Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Chuck Anderson
On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:10:16PM -0800, Scott Weeks wrote:
 To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do 
 come out with a way to do things first which then become a standard 
 that they have to follow.
 
 ISL/DOT1Q
 HSRP/VRRP
 etherchannel/LACP

Yes, and then they keep their proprietary implementation instead of 
phasing it out, and no one migrates to the standard one which leads to 
vendor lockin.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Herro91
From my experience - A key thing to consider from any vendor is their
support - Cisco has great support and a large support organization. I've
seen them turn around complex problems very rapidly for their customers.

Additionally, someone already mentioned investment protection and that Cisco
keeps providing incremental improvements such that older 12000s are still up
and running AND supported.

When making an important purchase, these are among the top IMHO.

HTH
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 8:18 AM, Chuck Anderson c...@wpi.edu wrote:

 On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:10:16PM -0800, Scott Weeks wrote:
  To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do
  come out with a way to do things first which then become a standard
  that they have to follow.
 
  ISL/DOT1Q
  HSRP/VRRP
  etherchannel/LACP

 Yes, and then they keep their proprietary implementation instead of
 phasing it out, and no one migrates to the standard one which leads to
 vendor lockin.




RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Brandon Kim

For ISL, I know they are trying to phase that out. For the exams, they are 
based on dot1q.

Even if I had all cisco equipment, I'd try to go with standards because you 
never know down the road where you may
need to use another vendor.

I wouldn't use EIGRP if given a choice, I'd go with OSPF or RIPv2.


 Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2011 08:18:00 -0500
 From: c...@wpi.edu
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:10:16PM -0800, Scott Weeks wrote:
  To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do 
  come out with a way to do things first which then become a standard 
  that they have to follow.
  
  ISL/DOT1Q
  HSRP/VRRP
  etherchannel/LACP
 
 Yes, and then they keep their proprietary implementation instead of 
 phasing it out, and no one migrates to the standard one which leads to 
 vendor lockin.
 
  

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Tony Varriale


- Original Message - 
From: Chuck Anderson c...@wpi.edu

To: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 7:18 AM
Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?



On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:10:16PM -0800, Scott Weeks wrote:

To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do
come out with a way to do things first which then become a standard
that they have to follow.

ISL/DOT1Q
HSRP/VRRP
etherchannel/LACP


Yes, and then they keep their proprietary implementation instead of
phasing it out, and no one migrates to the standard one which leads to
vendor lockin.


Which new Cisco gear has ISL support that you are using?

And in case you haven't read any documentation or spoke to anyone over there 
in the last 5 years, Cisco pushes dot1q and lacp extensively.


tv 





Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Tony Varriale


- Original Message - 
From: Brandon Kim brandon@brandontek.com

To: c...@wpi.edu; nanog group nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 8:46 AM
Subject: RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?





For ISL, I know they are trying to phase that out. For the exams, they are 
based on dot1q.


Even if I had all cisco equipment, I'd try to go with standards because you 
never know down the road where you may

need to use another vendor.

I wouldn't use EIGRP if given a choice, I'd go with OSPF or RIPv2.


The main problem with this is RIP sucks and there aren't a lot of people out 
there that are really good with OSPF.  For every one legit design and 
implementation of OSPF, I've seen 50 with every thing in 0 and config 
statements everywhere.


For companies that don't have real dedicated networking people, EIGRP is 
much more easy to admin and troubleshoot.


tv 





Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Jack Bates



On 1/13/2011 8:46 AM, Brandon Kim wrote:


For ISL, I know they are trying to phase that out. For the exams, they are 
based on dot1q.

Even if I had all cisco equipment, I'd try to go with standards because you 
never know down the road where you may
need to use another vendor.

I wouldn't use EIGRP if given a choice, I'd go with OSPF or RIPv2.



Grrr, IS-IS. SP protocol of choice. Don't believe me, look at some 
juniper licensing (you'll need to pay us more for IS-IS, but OSPF is 
available on this cheap enterprise switch for fr). Has an 
annoyance factor of not every vendor supporting it, but lack of IS-IS or 
some of it's features often shows the caliber of gear you are dealing 
with or it's current maturity (Brocade MLX had IS-IS v6 support, but 
didn't support multitopology when I last tested, which gives me an idea 
of their v6 support compared to vendors such as C/J).


OT: Learned my first hard lesson on playing with routing protocols on 
production network in non-standard ways. MLX was interconnected using 
single topology to the cisco which was using multitopology. I didn't 
expect the v6 side to work naturally. Upon upgrading the MLX to a later 
code, the Juniper isolated by 2 cisco's from the MLX core dumped the 
routing process repeatedly. Unplugged the MLX, the Juniper stabilized. 
Gotta love them nasty bugs. Of course, I suspect the bug was related to 
interconnecting a single topology into a multi-topology, which you 
really aren't supposed to do. :)



Jack



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, Michael Ruiz mr...@lstfinancial.com said:
 I like Cisco personally and they are cheaper than
 buying a Juniper.  For example a M-series is always going to cost some
 bucks after you factor the FPC and the PICS that need to be loaded.

We didn't find that to be the case, after you factor in all the Cisco
pieces that need to be loaded as well.  Both make modular routers, so I
don't see how saying that one requires modules is a valid argument.

-- 
Chris Adams cmad...@hiwaay.net
Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services
I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Jack Bates

On 1/13/2011 1:35 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:

For example a M-series is always going to cost some
bucks after you factor the FPC and the PICS that need to be loaded.


I find this usually has to do with the fact that there is no backup to 
software processing on a Juniper. Every feature it supports, it does so 
in hardware. If the hardware won't do it, then JUNOS won't do it.


The exception has been the multiservices PIC, which is being obsoleted 
with the trio chipset.


You are right, though. If you don't need the performance, you can settle 
for a cisco in many cases. Also, the MX Juniper line often has nicer 
performance than the M series if you do more ethernet than sonet.


Jack



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Michael Ruiz
I find this usually has to do with the fact that there is no backup to

software processing on a Juniper. Every feature it supports, it does
so 
in hardware. If the hardware won't do it, then JUNOS won't do it.

The exception has been the multiservices PIC, which is being obsoleted 
with the trio chipset.

You are right, though. If you don't need the performance, you can
settle 
for a cisco in many cases. Also, the MX Juniper line often has nicer 
performance than the M series if you do more ethernet than sonet.

Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
the commit and check command. :-)

-Original Message-
From: Jack Bates [mailto:jba...@brightok.net] 
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 1:41 PM
To: Michael Ruiz
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

On 1/13/2011 1:35 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:
 For example a M-series is always going to cost some
 bucks after you factor the FPC and the PICS that need to be loaded.

I find this usually has to do with the fact that there is no backup to 
software processing on a Juniper. Every feature it supports, it does so

in hardware. If the hardware won't do it, then JUNOS won't do it.

The exception has been the multiservices PIC, which is being obsoleted 
with the trio chipset.

You are right, though. If you don't need the performance, you can settle

for a cisco in many cases. Also, the MX Juniper line often has nicer 
performance than the M series if you do more ethernet than sonet.

Jack



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Jack Bates

On 1/13/2011 1:48 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:

Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
the commit and check command.:-)


Cisco IOS has a similar feature.

reload in 5
make changes
verify things are working
reload cancel

It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have to 
reload both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you reload, 
but it does beat 2 hour drives.



Jack



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Thu, 13 Jan 2011, Michael Ruiz wrote:


Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
the commit and check command. :-)


Definite +1 for rollback and commit check - and also show | compare

jms



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Scott Morris
The catch is being able to do it without reloading!

commit confirm will help a lot as well.  In case your commit
annihilates your ssh session.  ;)

Scott


On 1/13/11 2:51 PM, Jack Bates wrote:
 On 1/13/2011 1:48 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
 I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
 the commit and check command.:-)

 Cisco IOS has a similar feature.

 reload in 5
 make changes
 verify things are working
 reload cancel

 It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have
 to reload both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you
 reload, but it does beat 2 hour drives.


 Jack







Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Leo Bicknell
In a message written on Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 01:48:27PM -0600, Michael Ruiz 
wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
 I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
 the commit and check command. :-)

Cisco marketing seems to have dropped the ball on this one, but IOS
has had a feature that allows you to save a number of configurations,
do diff's, and generally behave similar to the JunOS method for
quite a while.  You'll want to check out the archive command.

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/networking/?p=532

The only thing I can tell that's really missing is commit confirmed in
JunOS, and of course it operates differently so people may or may not
like it.

