation" or some other shady trick.
--
Brandon Martin

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