RE: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-22 Thread Heath_Dieckert


Based on our testing it looks like it all has to do with packet size.  With
small packets the throughput is very low.  With what Cisco calls an
internet mix of packet sizes throughput is much better.  When doing max
MTU packets, the throughput is of course the best.  

Also remember that Cisco as well as most other vendors advertise one way
traffic only.  If you have traffic on the return path, that counts against
their numbers.

So 40 pps one way is the same to them as 20 pps both ways.

Interesting thread

Thanks.



-Original Message-
From: Gary [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 12:12 AM
To: Adam Rothschild
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming
back)



Adam:

 [...] Sort of like buying a GbE interface for a 7200 (It only get's
  10% throughput...  Why waste the money, just buy FE!).

 How did the Foundry test lab arrive at those figures, and what
 substances were consumed at the time?

I used a Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400.  I used two different 7200's with the
exact same results.  Bidirectional throughput on 1GbE is a fraction above
10%.  Unidirectional is a bit better (23%).  Singl line ACL drops it to 8%
(permit ip any any).  FE performance doesn't start to drop below line rate
until you put more than two in the box.  I have a powerpoint if you'd like
it, but it is not meant to slander Cisco, just to convince my customers NOT
to put GbE in a 7200!  It is not a GbE platform!




RE: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-22 Thread Ralph Doncaster


 Based on our testing it looks like it all has to do with packet size.  With
 small packets the throughput is very low.  With what Cisco calls an
 internet mix of packet sizes throughput is much better.  When doing max
 MTU packets, the throughput is of course the best.  

The other thing I've found about traffic type is how sensitive
netflow is.  I was running it for a while, then I got a co-lo customer
that had a lot of UDP traffic with small packet sizes and rarely more than
a few packets between the same src/dest ip/port (much like DNS
queries).  It was enough to flatline the box and cause it to crash.

-Ralph




RE: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-22 Thread Daniska Tomas


did you do netflow switching or cef + netflow accounting that time?

--
 
Tomas Daniska
systems engineer
Tronet Computer Networks
Plynarenska 5, 829 75 Bratislava, Slovakia
tel: +421 2 58224111, fax: +421 2 58224199
 
A transistor protected by a fast-acting fuse will protect the fuse by blowing first.



 -Original Message-
 From: Ralph Doncaster [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
 Sent: 22. mája 2002 16:15
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market 
 must be coming back)
 
 
 
  Based on our testing it looks like it all has to do with 
 packet size.  With
  small packets the throughput is very low.  With what Cisco calls an
  internet mix of packet sizes throughput is much better.  
 When doing max
  MTU packets, the throughput is of course the best.  
 
 The other thing I've found about traffic type is how sensitive
 netflow is.  I was running it for a while, then I got a co-lo customer
 that had a lot of UDP traffic with small packet sizes and 
 rarely more than
 a few packets between the same src/dest ip/port (much like DNS
 queries).  It was enough to flatline the box and cause it to crash.
 
 -Ralph
 
 



RE: The business side of the coin. WAS RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-22 Thread Marc Pierrat

 How long has this company been in business?
 Are they using open standards?
 Do they have knowledgeable tech support?
 ..and so on.  

Good startups make great partners, and a great partner will have crisp and compelling 
answers to these questions that CFO-types like, even before you start to ask them.  
Even so: you might not have needed such performance anyway, since your situation might 
have been risk_of_brand_name  risk_of_better_performance. (There's always a risk to 
choosing the "safe" alternative, but established vendors go through great lengths to 
make sure you don't see them.)
This topic brings to mind a phrase I once read:

"Truth and Technology will Triumph over Bullshit and Bureaucracy."
-- PanAmSat's slogan(mantra?) as a startup, often accompanied by an image of Spot, 
dutifully lifting his leg to the competition (other interpretations abound)


RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-21 Thread Gary


Chance:

  that want 4 X 10 GbE on each module (8 slot chassis).  I
  expect this will be a perfect 40G throughput since I've never
  seen us do anything less than perfect (been working here
  since August).

 Oh phuleeese Stop drinking your own Kool-Aid(tm). To honestly
 suggest that Foundry, or any other vendor for that matter, never does
 'anything less than perfect' is nothing less than idiotic. If Foundry
 does things so 'perfect' why do they have a TAC? Why do they have bugs?
 Why do they even need to release new software ever again? Obviously what
 is out now will solve every possible issue - its 'perfect' right? The
 only possible answer according to your logic, is to support customers
 who are 'doing it wrong' and need to be educated.