-- 
   Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/


pgpscTXrwurRU.pgp
Description: PGP signature


RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Michael Ruiz
Cisco marketing seems to have dropped the ball on this one, but IOS has
had a feature that allows you to save a number of configurations, do
diff's, and generally behave similar to the JunOS method for quite a
while.  You'll want to check out the archive command.

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/networking/?p=532

The only thing I can tell that's really missing is commit confirmed
in JunOS, and of course it operates differently so people may or may not
like it.

-- 
   Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
Yeah you are right it does have some JUNOS like feel. 

-Original Message-
From: Leo Bicknell [mailto:bickn...@ufp.org] 
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 1:58 PM
To: Michael Ruiz
Cc: Jack Bates; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

In a message written on Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 01:48:27PM -0600, Michael
Ruiz wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  
 Whew I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few 
 times and the commit and check command. :-)

Cisco marketing seems to have dropped the ball on this one, but IOS has
had a feature that allows you to save a number of configurations, do
diff's, and generally behave similar to the JunOS method for quite a
while.  You'll want to check out the archive command.

http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/networking/?p=532

The only thing I can tell that's really missing is commit confirmed in
JunOS, and of course it operates differently so people may or may not
like it.

-- 
   Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Greg Whynott
at one shop were i considered using Juniper instead of a Cisco internet edge 
router,  the cost of the Juniper was so close to the Cisco it was a non 
consideration.The only reason we went with Cisco that time was due to the 
fact most of the other gear was Cisco,  and it seemed to make more sense to 
stay with cisco instead of introducing a new vendor/methods into the mix 
without good reason.

The hardware alone was cheaper than the Cisco kit,  but after we said we needed 
to hold a million BGP routes,  the prices became very similar.  Juniper wants 
to license you on the amount of routes you intend to receive,  if i remember 
correctly.

-g





On Jan 13, 2011, at 2:40 PM, Chris Adams wrote:

 Once upon a time, Michael Ruiz mr...@lstfinancial.com said:
 I like Cisco personally and they are cheaper than
 buying a Juniper.  For example a M-series is always going to cost some
 bucks after you factor the FPC and the PICS that need to be loaded.

 We didn't find that to be the case, after you factor in all the Cisco
 pieces that need to be loaded as well.  Both make modular routers, so I
 don't see how saying that one requires modules is a valid argument.

 --
 Chris Adams cmad...@hiwaay.net
 Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services
 I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.



--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Thomas Magill
Cisco IOS has a similar feature.

reload in 5
make changes
verify things are working
reload cancel

There seems to be a better way to do it in IOS that will not reload the router:

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/12_3t/12_3t7/feature/guide/gtrollbk.html
 
I haven't tried it since all my gear has OOB serial mgmt but it appears to let 
you rollback a config after a set time without a reboot.  It still doesn't seem 
to be as nice as JUNOS rollback.  





Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Bill Blackford
Subway subs started offering toasted as an option in response to the
success of Quiznos Subs.

So many vendors have been chasing the me too feature match behind
Cisco for so many years it interesting to see Cisco doing the same
behind Juniper.

-b



-- 
Bill Blackford
Network Engineer

Logged into reality and abusing my sudo privileges.

ig after a set time without a reboot.  It still doesn't seem to be as
nice as JUNOS rollback.







-- 
Bill Blackford
Network Engineer

Logged into reality and abusing my sudo privileges.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Owen DeLong

On Jan 13, 2011, at 11:51 AM, Jack Bates wrote:

 On 1/13/2011 1:48 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.  Whew
 I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times and
 the commit and check command.:-)
 
 Cisco IOS has a similar feature.
 
 reload in 5
 make changes
 verify things are working
 reload cancel
 
 It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have to 
 reload both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you reload, but 
 it does beat 2 hour drives.
 
 
 Jack

Not at all the same... With JunOS, I can have the changes I made running for 
days, but, when some problem is later discovered I can still rollback to the 
previous (or several revisions back). I can easily compare the current config 
to several previous revisions, etc.

Additionally, with JunOS I can make all my changes, verify them syntactically, 
compare the changes made to the previous configuration all without having the 
changes take effect during the process. Then, when I'm satisfied I have it 
right, I commit the configuration. If you've ever had to play the IOS ACL 
rotation game, you know how wonderful this feature is.

Cisco's half-hearted attempt to play catch-up here is woefully inadequate.

Owen




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Jack Bates



On 1/13/2011 2:58 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:

reload in 5
make changes
verify things are working
reload cancel

It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have to reload 
both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you reload, but it does 
beat 2 hour drives.





Not at all the same... With JunOS, I can have the changes I made running for 
days, but, when some problem is later discovered I can still rollback to the 
previous (or several revisions back). I can easily compare the current config 
to several previous revisions, etc.



EDIT: /sarcasm



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Michael Ruiz
On Jan 13, 2011, at 11:51 AM, Jack Bates wrote:

 On 1/13/2011 1:48 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.
Whew
 I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times
and
 the commit and check command.:-)
 
 Cisco IOS has a similar feature.
 
 reload in 5
 make changes
 verify things are working
 reload cancel
 
 It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have
to reload both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you
reload, but it does beat 2 hour drives.
 
 
 Jack

Not at all the same... With JunOS, I can have the changes I made
running for days, but, when some problem is later discovered I can still
rollback to the previous (or several revisions back). I can easily
compare the current config to several previous revisions, etc.

Additionally, with JunOS I can make all my changes, verify them
syntactically, compare the changes made to the previous configuration
all without having the changes take effect during the process. Then,
when I'm satisfied I have it right, I commit the configuration. If
you've ever had to play the IOS ACL rotation game, you know how
wonderful this feature is.

Cisco's half-hearted attempt to play catch-up here is woefully
inadequate.

Owen


I agree.  That is the really neat feature about the
rollback command.  Like I said before it has saved me more ways the one.
:-)

-Original Message-
From: Owen DeLong [mailto:o...@delong.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2011 2:59 PM
To: Jack Bates
Cc: Michael Ruiz; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?


On Jan 13, 2011, at 11:51 AM, Jack Bates wrote:

 On 1/13/2011 1:48 PM, Michael Ruiz wrote:
 Yeah another thing I love about the JUNOS is the rollback command.
Whew
 I can tell you a few times where that has saved my bacon a few times
and
 the commit and check command.:-)
 
 Cisco IOS has a similar feature.
 
 reload in 5
 make changes
 verify things are working
 reload cancel
 
 It's a little different on a redundant processor system, as you have
to reload both processors. It's also a 2-20 minute outage while you
reload, but it does beat 2 hour drives.
 
 
 Jack

Not at all the same... With JunOS, I can have the changes I made running
for days, but, when some problem is later discovered I can still
rollback to the previous (or several revisions back). I can easily
compare the current config to several previous revisions, etc.

Additionally, with JunOS I can make all my changes, verify them
syntactically, compare the changes made to the previous configuration
all without having the changes take effect during the process. Then,
when I'm satisfied I have it right, I commit the configuration. If
you've ever had to play the IOS ACL rotation game, you know how
wonderful this feature is.

Cisco's half-hearted attempt to play catch-up here is woefully
inadequate.

Owen




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread b nickell
Cheers.. to M.A.R.'s related view

On Jan 13, 2011 12:37 PM, Michael Ruiz mr...@lstfinancial.com wrote:

I know where I have worked we have had a mixture of Juniper and Cisco
equipment.  Personally buying a Juniper Router like a M or a T series is
like buying a Ferrari. I like Cisco personally and they are cheaper than
buying a Juniper.  For example a M-series is always going to cost some
bucks after you factor the FPC and the PICS that need to be loaded.
Personally I like the JUNOS system better than the Cisco IOS, it is more
tech friendly when troubleshooting issues.  I have not worked on the new
IOS-NX system, but if I understand it correctly it is modular.  If Cisco
can the really cool Monitor command and the structure the command tree
like a Juniper.  I would think Cisco did something totally right.



M.A.R


Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Jack Bates



On 1/13/2011 2:44 PM, Thomas Magill wrote:

Cisco IOS has a similar feature.

reload in 5
make changes
verify things are working
reload cancel


There seems to be a better way to do it in IOS that will not reload the router:

http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/12_3t/12_3t7/feature/guide/gtrollbk.html

I haven't tried it since all my gear has OOB serial mgmt but it appears to let 
you rollback a config after a set time without a reboot.  It still doesn't seem 
to be as nice as JUNOS rollback.




The problem is, it doesn't seem to support an automated rollback 
function. You'd need OOB to get access in many cases to do the rollback.



Jack



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-13 Thread Thomas Magill
 The problem is, it doesn't seem to support an automated rollback 
 function. You'd need OOB to get access in many cases to do the rollback.

