Re: [j-nsp] What does AS path attribute problem mean?

2011-09-10 Thread Markus
For what it's worth, I heard from someone that it also affected Foundry and Microtik, and in one case, Cisco. All routers were running older software releases and in the case of Microtik, upgrading to the latest software fixed it. Am 10.09.2011 06:56, schrieb Chris Adams: Once upon a time,

Re: [j-nsp] MX RE how fast is slow

2011-09-10 Thread Drew Weaver
ytti said: To my understanding RPD process is very much OS inside OS type of deal, it has its own memory management, own scheduler etc., so any complexities you might have experienced when linux/freebsd/windows was being ported to another platforms you might experience in RPD. So you're not

Re: [j-nsp] MX RE how fast is slow

2011-09-10 Thread Mark Tinka
On Saturday, September 10, 2011 09:17:41 PM Drew Weaver wrote: With all of this talk of how slow the MX80's RE is it got me wondering what is a fast RE? For instance (and this is a bad example because it's old..) on my PRP-2s it takes about 5-6 minutes before it settles after a link flap.

Re: [j-nsp] What does AS path attribute problem mean?

2011-09-10 Thread Kevin Hodle
Hi Markus/Mark, Most of our backbone consists of Cisco 7600s running SRD, as well as Brocade NI/XMRs running IW 5.1 with a small handful of older Juniper M-series and Cisco 12ks (non of them directly terminating eBGP session). We saw no issues on any other platform except M-series Junipers