Topic is performance.  Not sugary beverages.  Sorry for not making that
clear.  Let me reword.  My bad:  perfect performance on 10GbE.  I believe
I also mentioned our 8G per slot throughput limitation not to mislead people
to think we do 10GbE non-blocking.  Same limitation as the Cat6500 once it
gets up to speed.

 Go find the nice black shirts that were passed out at Foundry's last
 Kool-Aid fest. You are in obvious need of one. This is NOT the place to
 post vendor FUD. All you are doing is making Foundry look bad, and
 making yourself look even worse.

Didn't you pass out those shirts?  Everything I posted concerning
performance of 10GbE I saw for myself.  All other information was publicly
available and concerns operators interested in 10GbE.  Many of them are
unaware of their options and I wanted to bring Foundry to light.

Reading NANOG you would think that the only way to spot Nimda would be NBAR
and the only MPLS is Juniper.  The post I replied to is a person considering
10GbE in a 6500.  I've seen the performance on this at a customer site with
SmartBits.  The channel became a Foundry reseller because of this specific
issue.

Now the same configuration comes up on NANOG and I wanted the person
thinking about the 6500/10GbE solution to be aware of what I saw.  Perhaps
the performance is faster than 4G today (My info is a month old).  If I were
to leave Foundry today (to make them look better) and work for another
company (McDonalds?), I would have sent the same post (would you like fries
with that?).  You can't forget what you see.  I have tested our 10GbE
personally.

Gary




RE: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-21 Thread Gary


Richard:

 And if^H^Hwhen you run into a really fun issue, don't even think
 about calling Foundry TAC after hours, all you'll get is someone's house
 with their screaming kids in the background.

Our TAC is 24/7 and has been 24/7 for years.  I work in the Support Center
for Japan.  We have not gone 24/7 yet, but it is under investigation.
Sitting 2 feet from me is a gentleman who has been working with Foundry
products since '97.  He has called almost every day since then and not once
has had the problem you described.  I did not mention to him why I was
asking these questions and he is honest.   Did you call the wrong number?
This looks a bit personal...

Gary




Re: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-21 Thread Adam Rothschild


On 2002-05-21-01:12:25, Gary [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I used a Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400.  I used two different 7200's
 with the exact same results.  Bidirectional throughput on 1GbE is a
 fraction above 10%.  Unidirectional is a bit better (23%).  Singl
 line ACL drops it to 8% (permit ip any any).  FE performance doesn't
 start to drop below line rate until you put more than two in the
 box.  I have a powerpoint if you'd like it, but it is not meant to
 slander Cisco, just to convince my customers NOT to put GbE in a
 7200!  It is not a GbE platform!

Send it over, I'd be interested in how you're conducting these tests.
I'm not trying to accuse you of lying or slandering your competitors
or anything, but well, those numbers sound a bit funny.

  Besides, that's really an apples to oranges comparison.  
 [...]
 My powerpoint compares the 7200 with the FastIron 4802 Premium.  It
 is line rate with less than 7 us latency on the two GbE ports.  I
 tested this myself.  I can forward this to you if you like.  It is a
 bunch of SmartApps screen captures of the testing.

Not a meaningful comparison; vastly different architectures and
purposes.  I'd be more interested in seeing empirical data comparing
the FastIron 4802 to... say... a Catalyst 2948G-L3 or Extreme Summit
48i.  Maybe a Cat6k/MSFC2 as well, seeing as the pricing is roughly
comparable in the used hardware market, even if the density is not.

 I really like the 7200 VXR.  It is a good 10M and minimum FE
 platform.  It can switch DS0 on the midplane and it supports a wide
 array of interfaces!  

Sounds reminiscent of the dot.gone wastefulness that killed many
companies. :-)

-a



Re: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-21 Thread Richard A Steenbergen


On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 04:55:51PM +0900, Gary wrote:
 Richard:
 
  And if^H^Hwhen you run into a really fun issue, don't even think
  about calling Foundry TAC after hours, all you'll get is someone's house
  with their screaming kids in the background.
 
