TL;DR: Yes, go ahead, they’re good, we like them.

I won’t say they’re perfect, but we’re using them at the edge (two of them in a 
hybrid core/edge model right now, even!) and I would happily endorse them for 
edge routers.  Their BGP stack hasn’t put up any major roadblocks for us so far 
(at least, that weren’t, ahem, self-inflicted).  We’ve had 1 incident in the 
last ~2 years where a stuck route on one router needed a full reboot to clear 
out, following a partial outage - that’s the worst thing I can remember right 
now.

Don’t know if you know this already or not, so making it clear:  the one thing 
to beware of IMO, compared to e.g. a high-end Juniper MX960-style system where 
you can turn every single feature on without caring, is that the Aristas can do 
almost anything you can dream of… but not necessarily all at the same time on 
the same box, no matter which model you’re looking at.
So if you use it as an edge router?  Fine.  As a VXLAN gateway?  Fine.  As a 
core router or switch with every kind of accounting turned on?  Fine.  All of 
those things simultaneously?  Maaaaaybe.  It’ll be decision time for which 
specific, individual sub-features you can live without.  But you’re paying 
1/10th (probably less!) of what you would for an MX960, so there you go.

If this helps, they’re similar to the Cisco Nexus platform in this regard, e.g. 
if you enable and use every single “Feature” on the fixed-configuration Nexuses 
you’ll start running out of hardware configuration resources to enable them 
long before you can finish configuring or using all those features.

This is something your Arista SE can go through with you in excruciating detail 
(keyword: “TCAM Profile”), if you think you might be veering into that 
territory.  After lots of iterations, and a new software release or two, our 
all-in-one boxes (7280SR2K) do more or less everything we want them to.  
(Apparently we aren’t typical Arista customers.  Go figure.)  If you want to do 
BGP and MLAG at the same time on the same box, get your SE involved from the 
start.

For anyone not trying to overload the platform or do too much “weird” stuff, it 
should be a quick and easy deployment producing much happiness.

-Adam


Adam Thompson
Consultant, Infrastructure Services
[MERLIN]
100 - 135 Innovation Drive
Winnipeg, MB, R3T 6A8
(204) 977-6824 or 1-800-430-6404 (MB only)
athomp...@merlin.mb.ca<mailto:athomp...@merlin.mb.ca>
www.merlin.mb.ca<http://www.merlin.mb.ca/>

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+athompson=merlin.mb...@nanog.org> On Behalf Of David 
Hubbard
Sent: Thursday, March 31, 2022 8:10 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Opinions on Arista for BGP?

Hi all, would love to get any current opinions (on or off list) on the 
stability of Arista’s BGP implementation these days.  Been many years since I 
last looked into it and wasn’t ready for a change yet.  Past many years have 
been IOS XR on NCS5500 platform and Arista everywhere but the edge.  I’ve been 
really happy with them in the other roles, so am thinking about edge now.  I do 
like and use XR’s RPL, and prefix/as/community/object sets, but we can live 
without via our own config management if there aren’t easy equivalents.  No 
fancy needs at all, just small web server networks, so just need reliable eBGP 
and internal OSPF/OSPFv3.

Thanks,

David

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