I thought that is what 'configure terminal revert timer x' did.  It looks like 
you have to do a 'configure confirm' before the revert time expires or it 
reverts back to when you started.  Maybe I'll actually try this out and find 
out for sure.



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-12 Thread Scott Weeks


--- brandon@brandontek.com wrote:
From: Brandon Kim brandon@brandontek.com

To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do come out 
with a way to do things first which then become a standard that
they have to follow.

ISL/DOT1Q
HSRP/VRRP
etherchannel/LACP



A bit of a late response, but 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiprotocol_Label_Switching#History 

scott



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-11 Thread Jethro R Binks
On Mon, 10 Jan 2011, Greg Whynott wrote:

  Just as a pointer - one of the largest and most utilized IX (AMS-IX) 
  has their platform built on Brocade devices.
 
 Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that 
 large using Foundry in large deployments..

Probably not as large as AMX-IX, but London Internet Exchange (LINX): both 
as Foundry and Brocade.

Jethro.

.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .
Jethro R Binks, Network Manager,
Information Services Directorate, University Of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

The University of Strathclyde is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, number SC015263.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-11 Thread Ron Broersma

 Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that large 
 using Foundry in large deployments..

Foundry/Brocade is used heavily in portions of DoD's research and engineering 
community.  It is usually preferred where you need high 10Gig port density, 
IPv6, and/or sflow.  But Juniper and Cisco are used heavily as well, depending 
on local requirements and culture.
--Ron



smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature


RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-11 Thread Brandon Kim

For anyone that is following this thread/subject from yesterday, is it me or 
does it seem as if Cisco really isn't
the choice for most SP's?

Someone has mentioned that it all really depends on your needs and what it is 
you want to provide.

IMO, every vendor has something they are good at. I wouldn't use Cisco for 
everything, nor Juniper etc etc...

The concern I sense is that from Cisco's POV, it's their way or the highway. 
Not only do you pay a premium for smartnet,
but if there's an issue, they are quick to point the finger. That is not 
service/support that I desire

Is this what everyone is sensing as well? I'm starting to look at Brocade now 
just to do some fair comparisons.




 Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2011 13:56:31 +
 From: jethro.bi...@strath.ac.uk
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 On Mon, 10 Jan 2011, Greg Whynott wrote:
 
   Just as a pointer - one of the largest and most utilized IX (AMS-IX) 
   has their platform built on Brocade devices.
  
  Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that 
  large using Foundry in large deployments..
 
 Probably not as large as AMX-IX, but London Internet Exchange (LINX): both 
 as Foundry and Brocade.
 
 Jethro.
 
 ..  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .
 Jethro R Binks, Network Manager,
 Information Services Directorate, University Of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK
 
 The University of Strathclyde is a charitable body, registered in
 Scotland, number SC015263.
 
  

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-11 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 1/11/11 6:49 AM, Jack Bates wrote:
 
 To be honest, I use smartnet to upgrade the OS. I quit calling TAC after
 they failed to understand, much less help me with my eigrp over frame
 relay with automatic ISDN backup on route failure and re-establishment
 of eigrp over the ISDN. :)
 

The cisco-nsp mailing list is often much more helpful than TAC.

~Seth



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Jared Mauch

On Jan 10, 2011, at 10:31 AM, Brandon Kim wrote:

 
 Hello gents:
 
 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a 
 mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.
 
 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about 
 being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?
 
 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of 
 choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a real 
 world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.


I think a lot of this depends on the market.

If you're into FTTH/FTTP then Cisco is not the way to go.  They have no serious 
offerings in this space IMHO. (that are cost competitive).

Each vendor has various things they do well.  Cisco surely is well capitalized 
with a broad portfolio of offerings in the DWDM to IP space.

I do believe they are the IBM of the industry, ie: Nobody ever was fired for 
buying IBM(sic).

This does not mean they (nor anyone else) delivers a perfect solution.  This is 
a challenge that I frequently remind the vendors of, as apparently many 
customers actually do *yell* at them when there are bugs, vs offering 
constructive partnerships to resolve the issues.

I think that Juniper, Foundry(Brocade) and some other vendors offer compelling 
products in the core space as well.  It's well worth its while to build a 
relationship with your vendors so you can have that constructive partnership 
IMHO.  Then when you hit a serious problem, you can take constructive actions 
vs just screaming loudly and hoping they jump.

- Jared


Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Jack Bates

On 1/10/2011 9:31 AM, Brandon Kim wrote:

Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all
about being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco
based?

Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor
of choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more
of a real world experience of what you guys use that actually work
and does the job.



You have to really narrow the network criteria. What's good for DSL 
subscriber termination with or without subscriber management features 
(on router, or handled externally), in core networks a 
t1/t3/oc3/gig-e/oc48/10G+ speeds, mpls features, etc.


The first kickoff on any network is if it is service provider or 
enterprise. The feature sets and types of boxes differ greatly between 
these for most manufacturers (as does price).


I've been happy with, and disappointed with, Cisco, Extreme, Juniper, 
and Brocade. There's a few others out there that I haven't used or tested.


In the Terabit market, I love Alcatel and Juniper, but I can't afford 
the terabit market. :)



Jack



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Saxon Jones
In my experience it all comes down to Cisco-certified people being
easy to find, and managers not wanting to spend all their time in the
hiring process. So yes, I've generally seen Cisco as the de-facto
choice, but it's rarely been a technical argument that swings the
balance. I'm generally playing in the Enterprise space now, though.

-saxon

On 10 January 2011 08:31, Brandon Kim brandon@brandontek.com wrote:

 Hello gents:

 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a 
 mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about 
 being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?

 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of 
 choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a real 
 world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the Tolly 
 Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find that 
 so hard to believe.

 Thanks!

 Brandon





Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Craig V
Our core business is not as a service provider, as in selling services to
others, but we act as a service provider providing services for the various
customers in our internal network that we support.

Our core used to be an all Cisco Core. a few years back the decision was
made to replace this with Alcatel-Lucent IPD products. I can say we are
happy that we did replace the Cisco core, and we have had a very good
experience with the IPD product line. I am sure others can attest to this
also.  The features and functionality along with the reliability have been
very good, and in my opinion they have a strong product.

Our edge at this point is a mixture of Cisco access switches, and we also
still have some Cisco Distribution.

On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 10:31 AM, Brandon Kim brandon@brandontek.comwrote:


 Hello gents:

 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a
 mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about
 being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?

 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of
 choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a real
 world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the
 Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco
 equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find that
 so hard to believe.

 Thanks!

 Brandon




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Mon, 10 Jan 2011, Brandon Kim wrote:

Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all 
about being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?


I would not necessarily say that.  Granted, most of the places I've worked 
are Cisco shops to a large extent, that does not mean it is the only 
solution to many problems.  There are product spaces where Cisco has a 
very well established presence (routers, switches, remote access, 
wireless, DWDM, IP telephony, etc), but there are other players in those 
spaces, in additional to spaces where Cisco does not have as large of a 
presence.


There are many people who will give 'buy Cisco' as a default answer to 
many networking needs, much the same as there are meny people who will 
give 'buy Microsoft' or 'buy Oracle' for software/database needs.  There 
are other solutions to those needs.  If you see a piece of gear from a new 
vendor, don't be afraid to contact them to see if get their sales team in 
to give you a presentation or take a box for a test drive.  Ideally, you 
also have acess to some type of lab or non-production environment where 
you can try out equipment without putting 'live' data at risk.


In most shops I've worked in, the final decision comes down to:
1. cost
2. performance/reliability
3. support
4. scalability (read: investment protection, speaking back to point 1)
5. interoperability
6. security
7. environmental factors (rack space, power, cooling, etc)

Pretty much all of the subsequent points ties back to point 1 in some way.

Network devices are tools designed to do one or more jobs.  The job you're 
trying to do determines the tools you use, and how you use them.


jms

PS: I take test results from Tolly/Gartner/Burton/etc with a grain of 
salt.  When a vendor performs well in a bake-off, they will proudly 
trumpet that fact.  When they don't they will usually claim that either 
the box they tested was broken, or the testing methodology was flawed in 
some way :)




RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Paul Stewart
Cisco shop here that is avidly converting to Juniper.

Paul


-Original Message-
From: Brandon Kim [mailto:brandon@brandontek.com] 
Sent: Monday, January 10, 2011 10:32 AM
To: nanog group
Subject: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?


Hello gents:

I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a
mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about
being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?

Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of
choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a real
world
experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the
Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco
equipment
is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find that
so hard to believe.

Thanks!