 Our TAC is 24/7 and has been 24/7 for years.  I work in the Support Center
 for Japan.  We have not gone 24/7 yet, but it is under investigation.
 Sitting 2 feet from me is a gentleman who has been working with Foundry
 products since '97.  He has called almost every day since then and not once
 has had the problem you described.  I did not mention to him why I was
 asking these questions and he is honest.   Did you call the wrong number?
 This looks a bit personal...

I didn't say it wasn't 24/7, I just said it rang through to someones house
with their screaming kids in the background on a regular basis. I do know
how to operate a telephone, thanks. :)

And it's nothing personal, I have actually been one of Foundry's biggest 
supporters compared to almost every other engineer I know. Everyone else 
gave up using them in layer 3 a long time ago.

-- 
Richard A Steenbergen [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.e-gerbil.net/ras
PGP Key ID: 0x138EA177  (67 29 D7 BC E8 18 3E DA  B2 46 B3 D8 14 36 FE B6)



The business side of the coin. WAS RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-21 Thread Christopher J. Wolff

I recall that, early in my career I had the opportunity to build a new
LAN backbone for a 6 story office building.  It was going to be Category
5! Woohoo. With a 12/24 fiber backbone.

ATM in a LAN environment was new at the time but I was going to make
sure I had an OC3 backhauling each of the floors to a central switch.  I
thought this design was beautiful and marvelous.  There was a neat new
company that made LAN-style ATM gear with performance specs that would
just blow your mind.

So when I took the design to the board they loved the fastethernet fiber
blah blah and gave approval.  But when it came down to selecting vendors
for the hardware I ran right into a brick wall with questions like:

How long has this company been in business?
Are they using open standards?
Do they have knowldgeable tech support?
..and so on.  

So, regardless of whether the hardware is the fastest thing on the
block, pushing 10 nanobits at a megaflop, you can look like a fool if
you don't consider the business repercussions of the vendor you choose.
In the end, I didn't get my design approved until I chose Cisco.  Was I
pissed, sure!  Did I ship off white papers and other propaganda to
support my case? Yes!  But the company went bankrupt about 2 weeks after
I submitted the bid.

Just my .02,

Regards,
Christopher J. Wolff, VP CIO
Broadband Laboratories
http://www.bblabs.com
 


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Gary
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 12:37 AM
To: Richard A Steenbergen
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: The market must be coming back



Richard:

 Personally I would say that Foundry does EVERYTHING less than perfect.

 Nearly everyone I'm aware of (including myself) who has had to 
 misfortune to try and use their devices in a service provider 
 environment and a layer 3 role has come away with a universal loathing

 of biblical proportions.

Not worth a response.  Can't please everybody and you CAN'T design
everyone's network for them.  Sort of like EIGRP.  Even the worst
network engineer can look great with it.  Perhaps you should read JANOG.
Maybe they can help you.  Search for $B%U%"%&%s%I%j!#(B (note, if you cannot
read this, it is Japanese for Foundry in unicode).

 I really can't stress this enough, it DOES NOT MATTER how many 
 gigabits your box forwards. A router is ONLY as useful as the quality 
 of its software and support, if you can't login to it or have working 
 routing protocols, it's just a big paperweight. The only "wannabe 
 cisco" company I have seen learn this lesson is Juniper, and I am 
 firmly convinced this is the reason for their success in the core.

Juniper is an OUSTANDING company.  Much better than many networking
companies in many respects.  I've also heard nothing but good things
about Unisphere here in Japan, so perhaps this will be a good marriage
with benefits to service providers.  I'll enjoy competing.  We will
compete.

 Whenever I read a press release about Foundry in the core, I stop and 
 take a moment to laugh uncontrollably. It has nothing to do with ISIS 
 or MPLS, it has to do with making your existing functionality work 
 correctly and behave in a sensible fashion. Nothing personal against 
 Foundry, but the people in charge couldn't possibly "not get it" any 
 more than they do now.

Remember what you said in this paragraph.  I will refer to it later.

Yoroshiku,

Gary


RE: The business side of the coin. WAS RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-21 Thread Christopher J. Wolff


Good point!  The other one is Choose your battles wisely.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Patrick
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 9:52 PM
To: Christopher J. Wolff
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: The business side of the coin. WAS RE: The market must be
coming back



On Tue, 21 May 2002, Christopher J. Wolff wrote:


 So, regardless of whether the hardware is the fastest thing on the 
 block, pushing 10 nanobits at a megaflop, you can look like a fool if 
 you don't consider the business repercussions of the vendor you 
 choose. In the end, I didn't get my design approved until I chose 
 Cisco.  Was I pissed, sure!  Did I ship off white papers and other 
 propaganda to support my case? Yes!  But the company went bankrupt 
 about 2 weeks after I submitted the bid.

