Here you go, we are running Nexus 3064PQ used switches and pretty much 200 
switches we have installed in our datacenter as a tor switches and running vPC 
to between them to increase bandwidth, we are also running BGP, OSPF routing 
protocols, But for that you need IP enterprise license, check license 
requirement.

I have not idea about MPSL and VPLS but I believe that should work too. 

I’m extremely happy with these switches they have very low latency and very 
fast switching. Let me know if you have any question about these switches. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Mar 30, 2019, at 10:26 AM, Colton Conor <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> For those of you that have used the Cisco Nexus 3064, what can you tell me
> about this switch? The used market on eBay is flooded with these switches
> at around $500 each which seems like a hell of a deal for a 48 port 10G
> switch with 4 40G uplinks.
> 
> We don't have Cisco only Juniper experience, so I don't know much about
> these switches. From what I can tell they are EOLed, but it looks like
> Cisco is still producing software for them?
> 
> What confusing to me is it seems Cisco has like 6 different operating
> systems, and this one runs the Nexus operating system which I know nothing
> about. How dos it compare to Juniper?
> 
> We traditionally use something like a Juniper QFX5100 for this port count
> and density. How does the Nexus 3064 compare to a QFX5100? A used QFX5100
> goes fro around $3000, so for the same price I could buy 6 of these Nexus
> 3064's.
> 
> There are multiple models of the 3064, so please let me know if these are
> any big gotchas to know about.
> 
> Does the Nexus 3064 support MPLS? VPLS? Routing using OSPF and BGP?
> _______________________________________________
> cisco-nsp mailing list  [email protected]
> https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
> archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
_______________________________________________
cisco-nsp mailing list  [email protected]
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp
archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/

Reply via email to