Brandon

  =




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Randy Carpenter

We have traditionally been a Cisco shop, but we are starting to move toward 
Juniper for much of our needs, and will be recommending Juniper as an 
alternative for customers' needs. From a technical point of view, I find the 
configurations to be simpler and easier to understand, and I like the fact that 
most everything runs the same OS, with the same interface. From a financial 
point of view, Juniper tends to be less expensive for more performance, and 
their support contracts are much cheaper.

All that said, and as other's have said, Cisco is always a safe choice, 
particularly since many people are familiar with them.

-Randy

--
| Randy Carpenter
| Vice President, IT Services
| Red Hat Certified Engineer
| First Network Group, Inc.
| (419)739-9240, x1


- Original Message -
 Hello gents:
 
 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of
 a mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.
 
 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all
 about being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco
 based?
 
 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor
 of choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of
 a real world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the
 job.
 
 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow
 the Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that
 Cisco equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find
 that so hard to believe.
 
 Thanks!
 
 Brandon



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Thomas Donnelly
On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 09:31:32 -0600, Brandon Kim  
brandon@brandontek.com wrote:




Hello gents:

I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a  
mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.


Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about  
being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?


Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of  
choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a  
real world

experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the  
Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco  
equipment
is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find  
that so hard to believe.


Cisco is typically not known as the fastest or most power efficient when  
compared to other vendors, but they usually have some advanced feature  
sets that are very nice. In the ISP space this may be less helpful, but in  
the SMB and Enterprise space this can be very helpful. Things such as Call  
Manager Express, Web Content Filtering, WebEx Nodes, Server Load  
Balancing, Wireless Lan Controllers, etc. that are either built into IOS  
or available with a line card or module, are nice tools to have at your  
disposal, and often can mean reducing the number of devices you need in  
your rack.


As of the Tolly group, I find whomever pays Tolly for the survey tends to  
be the fastest.


Example:
Abstract:

HP commissioned Tolly to evaluate the performance, power consumption and  
TCO of its E5400 zl and E8200 switch series and compare those systems with  
the Cisco Systems Catalyst 3750-X and Catalyst 4500.


This is because the Vendor is getting to pick what they want to benchmark  
rather than the company benchmarking them. No one is going to choose tests  
that their product will lose in. There isn't much in the way of Tom's  
Hardware Style testing of enterprise gear to my knowledge.


Cisco gear is also known for long life, being very consistent, and high  
reliability. A walk through colos you will often see many many Cisco  
12000's for those exact reasons.


I feel each vendor has its strong points, price/performance may not be  
Cisco's but Cisco's ease of configuration and feature sets, along with  
reliability are definitely notable.


-=Tom



Thanks!

Brandon





--
Using Opera's revolutionary email client: http://www.opera.com/mail/



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott
I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal L2/L3.  Always 
Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.

from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried to use 
another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it was a bad 
choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,  multiple 
and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.  Then for the next 
few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to say Cisco gear has been 
without its issues,  but they are much fewer and handled better when stuff hits 
the fan.

the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable deploying 
for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC requirements which is not 
CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has always been Cisco for edge 
routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed to trying Juniper for routing,  
I know of a few shops who do and they have been pleased thus far.I've 
little or no experience  with many of the other vendors,  and I'm sure they 
have good offerings,  but I won't be beta testing their firmwares anymore (one 
vendor insisted we upgrade our firmware on our core equipment several times in 
one year…).


Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the smart net 
contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with unrestricted license 
and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on options,  with a 
yearly renewal of about 15k or more…

-g




On Jan 10, 2011, at 11:21 AM, Randy Carpenter wrote:


 We have traditionally been a Cisco shop, but we are starting to move toward 
 Juniper for much of our needs, and will be recommending Juniper as an 
 alternative for customers' needs. From a technical point of view, I find the 
 configurations to be simpler and easier to understand, and I like the fact 
 that most everything runs the same OS, with the same interface. From a 
 financial point of view, Juniper tends to be less expensive for more 
 performance, and their support contracts are much cheaper.

 All that said, and as other's have said, Cisco is always a safe choice, 
 particularly since many people are familiar with them.

 -Randy

 --
 | Randy Carpenter
 | Vice President, IT Services
 | Red Hat Certified Engineer
 | First Network Group, Inc.
 | (419)739-9240, x1
 

 - Original Message -
 Hello gents:

 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of
 a mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all
 about being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco
 based?

 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor
 of choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of
 a real world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the
 job.

 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow
 the Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that
 Cisco equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find
 that so hard to believe.

 Thanks!

 Brandon



--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott

 Brandon


 Just as a pointer - one of the largest and most utilized IX (AMS-IX) has
 their platform built on Brocade devices.



Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that large 
using Foundry in large deployments..

-g


--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Brandon Kim

Wow, overall consensus is that there are quite a few that are migrating to 
Juniper from Cisco.

I am a bit biased because I have spent an awful amount of time invested into 
Cisco and understanding how to configure them.
But being a former business owner, I also am very much sensitive to costs and 
business needs.

For those that have been Cisco focused, do you stay fully objective, and are 
you willing to pitch another vendor knowing that you will
have to learn a new IOS? And that that will be your time that you'll have to 
spend to understand the product and support it?

We have been selling HP procurves to SMB's because of the cost factor. I don't 
really mind them all that much. I've tried to fit Cisco switches
in the mix but their pricing is just so much more as well as the smartnet 
costs. They really price themselves out and that is unfortunate.

I will be looking at refreshing our core switches and routers soon so I will 
stay objective as much as I can. 

=)




 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 10:36:24 -0600
 CC: brandon@brandontek.com
 From: tad1...@gmail.com
 
 On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 09:31:32 -0600, Brandon Kim  
 brandon@brandontek.com wrote:
 
 
  Hello gents:
 
  I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a  
  mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.
 
  Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about  
  being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?
 
  Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of  
  choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a  
  real world
  experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.
 
  No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the  
  Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco  
  equipment
  is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find  
  that so hard to believe.
 
 Cisco is typically not known as the fastest or most power efficient when  
 compared to other vendors, but they usually have some advanced feature  
 sets that are very nice. In the ISP space this may be less helpful, but in  
 the SMB and Enterprise space this can be very helpful. Things such as Call  
 Manager Express, Web Content Filtering, WebEx Nodes, Server Load  
 Balancing, Wireless Lan Controllers, etc. that are either built into IOS  
 or available with a line card or module, are nice tools to have at your  
 disposal, and often can mean reducing the number of devices you need in  
 your rack.
 
 As of the Tolly group, I find whomever pays Tolly for the survey tends to  
 be the fastest.
 
 Example:
 Abstract:
 
 HP commissioned Tolly to evaluate the performance, power consumption and  
 TCO of its E5400 zl and E8200 switch series and compare those systems with  
 the Cisco Systems Catalyst 3750-X and Catalyst 4500.
 
 This is because the Vendor is getting to pick what they want to benchmark  
 rather than the company benchmarking them. No one is going to choose tests  
 that their product will lose in. There isn't much in the way of Tom's  
 Hardware Style testing of enterprise gear to my knowledge.
 
 Cisco gear is also known for long life, being very consistent, and high  
 reliability. A walk through colos you will often see many many Cisco  
 12000's for those exact reasons.
 
 I feel each vendor has its strong points, price/performance may not be  
 Cisco's but Cisco's ease of configuration and feature sets, along with  
 reliability are definitely notable.
 
 -=Tom
 
 
  Thanks!
 
  Brandon
 
  
 
 
 -- 
 Using Opera's revolutionary email client: http://www.opera.com/mail/
  

RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Mon, 10 Jan 2011, Brandon Kim wrote:

For those that have been Cisco focused, do you stay fully objective, 
and are you willing to pitch another vendor knowing that you will have 
to learn a new IOS? And that that will be your time that you'll have to 
spend to understand the product and support it?


I work at a multivendor shop - we're not afraid to work with other 
vendors' gear.  There's a lot of Cisco here, but there is a lot of 
non-Cisco here too.


Core routing/switching: Cisco
Access switches: Cisco
Border routers: Juniper
Firewalls: Cisco/Fortinet
Load balancers: F5
Wireless: Cisco
IP Telephony: Avaya
SAN: Cisco/Brocade (I think - I don't touch the storage stuff too much :))
VPNs: Juniper/Fortinet/Cisco (depending on VPN type/application)
UPSs: Emerson(Liebert) and Eaton(Powerware)

jms



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Joel M Snyder
I try to follow the Tolly Group who compares products, and they 
continually show that Cisco equipment
is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find 
that so hard to believe.