No one gets fired for buying IBM.


/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
/\/\/\
   Patrick Greenwell
 Asking the wrong questions is the leading cause of wrong
answers
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
\/\/\/




The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Christopher J. Wolff


Everyone's so busy there hasn't been a peep on here in weeks.

Regards,
Christopher J. Wolff, VP CIO
Broadband Laboratories
http://www.bblabs.com
 




Re: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Scott Granados


Actually, there has been a lot of peeping!

On Mon, 20 May 2002, Christopher 
J. Wolff wrote:

 
 Everyone's so busy there hasn't been a peep on here in weeks.
 
 Regards,
 Christopher J. Wolff, VP CIO
 Broadband Laboratories
 http://www.bblabs.com
  
 




Re: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread dre



On Mon, May 20, 2002 at 05:27:20PM -0700, Christopher J. Wolff wrote:

 Everyone's so busy there hasn't been a peep on here in weeks.

 Regards,
 Christopher J. Wolff, VP CIO

Nah, we're just not allowed to post here anymore.
Inside joke with myself, please ignore ;

-dre




RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Gary


Chris:

 I've been thinking about leasing some dark fiber and running one of the
 new 10gigE blades for the Cat 6500 chassis.

Be careful here.  Last I tested (at one of our channels that also resells
Cisco) is that the 10GbE on the Catalyst 6500 hasn't broken 4G throughput
yet.  Sort of like buying a GbE interface for a 7200 (It only get's 10%
throughput...  Why waste the money, just buy FE!).  The GSR is up to about
8G throughput nowadays from what I've seen.

Foundry Networks (my company) can get a perfect clean 8G throughput on all
of our chassis with management modules M2 or above (we don't support 10GbE
on the legacy M1).  Our NG chassis will be available later in the year for
those folks that want 4 X 10 GbE on each module (8 slot chassis).  I expect
this will be a perfect 40G throughput since I've never seen us do anything
less than perfect (been working here since August).

Additionally, you would be the first customer I've heard about doing
standards based 10GbE on a Catalyst.  (feel free to chime in if you're doing
this... Can I bring my SmartBits 600 to your site to test throughput?).
Good luck!

Foundry has a few references:

Deployed:
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_3_02.html
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_2_02.html
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr2_11_02.html

Many others that we don't press release.  We've got these blades running in
production networks here in Japan that I'm not allowed to talk about.  Also
many other places.

Deploying:
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr5_8_02.html

Performance:
http://www.spirentcom.com/news/press.cfm?id=87

  Throw in the Cisco Flamethrower GBIC and I should be good for 50 miles.
Has anyone tried
 this?

Foundry Network's Long Haul (LHB: 150 km, LHA: 70 km) Ethernet optics exceed
Cisco's on GbE (ZX: 100 km).  I'm sure we exceed them on the ER LAN PHY for
10GbE.  We've only tested to 85 kilometers (ER).  802.3ae standard is 40 km:

http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/020508/nyw068_1.html

Cisco's website says they can do the 802.3ae standard 40 km on the 1550 nm
blade.  I'm not sure if the optics are changeable either:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/ifaa/6500ggml/

I doubt if there is a GBIC for 10GbE available.  We use the same blade with
changeable optics; however, I would not call the SR (300 meters), LR (10
km), and ER LAN PHY optics GBIC's...

Moral of this story is that BEFORE you buy these blades from Cisco (or
anybody), test them!  If you don't have 10GbE SmartBits or IXIA, you can use
1GbE interfaces and wrap them around until you get 8G (no need to produced
anything higher 'cause the Cat 6500 has an 8G throughput limitation).  Don't
test latency with this method :-).  I don't believe the marketing from any
company, not even my own.  I test, then tell.

I've personally never seen a packet drop at a steady 8G rate for up to 72
hours; however, one of our customers evaluating the 10GbE blades reported 2
64 byte packet's were dropped in a 12 hour line rate test.  I suspect they
had bad fiber.

