On 14/04/17 15:51, David Hubbard wrote: > Hey all, have some Brocade MLXe’s that can no longer handle a full v4 and v6 > route table while also having VRF support (dumb CAM profile limitations in > the software). Mine don’t do anything fancy; just BGP to a few upstream > peers and OSPF/OSPFv3 to the inside, management VRF, some ACL’s. I’m looking > at the ASR9001 with add-on ports since I need (10) 10gig. However, I’ve also > been running some Arista 7280SE’s for the past 18 months with no issues, and > they want me to consider their 7280R since it would give me more ports, in > addition to some higher speed ports, which would be nice if I ever want to > upgrade some of our peering to 40 or 100gig. > > Arista’s specs say the 7500R / 7280R can handle 1M ipv4+ipv6 routes in > hardware (FIB): > > https://www.arista.com/assets/data/pdf/Whitepapers/FlexRoute-WP.pdf > > In theory, it would last at least a few years if the v4 table doesn’t get too > crazy between now and then. > > Curious if anyone has deployed a 7500R or 7280R in this role and what the > feedback has been? > > The 9001’s 4M ‘credits’ for the combo of v4 +(2)v6 routes obviously goes much > further, but I think either one would make it to their expected end of life, > or if not on the Arista side, I’d probably have spent half as much. > > Thanks, > > David >
I have a bunch of 7280R in a edge-peering role in as2603 network. Works really well and now with the latest additions of subroutemaps and a very optimistic road-map for features i think these style boxes will definitely see more market. Comparing the price of a 7820R 1Tb box with like a Juniper MX with 1Tb worth of ports its not even on the same play-field. I wouldn't count on the 1M routes to last a lifetime but on the other hand its very easy to re-skill the box to something else. If we look at broadcoms road-map there is also new 7280s destined to come out quite soon with the Jericho+ chipset, broadcom promises 20-25% table-increase so we will see what arista, cisco and the others boils it down to when the chip has gotten a box wrapped around it. -- hugge