RE: Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing?

2000-09-19 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
We use Ciscos 7513 with IOS 12.05T1 and 128Mb. Today full routing means about 80K bgp entries and it uses (including IOS, etc) 80Mb from the 128Mb. I was comparing this with another router that does not receive BGP. The second one uses less than 15Mb, what means that the BGP tables are about 65Mb

RE: Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing?

2000-09-19 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Title: Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing? Some ISPs offer full routing in two flavors: "as is" or a "summarized" version (maybe that's the case). Please don't ask any additional details because that was long long time ago... -Original Message-From: Guyler, Rik [EESUS]

RE: Cisco 3640 grunty enough for full-BGP routing?

2000-09-19 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
BGP process overall uses about 71Mb. I hope this post helps the rest of the members of the list. -Original Message- From: John Kaberna [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2000 3:21 PM To: Spolidoro, Guilherme; Cisco Groupstudy (E-mail) Subject: Re: Cisco 3640 grun

RE: RADB - BGP routing

2000-09-25 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
You can find a lot of information about RADB on the RADB.net web site. The problem is that I never found some examples or explanations on how large ISPs use the information stored on the IRRd servers on real life. Maybe somebody with more experience could comment about that. Anyway, RADB runs an

RE: RADB - BGP routing

2000-09-27 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
IL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2000 12:15 AM To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; 'Spolidoro, Guilherme' Subject: RE: RADB - BGP routing >From the ARIN, there is a statement shown below : *The minimum block of IP address space assigned by ARIN is a /20. Smaller blocks o

RE: RADB - BGP routing

2000-09-28 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
. Does it help? -Original Message- From: Benny Leong (HTHK - Senior Engineer II - iServices Development, NNSD) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 2:19 AM To: 'Brian' Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; 'Spolidoro, Guilherme' Subject: RE: RADB -

RE: Easing Internet backbone traffic..thoughts..!

2000-09-28 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Nigel, InterNAP likes to make a lot of noise on an old concept. Other companies such as SAVVIS already used this concept, although InterNAP says that they measure the delays, reliability and maybe a few other things in order to change their BGP/routing policy. They definetly have an interesting o

RE: Enabling IPSec on 12.0(7)t

2000-09-28 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Most likely your IOS version does not include IPSec. When you purchase the IOS, you have the option to purchase with/without the IPSec option. -Original Message- From: Very Gentle Guy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2000 9:18 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Enab

RE: Napster Question

2000-10-03 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Hello Hunter, You'll need a FW that is Content Aware. PIX is fine, but I don't think the IOS FW feature can do that at this time. The reason for that (Content Aware) is because you'll need to look into the packet (i.e. L5-7) in order to see if the user is doing a "get" or "put" (for FTP/HTTP for

RE: VLAN

2000-10-03 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
If you have a VLAN implemented on a Switched environment, most switches will bridge (i.e. do L2 switching) by default on the ports that belong to the same VLAN. Does it answer? Good luck. -Original Message- From: FRS [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2000 7:44 AM To:

RE: VLAN

2000-10-03 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
PROTECTED] Subject: Re: VLAN So you can BRIDGE inside a VLAN and ROUTE between VLANS? Do you have any examples of bridging inside a VLAN? ""Spolidoro, Guilherme"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]... > If you

RE: Intermittent ISDN connections

2000-10-03 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Niraj, we recently noticed a problem on one of our overseas ISDN PRI not very similar to yours, but we were using external TA with Bonding-1. Anyway, the problem is that AT&T was connecting each B channel through different paths on their network. That was causing each B channel having a different

Weired behaviour on HSRP

2000-10-12 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Hello all, I was doing some test with HSRP and I came across this specific question: When I configure the standby for authentication, but use different "keys/words" on the routers, HSRP still works (although I can see the BAD AUTHENTICATION messages). If I do a debug standby, I can see that both

RE: MPLS

2000-11-02 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Hello Helena, I ordered one of those free books from Cisco that people posted on the list. The name of the book is: L3-enabled ATM Solutions for Voice/Video, MPLS-VPN, QoS and Multicast. The book will give you information on how to configure the Cisco gear and also a decent overview about the t

RE: IS-IS use??

2000-11-16 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Chuck, I think this is a good question. I always looked for comparisons between IS-IS and OSPF and never really could find any good source (I mean, Doyle describe both protocols very well, but that's not what I'm looking for, I'm looking for large implementation descriptions, explaining problems/b

RE: VoIP/voFR

2000-11-16 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
Hello Evan, I would use num-exp for other reasons, not to accomplish what you want to do. You can do what you want on the dial-peer configuration. Here is an example:   dial-peer voice 1 pots destination-pattern 745 port 1/0:0 prefix 212345   That's what happends: when the route receive

RE: IS-IS use??

2000-11-16 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
learn customers' routes and redistribute these routes into IS-IS to router across the UUNet core? Just want to verify that I understand this correctly. Thanks Jack "Priscilla Oppenheimer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED].

RE: Throughput Meter

2000-05-23 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
There is a pretty neat tool called wsttcp, you install it on a "server" and then run it from the clients. It's very simple but do what was designed to do and is free. You can find it doing a search on the Internet. Guilherme Spolidoro CCNA, CCDA, CCSA, CCSE Telecom Analyst Unisys A&T - I.T. [EMAI

RE: FTP Throughput

2000-05-23 Thread Spolidoro, Guilherme
FTP runs over TCP, that requires an acknoledge for n packets (window). On a WAN environment, if you have plenty of BW, delay is going to be one of the limiting factors. Other factors are: I/O on your PC, quality of the TCP/IP stack (I have Win95 and we connect through a DS-3 to the Internet, but I