Gary Blankenship
Systems Engineer
Foundry Networks




RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Chance Whaley



 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On 
 Behalf Of Gary

 that want 4 X 10 GbE on each module (8 slot chassis).  I 
 expect this will be a perfect 40G throughput since I've never 
 seen us do anything less than perfect (been working here 
 since August).

Oh phuleeese Stop drinking your own Kool-Aid(tm). To honestly
suggest that Foundry, or any other vendor for that matter, never does
'anything less than perfect' is nothing less than idiotic. If Foundry
does things so 'perfect' why do they have a TAC? Why do they have bugs?
Why do they even need to release new software ever again? Obviously what
is out now will solve every possible issue - its 'perfect' right? The
only possible answer according to your logic, is to support customers
who are 'doing it wrong' and need to be educated. 

Go find the nice black shirts that were passed out at Foundry's last
Kool-Aid fest. You are in obvious need of one. This is NOT the place to
post vendor FUD. All you are doing is making Foundry look bad, and
making yourself look even worse.

My apologies to NANOG..

.chance

Mommy, my Kool-Aid tastes funny.
- Katie, Age 7
  Jonestown 10/18/78




 
 Additionally, you would be the first customer I've heard 
 about doing standards based 10GbE on a Catalyst.  (feel free 
 to chime in if you're doing this... Can I bring my SmartBits 
 600 to your site to test throughput?). Good luck!
 
 Foundry has a few references:
 
 Deployed: 
 http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_3_02.html
 http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_2_02.html
 http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr2_11_02.html
 
 Many others that we don't press release.  We've got these 
 blades running in production networks here in Japan that I'm 
 not allowed to talk about.  Also many other places.
 
 Deploying: 
 http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr5_8_02.h
tml

Performance:
http://www.spirentcom.com/news/press.cfm?id=87

  Throw in the Cisco Flamethrower GBIC and I should be good for 50 
 miles.
Has anyone tried
 this?

Foundry Network's Long Haul (LHB: 150 km, LHA: 70 km) Ethernet optics
exceed Cisco's on GbE (ZX: 100 km).  I'm sure we exceed them on the ER
LAN PHY for 10GbE.  We've only tested to 85 kilometers (ER).  802.3ae
standard is 40 km:

http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/020508/nyw068_1.html

Cisco's website says they can do the 802.3ae standard 40 km on the 1550
nm blade.  I'm not sure if the optics are changeable either:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/ifaa/6500ggml/

I doubt if there is a GBIC for 10GbE available.  We use the same blade
with changeable optics; however, I would not call the SR (300 meters),
LR (10 km), and ER LAN PHY optics GBIC's...

Moral of this story is that BEFORE you buy these blades from Cisco (or
anybody), test them!  If you don't have 10GbE SmartBits or IXIA, you can
use 1GbE interfaces and wrap them around until you get 8G (no need to
produced anything higher 'cause the Cat 6500 has an 8G throughput
limitation).  Don't test latency with this method :-).  I don't believe
the marketing from any company, not even my own.  I test, then tell.

I've personally never seen a packet drop at a steady 8G rate for up to
72 hours; however, one of our customers evaluating the 10GbE blades
reported 2 64 byte packet's were dropped in a 12 hour line rate test.  I
suspect they had bad fiber.

Gary Blankenship
Systems Engineer
Foundry Networks




Re: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Adam Rothschild


On 2002-05-21-00:14:30, Gary [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 [...] Sort of like buying a GbE interface for a 7200 (It only get's
 10% throughput...  Why waste the money, just buy FE!).

How did the Foundry test lab arrive at those figures, and what
substances were consumed at the time?

I'd say 300+ mbit/sec on a PA-GE is a more accurate real-world limit,
assuming you've got plenty of spare CPU cycles to burn, and no ACL's.

Besides, that's really an apples to oranges comparison.  I don't think
anyone, including Cisco, has ever made the claim that it can do line
rate GbE; that's not to say it isn't useful for certain topologies
requiring slightly-faster-than-fast-e router-switch uplinks, etc.

-a



Re: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Avleen Vig


On Mon, 20 May 2002, Christopher J. Wolff wrote:

 Everyone's so busy there hasn't been a peep on here in weeks.

I don't know.. it's been fairly chatty on here.
At times more so and more often on a single thread than usual.