Just a rough comment here.  Tolly's business model is a sponsored test 
one, and Cisco is the dominant vendor in the marketplace.  So when 
anyone has a new product they want to promote, they can hire Tolly's lab 
to show how a particular feature set is implemented and can often show 
how one model exceeds Cisco's performance on some or all benchmarks.


While Tolly never cheats, remember that the guys who win the test are 
the ones that are helping to design the test methodology, and so they 
are focusing on features that they know that they can beat Cisco on. 
Thus, the Tolly reports are true, but may not be telling the whole story 
or may be focusing on a particular feature more than anything else.  No 
one is lying to you, but you may not be given the whole picture.


There's nothing wrong with having Tolly show that your product is in the 
same league as Cisco's, but I would not necessarily read those reports 
to say that Cisco is always the loser in any new product comparison. 
The real value in Tolly's reports is to give credibility to the new and 
up-coming products by having a mostly-independent source show that the 
new products are comparable with the market leaders' in some ways.


Tolly is also very very important at doing spec verification: showing 
that a product actually DOES what the specification sheet says it does. 
 Remember that those numbers are often made up by product managers 
based on poorly-done in-house tests, so having a third-party, even a 
paid one, say yes, it does do that in our test lab is WAY more 
information than you get from most vendors.


Tolly provides a valuable service to our community but you need to look 
at a combination of benchmarks from Tolly as well as other very-unbiased 
sources (IDG and CMP magazines are pretty thorough) AND YOUR OWN TESTING 
to know what is best for you.


On the other hand, compared to the analyst firms like Gartner who don't 
even have test labs and generate their reports based on phone calls, 
Google searches, and unverified specification sheets, Tolly is a source 
of infinite knowledge about products.


Finally, also remember that performance is only one part of system 
design and deployment.  Management and feature completeness are, for the 
operator community, often more important than whether the box can do 80 
Gbps or 85 Gbps.  Product selection is best done by YOU setting YOUR 
requirements and doing YOUR OWN testing, not by looking at point tests 
to see if one product version/model/device beats another in a particular 
small set of performance tests.


Obligatory disclaimer: we don't compete directly with Tolly, but we do 
get paid by the magazines to do testing and there is some overlap, so we 
do compete indirectly.


jms

--
Joel M Snyder, 1404 East Lind Road, Tucson, AZ, 85719
Senior Partner, Opus One   Phone: +1 520 324 0494
j...@opus1.comhttp://www.opus1.com/jms



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott
the pro curve line is cheap and the standard support contract price can't be 
beat (life time free).   For many ' normal ' deployments it would be a good 
choice.in a 10Gbit HPC  or highly redundant environment I'd probably be 
looking at Extreme or Force 10.

There is a feature on the Cisco 6500 series which is very appealing for those 
needing highly redundant / quick fail over,  VSS.   Currently you can only get 
it on 6500's or better,  so the cost of admission is huge,  and you have to 
have the physical space to mount the units.  Extreme has a similar feature 
which is available threw out most of the product line,  meaning you don't have 
to drop 6 figures for a redundant zero time fail over solution and can fit it 
into as little as 2Us in the rack.   I recently set up a pair of Summit 650's 
using the virtual switch feature.  I have multiple 10Gbit clients terminated to 
the pair.  zero time fail over when a link goes down,  its nice.  This is 
what I find is the trend with features and Cisco,   Cisco sticks with what is 
known and a bit reluctant to throw a new feature into the mix,  where as a 
compeating vendor sees that as an opertunity.Cisco is slow and steady,  
where the other vendors tend to be lighter on their feet.   sometimes when you 
are quick on your feet,  you trip more often than the one walking slowly.


-g



On Jan 10, 2011, at 12:04 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:


 Wow, overall consensus is that there are quite a few that are migrating to 
 Juniper from Cisco.

 I am a bit biased because I have spent an awful amount of time invested into 
 Cisco and understanding how to configure them.
 But being a former business owner, I also am very much sensitive to costs and 
 business needs.

 For those that have been Cisco focused, do you stay fully objective, and are 
 you willing to pitch another vendor knowing that you will
 have to learn a new IOS? And that that will be your time that you'll have to 
 spend to understand the product and support it?

 We have been selling HP procurves to SMB's because of the cost factor. I 
 don't really mind them all that much. I've tried to fit Cisco switches
 in the mix but their pricing is just so much more as well as the smartnet 
 costs. They really price themselves out and that is unfortunate.

 I will be looking at refreshing our core switches and routers soon so I will 
 stay objective as much as I can.

 =)




 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 10:36:24 -0600
 CC: brandon@brandontek.com
 From: tad1...@gmail.com

 On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 09:31:32 -0600, Brandon Kim
 brandon@brandontek.com wrote:


 Hello gents:

 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a
 mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about
 being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?

 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of
 choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a
 real world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the
 Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco
 equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find
 that so hard to believe.

 Cisco is typically not known as the fastest or most power efficient when
 compared to other vendors, but they usually have some advanced feature
 sets that are very nice. In the ISP space this may be less helpful, but in
 the SMB and Enterprise space this can be very helpful. Things such as Call
 Manager Express, Web Content Filtering, WebEx Nodes, Server Load
 Balancing, Wireless Lan Controllers, etc. that are either built into IOS
 or available with a line card or module, are nice tools to have at your
 disposal, and often can mean reducing the number of devices you need in
 your rack.

 As of the Tolly group, I find whomever pays Tolly for the survey tends to
 be the fastest.

 Example:
 Abstract:

 HP commissioned Tolly to evaluate the performance, power consumption and
 TCO of its E5400 zl and E8200 switch series and compare those systems with
 the Cisco Systems Catalyst 3750-X and Catalyst 4500.

 This is because the Vendor is getting to pick what they want to benchmark
 rather than the company benchmarking them. No one is going to choose tests
 that their product will lose in. There isn't much in the way of Tom's
 Hardware Style testing of enterprise gear to my knowledge.

 Cisco gear is also known for long life, being very consistent, and high
 reliability. A walk through colos you will often see many many Cisco
 12000's for those exact reasons.

 I feel each vendor has its strong points, price/performance may not be
 Cisco's but Cisco's ease of configuration and feature sets, along with
 reliability are definitely notable

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread James Smith
All the places I've worked in the past decade have been all Cisco shops for
routing and switching, with a lot of Cisco use for security too (firewalls
and IDS).  Same with my current position, but we're switching to Juniper for
all those product categories.  Same or better performance, but 10-20% less
cost.  Additionally, I find the Juniper command line has more features that
make operating and monitoring much more efficient.  Also, JunOS has only one
development train which means that the commands I use work on every single
Juniper platform.  It always bugs me when I’m trying to setup QOS across a
network with different Cisco platforms (CatOS, ASA, different versions of
IOS) and each platform has a completely different way of doing it.

F5 all the way for content management.

TippingPoint for IPS.


On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 10:31 AM, Brandon Kim brandon@brandontek.comwrote:


 Hello gents:

 I wanted to put this out there for all of you. Our network consists of a
 mixture of Cisco and Extreme equipment.

 Would you say that it's fair to say that if you are serious at all about
 being a service provider that your core equipment is Cisco based?

 Am I limiting myself by thinking that Cisco is the de facto vendor of
 choice? I'm not looking for so much fanboy responses, but more of a real
 world
 experience of what you guys use that actually work and does the job.

 No technical questions here, just general feedback. I try to follow the
 Tolly Group who compares products, and they continually show that Cisco
 equipment
 is a poor performer in almost any equipment compared to others, I find that
 so hard to believe.

 Thanks!

 Brandon






-- 
James Smith


Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Jack Bates



On 1/10/2011 11:03 AM, Greg Whynott wrote:

Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that large 
using Foundry in large deployments..



People (who should know) have told me L3 does for some of their 10GE 
bonding. If you want high end at low cost, the box does it. Just price 
100GE cards at the different vendors. :)



Jack



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread b nickell
Cisco and my new Love; Juniper.. for Tier I / Peer

On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 10:43 AM, Jack Bates jba...@brightok.net wrote:



 On 1/10/2011 11:03 AM, Greg Whynott wrote:

 Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that
 large using Foundry in large deployments..


 People (who should know) have told me L3 does for some of their 10GE
 bonding. If you want high end at low cost, the box does it. Just price 100GE
 cards at the different vendors. :)


 Jack




-- 
-B


Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Miquel van Smoorenburg
In article xs4all.61ec3786-5732-4c5a-8938-a15e840dc...@oicr.on.ca you write:
 Just as a pointer - one of the largest and most utilized IX (AMS-IX) has
 their platform built on Brocade devices.

