I'm thinking that if you need advanced features, go buy a Cisco/Juniper.
But if you need basic (or even just homogenous) functionality, pfSense ought to 
be a good-enough platform.
It's really close right now but not having redistribution is a roadblock, at 
least for me.
-Adam

Mark Tinka <[email protected]> wrote:

>On Sunday, September 15, 2013 07:35:27 PM Jim Pingle wrote:
>
>> I agree. From what I have done with Quagga on OSPF, it's
>> been pretty straightforward and simple and tends to just
>> work and work well.
>> 
>> It isn't without its quirks, but I've never been sure if
>> those are actually quirks in Quagga or the way we
>> generate configurations for it.
>
>IS-IS in Quagga is very, very broken to the point of not 
>really being usable.
>
>We're an IS-IS shop in the backbone, but with Anycast DNS, 
>we've had to run OSPF on DNS servers with Quagga/Zebra, and 
>redistribute that into our IS-IS backbone.
>
>I don't know of any decent, non-router implementation of IS-
>IS at the moment. Then again, corporate networks generally 
>depend on OSPF anyway.
>
>OSPFv3 isn't as feature-rich in Quagga as it is in routers, 
>but if you can do away with some of those features, it'll 
>work and inter-op.
>
>Mark.
>
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