One report claims that the job boards have exploded in parts of the world
recently with large numbers of new positions opening.
Anyone report claims that the market is getting better and that this is
expected.
I know in the UK a lot of departments would have got new budgets last
month which would have caused the above effects there.
Probably true of other parts of the world also.

-- 
Avleen Vig
Work Time: Unix Systems Administrator
Play Time: Network Security Officer
Smurf Amplifier Finding Executive: http://www.ircnetops.org/smurf




Re: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Richard A Steenbergen


On Mon, May 20, 2002 at 10:33:32PM -0600, Chance Whaley wrote:
 
 Oh phuleeese Stop drinking your own Kool-Aid(tm). To honestly
 suggest that Foundry, or any other vendor for that matter, never does
 'anything less than perfect' is nothing less than idiotic. If Foundry
 does things so 'perfect' why do they have a TAC? Why do they have bugs?
 Why do they even need to release new software ever again? Obviously what
 is out now will solve every possible issue - its 'perfect' right? The
 only possible answer according to your logic, is to support customers
 who are 'doing it wrong' and need to be educated. 

Personally I would say that Foundry does EVERYTHING less than perfect.
Nearly everyone I'm aware of (including myself) who has had to misfortune
to try and use their devices in a service provider environment and a layer
3 role has come away with a universal loathing of biblical proportions.

I really can't stress this enough, it DOES NOT MATTER how many gigabits
your box forwards. A router is ONLY as useful as the quality of its
software and support, if you can't login to it or have working routing
protocols, it's just a big paperweight. The only wannabe cisco company I
have seen learn this lesson is Juniper, and I am firmly convinced this is
the reason for their success in the core.

Whenever I read a press release about Foundry in the core, I stop and take
a moment to laugh uncontrollably. It has nothing to do with ISIS or MPLS,
it has to do with making your existing functionality work correctly and
behave in a sensible fashion. Nothing personal against Foundry, but the
people in charge couldn't possibly not get it any more than they do now.

-- 
Richard A Steenbergen [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.e-gerbil.net/ras
PGP Key ID: 0x138EA177  (67 29 D7 BC E8 18 3E DA  B2 46 B3 D8 14 36 FE B6)



Re: Cisco 7200 VXR with NPE-400 (was RE: The market must be coming back)

2002-05-20 Thread Richard A Steenbergen


On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 07:27:35AM +0200, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
 
 I have personally seen a 7200 with PXF-chip and two PA-GE do NAT at
 300megabit with a few (10-15) ftp streams going thru it. With more random
 load it wouldn't go much above 100 meg, though.

I have done 400Mbit with an NPE400, though that's pushing the box close to
its limits.

But really, a good engineer knows his tools and knows how to choose them
for the task. If you want to push 900Mbps, you don't pick a router with a
central software based route lookup system and PCI based backplane. On the
other hand, if you need to do complex things, a 7200 may be your best
bet simply because of its simplicity. All the nasty bugs that make using a
GSR so miserable almost never manifest themselves on a 7200. If you're 
adventurous you can even install the latest code and probably not pay 
for your transgression against the IOS gods within 48 hours. :)

 And please, lab tests doesnt show it all. Does the Foundry have a route
 cache? How many entries? I have seen equipment that performs perfectly in
 the lab start to bog down when you put real traffic on them, because of
 route cache limitations (for instance, 256.000 entries starts to be
 problematic when you have thousands of customers running real internet
 traffic thru the device).

A classic Foundry flaw, which you can get around to some extent with ip
net-agg or dr-agg.

I've found it best to treat a Foundry doing layer 3 like you would a 7500.  
You know, tiptoe when you walk by it, try not to give it any funny looks,
only login to it when you REALLY need to, only make changes at 2am, etc,
it is usable in a customer aggregation role. Anything more is tempting
fate. And if^H^Hwhen you run into a really fun issue, don't even think
about calling Foundry TAC after hours, all you'll get is someone's house
with their screaming kids in the background.

-- 
Richard A Steenbergen [EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.e-gerbil.net/ras
PGP Key ID: 0x138EA177  (67 29 D7 BC E8 18 3E DA  B2 46 B3 D8 14 36 FE B6)



RE: The market must be coming back

2002-05-20 Thread Christopher J. Wolff


Jason,

Are you espousing Juniper or Foundry for 10ge?