Brocade device's pre Foundry purchase correct?  I can't see anyone that
large using Foundry in large deployments..

Well the ams-ix has been using Foundry for years, so it's
really the Brocade-formerly-Foundry hardware.

http://www.ams-ix.net/infrastructure/
http://www.ams-ix.net/infrastructure-detail/

Mike.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Andrey Khomyakov
There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.
I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and Avaya
phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling between
juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.

Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the network, the
rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good technical/financial
reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in those
cases.

Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least in my
experience.

My $0.02

Andrey

On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:

 I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal L2/L3.
  Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.

 from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried to use
 another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it was a bad
 choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
  multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.  Then
 for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to say Cisco
 gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and handled
 better when stuff hits the fan.

 the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
 deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC requirements
 which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has always
 been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed to
 trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they have been
 pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the other
 vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be beta
 testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our firmware
 on our core equipment several times in one year…).


 Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the smart net
 contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with unrestricted license
 and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on options,
  with a yearly renewal of about 15k or more…

 -g



-- 
Andrey Khomyakov
[khomyakov.and...@gmail.com]


Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Charles N Wyble
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

pfsense in redundant pair for routing/security/vlan termination
cisco all the way for l2 switching

On 01/10/2011 09:38 AM, James Smith wrote:
 All the places I've worked in the past decade have been all Cisco shops for
 routing and switching, with a lot of Cisco use for security too (firewalls
 and IDS).  Same with my current position, but we're switching to Juniper for
 all those product categories.  Same or better performance, but 10-20% less
 cost.  Additionally, I find the Juniper command line has more features that
 make operating and monitoring much more efficient.  Also, JunOS has only one
 development train which means that the commands I use work on every single
 Juniper platform.  It always bugs me when I’m trying to setup QOS across a
 network with different Cisco platforms (CatOS, ASA, different versions of
 IOS) and each platform has a completely different way of doing it.
 
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.10 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/
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=c7OX
-END PGP SIGNATURE-



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread George Bonser
 From: Andrey Khomyakov 
 Sent: Monday, January 10, 2011 11:36 AM
 To: nanog group
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say
 that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both
 sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and
 Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling
between
 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.

On the other hand, the other vendors are generally willing to bend over
backwards and sort out interoperability issues and often have technical
resources that are just as experienced on the Cisco gear as the Cisco
techs are.

And while Cisco might have at one time done the you should have bought
Cisco (click) act, I don't get that impression these days as more
networks have equipment from mixed vendors for very specific parts.
There are reasons why one might choose to purchase gear from different
vendors in a best of breed approach.  One might have load balancers
from A10 or Citrix, a firewall from Juniper or Palo Alto Networks,
access switches from Arista, core gear from Brocade and maybe even a
couple of Cisco boxes here and there where they make sense.  Having one
single vendor for no reason other than to simply ease troubleshooting
might be a valid reason in some networks but doesn't make sense in
others.  If you don't have the technical resources to sort out issues
in-house, sure, it might make sense to let the vendor do it all and in
that case you will need a network from one vendor.  Different vendors
have different things they do very well. A network might want to
leverage those good aspects in their network design.

It basically comes down to the type of service you are offering and how
much money you have.  For a best of breed network, you might have to
pay a little more for in-house talent.  For a homogeneous network, you
might sacrifice performance in some areas for savings on talent.  It
just depends on what is important to you.  No one vendor, in my
experience, makes the very best gear at the very best price in every
portion of the network.

That isn't Cisco specific, it goes for practically all vendors.
  



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Chris Adams
Once upon a time, Andrey Khomyakov khomyakov.and...@gmail.com said:
 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.

That kind of behavior from a vendor tells me I shouldn't have bought
that vendor for either side.

-- 
Chris Adams cmad...@hiwaay.net
Systems and Network Administrator - HiWAAY Internet Services
I don't speak for anybody but myself - that's enough trouble.



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Brandon Kim

To your point Andrey,

It probably works both ways too. I'm sure HP would love to finger point as 
well. I remember reading for my CCNP one 
of the thought process behind getting all Cisco is the very reason you pointed 
out, get all Cisco!

How convenient though for Cisco to do that, I wonder if they are being 
sincere(sarcasm).

Wouldn't it a perfect world for Cisco to just have everyone buy their stuff...I 
think it's a cop out though and you really should
try to support your product as best you can if it is connected to another 
vendor. 

I'm sad to hear that TACACS took that route. I hope they at least tried their 
hardest to support you.



 From: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:35:36 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 
 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling between
 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.
 
 Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the network, the
 rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good technical/financial
 reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in those
 cases.
 
 Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least in my
 experience.
 
 My $0.02
 
 Andrey
 
 On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:
 
  I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal L2/L3.
   Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.
 
  from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried to use
  another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it was a bad
  choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
   multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.  Then
  for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to say Cisco
  gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and handled
  better when stuff hits the fan.
 
  the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
  deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC requirements
  which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has always
  been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed to
  trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they have been
  pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the other
  vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be beta
  testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our firmware
  on our core equipment several times in one year…).
 
 
  Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the smart net
  contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with unrestricted license
  and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on options,
   with a yearly renewal of about 15k or more…
 
  -g
 
 
 
 -- 
 Andrey Khomyakov
 [khomyakov.and...@gmail.com]
  

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott

i think it really depends on who answers your call.   I've called Cisco a few 
times before for inter vendor issues and they gave us the   call the other 
vendor   finger.  ..  Other times they saved the day.

i know some shops negotiate their support contract which precludes them from 
going threw the regular support escalation process.  you get to speak to a more 
senior tech on the first 'hello'.

-g


On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Chris Adams wrote:

 Once upon a time, Andrey Khomyakov khomyakov.and...@gmail.com said:
 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.

 That kind of behavior from a vendor tells me I shouldn't have bought
 that vendor for either side.


--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott
just a side note,  HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in 
relation to solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they 
have PDF booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
 ).

At the time the other vendor in this case (cisco) flat our refused to help us.  
this was a few years back tho,  things may of changed.  I'd ask support you 
are not telling me i'm the _only_ customer trying to do this …   to which they 
would try and play the well most people don't mix gear..

HP's example should be the yard stick in the field.

-g



On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:


 To your point Andrey,

 It probably works both ways too. I'm sure HP would love to finger point as 
 well. I remember reading for my CCNP one
 of the thought process behind getting all Cisco is the very reason you 
 pointed out, get all Cisco!

 How convenient though for Cisco to do that, I wonder if they are being 
 sincere(sarcasm).

 Wouldn't it a perfect world for Cisco to just have everyone buy their 
 stuff...I think it's a cop out though and you really should
 try to support your product as best you can if it is connected to another 
 vendor.

 I'm sad to hear that TACACS took that route. I hope they at least tried their 
 hardest to support you.



 From: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:35:36 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 To: nanog@nanog.org

 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling between
 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.

 Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the network, the
 rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good technical/financial
 reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in those
 cases.

 Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least in my
 experience.

 My $0.02

 Andrey

 On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott 
 greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:

 I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal L2/L3.
 Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.

 from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried to use
 another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it was a bad
 choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
 multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.  Then
 for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to say Cisco
 gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and handled
 better when stuff hits the fan.

 the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
 deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC requirements
 which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has always
 been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed to
 trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they have been
 pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the other
 vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be beta
 testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our firmware
 on our core equipment several times in one year…).


 Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the smart net
 contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with unrestricted license
 and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on options,
 with a yearly renewal of about 15k or more…

 -g



 --
 Andrey Khomyakov
 [khomyakov.and...@gmail.com]



--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Brandon Kim


to which they would try and play the well most people don't mix gear..



ha! Funny if you responded with, Oh really? Thanks I didn't know that, I guess 
I'll get all HP...who do I talk to, to return this Cisco router?





 From: greg.whyn...@oicr.on.ca
 To: brandon@brandontek.com
 CC: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com; nanog@nanog.org
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:20:06 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 just a side note,  HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in 
 relation to solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they 
 have PDF booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for 
 example,  setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
 http://cdn.procurve..com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
  ).
 
 At the time the other vendor in this case (cisco) flat our refused to help 
 us.  this was a few years back tho,  things may of changed.  I'd ask support 
 you are not telling me i'm the _only_ customer trying to do this …   to 
 which they would try and play the well most people don't mix gear..
 
 HP's example should be the yard stick in the field.
 
 -g
 
 
 
 On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:
 
 
  To your point Andrey,
 
  It probably works both ways too. I'm sure HP would love to finger point as 
  well. I remember reading for my CCNP one
  of the thought process behind getting all Cisco is the very reason you 
  pointed out, get all Cisco!
 
