Hi Andrey:

I work in upper education, we have hundreds upon hundreds of switches in at 
least a hundred network closets, as well as multiple datacenters, etc. We do a 
full lease refresh every 3-5 years of the full environment. The amount of time 
it takes me to get a switch out of a box/racked is minimal compared to the 
amount of time it takes for the thing to power on. (In that it usually takes 
about 3 minutes, potentially less, depending on my rhythm). Patching a full 48 
ports (correctly) takes longer that racking. Maybe that’s because I have far 
too much practice doing this at this point.

If there’s one time waste in switch install, from my perspective, it’s how long 
it takes the things to boot up. When I’m installing the switch it’s a minor 
inconvenience. When something reboots (or when something needs to be reloaded 
to fix a bug – glares at the Catalyst switches in my life) in the middle of the 
day, it’s 7-10 minutes of outage for connected operational hosts, which is… a 
much bigger pain.

So long story short, install time is a near-zero care in my world.

That being said, especially when I deal with 2 post rack gear – the amount of 
sag over time I’m expected to be OK with in any given racking solution DOES 
somewhat matter to me. (glares again at the Catalyst switches in my life). 
Would I like good, solid, well manufactured ears and/or rails that don’t change 
for no reason between equipment revisions? Heck yes.

--Kevin


From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+kevin.menzel=sheridancollege...@nanog.org> On Behalf 
Of Andrey Khomyakov
Sent: September 24, 2021 12:38
To: Nanog <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Rack rails on network equipment

This message was sent from outside of Sheridan College. Please be careful when 
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Hi folks,
Happy Friday!

Would you, please, share your thoughts on the following matter?

Back some 5 years ago we pulled the trigger and started phasing out Cisco and 
Juniper switching products out of our data centers (reasons for that are not 
quite relevant to the topic). We selected Dell switches in part due to Dell 
using "quick rails'' (sometimes known as speed rails or toolless rails).  This 
is where both the switch side rail and the rack side rail just snap in, thus 
not requiring a screwdriver and hands of the size no bigger than a hamster paw 
to hold those stupid proprietary screws (lookin at your, cisco) to attach those 
rails.
We went from taking 16hrs to build a row of compute (from just network 
equipment racking pov) to maybe 1hr... (we estimated that on average it took us 
30 min to rack a switch from cut open the box with Juniper switches to 5 min 
with Dell switches)
Interesting tidbit is that we actually used to manufacture custom rails for our 
Juniper EX4500 switches so the switch can be actually inserted from the back of 
the rack (you know, where most of your server ports are...) and not be blocked 
by the zero-U PDUs and all the cabling in the rack. Stock rails didn't work at 
all for us unless we used wider racks, which then, in turn, reduced floor 
capacity.

As far as I know, Dell is the only switch vendor doing toolless rails so it's a 
bit of a hardware lock-in from that point of view.

So ultimately my question to you all is how much do you care about the speed of 
racking and unracking equipment and do you tell your suppliers that you care? 
How much does the time it takes to install or replace a switch impact you?

I was having a conversation with a vendor and was pushing hard on the fact that 
their switches will end up being actually costlier for me long term just 
because my switch replacement time quadruples at least, thus requiring me to 
staff more remote hands. Am I overthinking this and artificially limiting 
myself by excluding vendors who don't ship with toolless rails (which is all of 
them now except Dell)?

Thanks for your time in advance!
--Andrey

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