-Original Message-
From: Jason LeBlanc [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, May 20, 2002 9:35 PM
To: Gary; Christopher J. Wolff
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: The market must be coming back


Juniper.  Sorry I'm a fan, they've done a lot right.  Cisco is ~$35k per
port of 10ge, and unless you get a 6513 you can't get many interfaces.
This makes 10ge in a real network (where everything needs to be
redundant, multiple interfaces, etc) a bit impossible on the Catalyst
platform.  If your needs are but a few interfaces, maybe it works.
Cisco is woefully behind here.  The SUP2/SFM method of doing things is a
patch at best to boot.  Foundry is cheaper and a bit ahead in many
aspects, granted there are SW issues still looming, but the 'life of a
packet' as a packet is handled by a Foundry switch makes a lot more
sense.  Foundry ASIC's are rockin, as are Juniper's, Cisco seems to be
lost here.  I think the ASIC designers ran off to Foundry and Juniper.
;)

If only Juniper made 'switches', such that density were higher, cost per
port were lower and they were more applicable to switching (L2/STP, etc)
and LAN specific needs.

Additionally, anyone have thoughts on the Unisphere purchase by Juniper?
I think it should scare the bejesus out of Cisco.

Always interested in the opinions of the brightest, let the flames
begin. ;)

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Gary
Sent: Monday, May 20, 2002 9:15 PM
To: Christopher J. Wolff
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: The market must be coming back



Chris:

 I've been thinking about leasing some dark fiber and running one of 
 the new 10gigE blades for the Cat 6500 chassis.

Be careful here.  Last I tested (at one of our channels that also
resells
Cisco) is that the 10GbE on the Catalyst 6500 hasn't broken 4G
throughput yet.  Sort of like buying a GbE interface for a 7200 (It only
get's 10% throughput...  Why waste the money, just buy FE!).  The GSR is
up to about 8G throughput nowadays from what I've seen.

Foundry Networks (my company) can get a perfect clean 8G throughput on
all of our chassis with management modules M2 or above (we don't support
10GbE on the legacy M1).  Our NG chassis will be available later in the
year for those folks that want 4 X 10 GbE on each module (8 slot
chassis).  I expect this will be a perfect 40G throughput since I've
never seen us do anything less than perfect (been working here since
August).

Additionally, you would be the first customer I've heard about doing
standards based 10GbE on a Catalyst.  (feel free to chime in if you're
doing this... Can I bring my SmartBits 600 to your site to test
throughput?). Good luck!

Foundry has a few references:

Deployed:
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_3_02.html
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr4_2_02.html
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr2_11_02.html

Many others that we don't press release.  We've got these blades running
in production networks here in Japan that I'm not allowed to talk about.
Also many other places.

Deploying:
http://www.foundrynet.com/about/newsevents/releases/pr5_8_02.html

Performance:
http://www.spirentcom.com/news/press.cfm?id=87

  Throw in the Cisco Flamethrower GBIC and I should be good for 50 
 miles.
Has anyone tried
 this?

Foundry Network's Long Haul (LHB: 150 km, LHA: 70 km) Ethernet optics
exceed Cisco's on GbE (ZX: 100 km).  I'm sure we exceed them on the ER
LAN PHY for 10GbE.  We've only tested to 85 kilometers (ER).  802.3ae
standard is 40 km:

http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/020508/nyw068_1.html

Cisco's website says they can do the 802.3ae standard 40 km on the 1550
nm blade.  I'm not sure if the optics are changeable either:

http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/ifaa/6500ggml/

I doubt if there is a GBIC for 10GbE available.  We use the same blade
with changeable optics; however, I would not call the SR (300 meters),
LR (10 km), and ER LAN PHY optics GBIC's...

Moral of this story is that BEFORE you buy these blades from Cisco (or
anybody), test them!  If you don't have 10GbE SmartBits or IXIA, you can
use 1GbE interfaces and wrap them around until you get 8G (no need to
produced anything higher 'cause the Cat 6500 has an 8G throughput
limitation).  Don't test latency with this method :-).  I don't believe
the marketing from any company, not even my own.  I test, then tell.

I've personally never seen a packet drop at a steady 8G rate for up to
72 hours; however, one of our customers evaluating the 10GbE blades
reported 2 64 byte packet's were dropped in a 12 hour line rate test.  I
suspect they had bad fiber.

Gary Blankenship
Systems Engineer
Foundry Networks