  How convenient though for Cisco to do that, I wonder if they are being 
  sincere(sarcasm).
 
  Wouldn't it a perfect world for Cisco to just have everyone buy their 
  stuff...I think it's a cop out though and you really should
  try to support your product as best you can if it is connected to another 
  vendor.
 
  I'm sad to hear that TACACS took that route. I hope they at least tried 
  their hardest to support you.
 
 
 
  From: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com
  Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:35:36 -0500
  Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
  To: nanog@nanog.org
 
  There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
  since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
  VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.
  I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and Avaya
  phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling between
  juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
  Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.
 
  Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the network, the
  rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good technical/financial
  reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in those
  cases.
 
  Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least in my
  experience.
 
  My $0.02
 
  Andrey
 
  On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott 
  greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:
 
  I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal L2/L3.
  Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.
 
  from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried to use
  another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it was a 
  bad
  choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
  multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.  Then
  for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to say 
  Cisco
  gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and handled
  better when stuff hits the fan.
 
  the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
  deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC requirements
  which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has always
  been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed to
  trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they have 
  been
  pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the other
  vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be beta
  testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our 
  firmware
  on our core equipment several times in one year…).
 
 
  Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the smart net
  contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with unrestricted 
  license
  and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on options,
  with a yearly renewal of about 15k or more…
 
  -g
 
 
 
  --
  Andrey Khomyakov
  [khomyakov.and...@gmail.com]
 
 
 
 --
 
 This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
 information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
 distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
 intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
 please contact the sender

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Thomas Donnelly


On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:39:19 -0600, Brandon Kim  
brandon@brandontek.com wrote:





to which they would try and play the well most people don't mix gear..



ha! Funny if you responded with, Oh really? Thanks I didn't know that,  
I guess I'll get all HP...who do I talk to, to return this Cisco router?


I've threatened that one against Juniper and minutes later I had an  
engineer on the phone. At 3:30am. Funny how once you mention buying  
another vendor they raise an eyebrow.









From: greg.whyn...@oicr.on.ca
To: brandon@brandontek.com
CC: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com; nanog@nanog.org
Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:20:06 -0500
Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

just a side note,  HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt  
with in relation to solving/providing inter vendor interoperability  
solutions.   they have PDF booklets on many  things we would run into  
during work.  for example,  setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,   
(  
http://cdn.procurve..com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf  
).


At the time the other vendor in this case (cisco) flat our refused to  
help us.  this was a few years back tho,  things may of changed.  I'd  
ask support you are not telling me i'm the _only_ customer trying to  
do this …   to which they would try and play the well most people  
don't mix gear..


HP's example should be the yard stick in the field.

-g



On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:


 To your point Andrey,

 It probably works both ways too. I'm sure HP would love to finger  
point as well. I remember reading for my CCNP one
 of the thought process behind getting all Cisco is the very reason  
you pointed out, get all Cisco!


 How convenient though for Cisco to do that, I wonder if they are  
being sincere(sarcasm).


 Wouldn't it a perfect world for Cisco to just have everyone buy their  
stuff...I think it's a cop out though and you really should
 try to support your product as best you can if it is connected to  
another vendor.


 I'm sad to hear that TACACS took that route. I hope they at least  
tried their hardest to support you.




 From: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:35:36 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 To: nanog@nanog.org

 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say  
that

 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both  
sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and  
Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling  
between

 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them  
anymore.


 Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the  
network, the
 rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good  
technical/financial
 reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in  
those

 cases.

 Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least  
in my

 experience.

 My $0.02

 Andrey

 On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott  
greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:


 I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal  
L2/L3.

 Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.

 from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried  
to use
 another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it  
was a bad

 choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
 multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.   
Then
 for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to  
say Cisco
 gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and  
handled

 better when stuff hits the fan.

 the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
 deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC  
requirements
 which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has  
always
 been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed  
to
 trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they  
have been
 pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the  
other
 vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be  
beta
 testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our  
firmware

 on our core equipment several times in one year…).


 Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the  
smart net
 contracts.   They come at a price.   a little 5505 with  
unrestricted license
 and contract costs over 2k,  a 5540 about 40k-70k depending on  
options,

 with a yearly renewal of about 15k or more…

 -g



 --
 Andrey Khomyakov
 [khomyakov.and...@gmail.com]



--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or  
privileged information for the sole use

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott
for vendors who we were not getting the goods from,  I've found calling your 
sales rep much more efficient than anything you can say/ask/beg/threaten the 
tech on the phone.Sales guys have the inside numbers to call,  the clout to 
get things moving as they generate revenue for said vendor.his pay comes 
from you,  you pay him,  he works for 2.

-g


On Jan 10, 2011, at 4:14 PM, Thomas Donnelly wrote:


 On Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:39:19 -0600, Brandon Kim
 brandon@brandontek.com wrote:



 to which they would try and play the well most people don't mix gear..



 ha! Funny if you responded with, Oh really? Thanks I didn't know that,
 I guess I'll get all HP...who do I talk to, to return this Cisco router?

 I've threatened that one against Juniper and minutes later I had an
 engineer on the phone. At 3:30am. Funny how once you mention buying
 another vendor they raise an eyebrow.






 From: greg.whyn...@oicr.on.ca
 To: brandon@brandontek.com
 CC: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com; nanog@nanog.org
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:20:06 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

 just a side note,  HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt
 with in relation to solving/providing inter vendor interoperability
 solutions.   they have PDF booklets on many  things we would run into
 during work.  for example,  setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,
 (
 http://cdn.procurve..com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
 ).

 At the time the other vendor in this case (cisco) flat our refused to
 help us.  this was a few years back tho,  things may of changed.  I'd
 ask support you are not telling me i'm the _only_ customer trying to
 do this …   to which they would try and play the well most people
 don't mix gear..

 HP's example should be the yard stick in the field.

 -g



 On Jan 10, 2011, at 3:04 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:


 To your point Andrey,

 It probably works both ways too. I'm sure HP would love to finger
 point as well. I remember reading for my CCNP one
 of the thought process behind getting all Cisco is the very reason
 you pointed out, get all Cisco!

 How convenient though for Cisco to do that, I wonder if they are
 being sincere(sarcasm).

 Wouldn't it a perfect world for Cisco to just have everyone buy their
 stuff...I think it's a cop out though and you really should
 try to support your product as best you can if it is connected to
 another vendor.

 I'm sad to hear that TACACS took that route. I hope they at least
 tried their hardest to support you.



 From: khomyakov.and...@gmail.com
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:35:36 -0500
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 To: nanog@nanog.org

 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say
 that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both
 sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and
 Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling
 between
 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them
 anymore.

 Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the
 network, the
 rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good
 technical/financial
 reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in
 those
 cases.

 Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least
 in my
 experience.

 My $0.02

 Andrey

 On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 11:52 AM, Greg Whynott
 greg.whyn...@oicr.on.cawrote:

 I've tried to use other vendors threw out the years for internal
 L2/L3.
 Always Cisco for perimeter routing/firewalling.

 from my personal experience,  each time we took a chance and tried
 to use
 another vendor for internal L2 needs,  we would be reminded why it
 was a bad
 choice down the road,  due to hardware reliability,  support issues,
 multiple and ongoing software bugs,  architectural design choices.
 Then
 for the next few years I'd regret the decision. This is not to
 say Cisco
 gear has been without its issues,  but they are much fewer and
 handled
 better when stuff hits the fan.

 the only other vendor at this point in my career I'd fee comfortable
 deploying for internal enterprise switching,  including HPC
 requirements
 which is not CIsco branded,  would be Force10 or Extreme.  it has
 always
 been Cisco for edge routing/firewalling,  but i wouldn't be opposed
 to
 trying Juniper for routing,  I know of a few shops who do and they
 have been
 pleased thus far.I've little or no experience  with many of the
 other
 vendors,  and I'm sure they have good offerings,  but I won't be
 beta
 testing their firmwares anymore (one vendor insisted we upgrade our
 firmware
 on our core equipment several times in one year…).


 Cisco isn't a good choice if you don't have the budget for the
 smart net
 contracts

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Jeff Kell
On 1/10/2011 3:20 PM, Greg Whynott wrote:
 HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in relation to 
 solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they have PDF 
 booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
 setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
 http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
  ).

Well, technically, the HP reference tells you how to convert your Cisco
default PVST over to MST to match the HP preference.

The handful of HP switches versus the stacks and stacks of production
Cisco requiring conversion to suit them was intimidating to say the
least :-)

Foundry/Brocade on the other hand do PVST (so they say, I haven't given
it a thorough lab test).

Jeff



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Greg Whynott
just to play devils advocate..

PVST is Cisco propriety.

I'd rather see vendors default to an open standard as opposed to something 
which is closed.  the lowest common denominator…

in my eyes the document tells you how to make a cisco and hp switch work 
together,  not convert.

numbers alone do not denote intelligence,  if so cockroaches would rule the 
world.  8)


-g





On Jan 10, 2011, at 5:32 PM, Jeff Kell wrote:

 On 1/10/2011 3:20 PM, Greg Whynott wrote:
 HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in relation to 
 solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they have PDF 
 booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
 setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
 http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
  ).

 Well, technically, the HP reference tells you how to convert your Cisco
 default PVST over to MST to match the HP preference.

 The handful of HP switches versus the stacks and stacks of production
 Cisco requiring conversion to suit them was intimidating to say the
 least :-)

 Foundry/Brocade on the other hand do PVST (so they say, I haven't given
 it a thorough lab test).

 Jeff


--

This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged 
information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or 
distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally 
intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, 
please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other 
information contained in this message may not be that of the organization.



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 1/10/2011 14:32, Jeff Kell wrote:
 On 1/10/2011 3:20 PM, Greg Whynott wrote:
 HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in relation to 
 solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they have PDF 
 booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
 setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
 http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
  ).
 
 Well, technically, the HP reference tells you how to convert your Cisco
 default PVST over to MST to match the HP preference.
 
 The handful of HP switches versus the stacks and stacks of production
 Cisco requiring conversion to suit them was intimidating to say the
 least :-)
 


To be fair, one is Cisco proprietary while the other is IEEE 802.1Q.

~Seth



RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Brandon Kim

To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do come out 
with a way to do things first which then become a standard that
they have to follow.

ISL/DOT1Q
HSRP/VRRP
etherchannel/LACP

Just some examples. I'm not aware of too many other vendors that create 
their own protocol, in which they then become a standard?






 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:46:53 -0800
 From: se...@rollernet.us
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 On 1/10/2011 14:32, Jeff Kell wrote:
  On 1/10/2011 3:20 PM, Greg Whynott wrote:
  HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in relation to 
  solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they have PDF 
  booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
  setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
  http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
   ).
  
  Well, technically, the HP reference tells you how to convert your Cisco
  default PVST over to MST to match the HP preference.
  
  The handful of HP switches versus the stacks and stacks of production
  Cisco requiring conversion to suit them was intimidating to say the
  least :-)
  
 
 
 To be fair, one is Cisco proprietary while the other is IEEE 802.1Q.
 
 ~Seth
 
  

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 1/10/2011 14:54, Brandon Kim wrote:
 
 To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do come out 
 with a way to do things first which then become a standard that
 they have to follow.
 
 ISL/DOT1Q
 HSRP/VRRP
 etherchannel/LACP
 
 Just some examples. I'm not aware of too many other vendors that create 
 their own protocol, in which they then become a standard?
 
 


All I found (quickly without trying too hard) is that the IEEE version
is based on Cisco's MISTP rather than PVST.

~Seth



Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Owen DeLong

On Jan 10, 2011, at 11:35 AM, Andrey Khomyakov wrote:

 There have been awfully too many time when Cisco TAC would just say that
 since the problem you are trying to troubleshoot is between Cisco and
 VendorX, we can't help you. You should have bought Cisco for both sides.
 I had that happen when I was troubleshooting LLDP between 3750s and Avaya
 phones, TACACS between Cisco and tac_plus daemon, link bundling between
 juniper EX and Cisco, some obscure switching issues between CAT and
 Procurves and other examples like that just don't recall them anymore.
 
This has been my justification in the past for buying Cisco for neither side the
next time.

I've never had Juniper tell me that until they could show clearly that the
misbehaving item was the brand C hardware on the other side. They even
went so far as to provide me very detailed analysis of the exact form of
misbehavior in the brand C gear and offered to talk to the C-TAC if I
could arrange it in order to better communicate the problem.

While I'm not sure this is the usual behavior of the J-TAC, I can say that
the C-TAC behavior described above is all too common.

 Every time I'm reminded that if you have a lot of Cisco on the network, the
 rest should be cisco too, unless there is a very good technical/financial
 reason for it, but you should be prepared to be your own help in those
 cases.
 
A network-equipment vendor that won't help you resolve interoperability
problems with equipment they didn't build (BTW, I've had C-TAC refuse
to resolve problems between different business units of C-Gear, too) IS
a reason to buy from other vendors, IMHO.

 Vendors love to point at the other vendors for solutions. At least in my
 experience.
 
Good vendors don't do that. Vendors that do that don't get my business.
Vote with your feet and your $$.

My $.0.2.

 My $0.02
 
 Andrey
 
Owen




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Owen DeLong
This is a two-edged sword.

Cisco tends to do their own thing, then, try to push their way of doing it onto 
the standards
bodies when the competition starts trying to catch up.

Other vendors tend to bring ideas that will require interoperability to the 
standards bodies
and work on getting the standard at least partially defined before spending 
effort on
implementation.

There are advantages and drawbacks to both approaches.

Owen

On Jan 10, 2011, at 2:54 PM, Brandon Kim wrote:

 
 To be fair to Cisco and maybe I'm way off here. But it seems they do come out 
 with a way to do things first which then become a standard that
 they have to follow.
 
 ISL/DOT1Q
 HSRP/VRRP
 etherchannel/LACP
 
 Just some examples. I'm not aware of too many other vendors that create 
 their own protocol, in which they then become a standard?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2011 14:46:53 -0800
 From: se...@rollernet.us
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 On 1/10/2011 14:32, Jeff Kell wrote:
 On 1/10/2011 3:20 PM, Greg Whynott wrote:
 HP probably was the most helpful vendor i've dealt with in relation to 
 solving/providing inter vendor interoperability solutions.   they have PDF 
 booklets on many  things we would run into during work.  for example,  
 setting up STP between Cisco and HP gear,  ( 
 http://cdn.procurve.com/training/Manuals/ProCurve-and-Cisco-STP-Interoperability.pdf
  ).
 
 Well, technically, the HP reference tells you how to convert your Cisco
 default PVST over to MST to match the HP preference.
 
 The handful of HP switches versus the stacks and stacks of production
 Cisco requiring conversion to suit them was intimidating to say the
 least :-)
 
 
 
 To be fair, one is Cisco proprietary while the other is IEEE 802.1Q.
 
 ~Seth
 
 




Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread lorddoskias

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aECSsfd4Wk

Watch this video, now, I know that it is essentially advertisement from 
brocade but the guy from ams-ix says something very interesting - For 
us it is important to have a board-level relationship with the vendor, 
no matter who it is. So in the end this might be a factor in deciding 
which equipment to buy - whether your company will be able to have a 
higher-level relationship with your vendor so that you can expect 
appropriate treatment in case of emergency. With bigger company this 
would be harder, though I think the position account manager is 
essential this, whereas with smaller companies it is easier to build 
such a relationship




RE: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Brandon Kim

Thank you for this. I find him very honest and humble. Although he didn't 
mention Cisco, should I assume that
he's probably thinking about Cisco without saying it?

For anyone that has watched this, he has mentioned going from dual star 
topology to an MPLS.

Perhaps one can educate me a little on how that is better off-list? It is an 
intresting topology.

Do you guys run MPLS internally as your main topology? I was a little confused 
on that part



 Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2011 01:17:39 +
 From: lorddosk...@gmail.com
 To: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?
 
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aECSsfd4Wk
 
 Watch this video, now, I know that it is essentially advertisement from 
 brocade but the guy from ams-ix says something very interesting - For 
 us it is important to have a board-level relationship with the vendor, 
 no matter who it is. So in the end this might be a factor in deciding 
 which equipment to buy - whether your company will be able to have a 
 higher-level relationship with your vendor so that you can expect 
 appropriate treatment in case of emergency. With bigger company this 
 would be harder, though I think the position account manager is 
 essential this, whereas with smaller companies it is easier to build 
 such a relationship
 
  

Re: Is Cisco equpiment de facto for you?

2011-01-10 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 11 Jan 2011 01:17:39 GMT, lorddoskias said:

 appropriate treatment in case of emergency. With bigger company this 
 would be harder, though I think the position account manager is 
 essential this

Heard someplace, but we've been here ourselves:

We were thrilled to hear they were assigning us our very own lead account
manager, until we found out the other levels were platinum, gold, silver, and
bronze...



pgpck4iED09bD.pgp
Description: PGP signature