>The setup is one VLAN per customer. Because 4095 VLANs is not enough, we have 
>QinQ with double VLAN tagging on the customers. The customers can use DHCP or 
>static configuration. DHCP packets need to be option82 tagged and forwarded to 
>a DHCP server. Every >customer has one or more static IP addresses.

What you are describing is how the national fibre network delivers customers to 
the ISP's in New Zealand (with DHCP and PPP being at the ISP's choice). 
Generally in New Zealand we have a very active Linux community but I have to 
say I have not seen any of the service providers attempt to use Linux as a BNG 
in this way for production customers. Commonly an MPLS network is used to 
transport these QinQ layer2 "handovers" to centralised BNG's. These BNG's in my 
experience are normally Cisco (asr1k,asr9k), Juniper (MX, hardware of virtual), 
Nokia (7750 hardware or virtual) and a small amount of Mikrotik (tends to get 
swapped out with the previous vendor solutions when scale (2000+) rises).  As 
much as I appreciate Linux, I personally still also see the value of the vendor 
offerings in this case (think stability and guaranteed performance). My biggest 
issue with the vendor offerings is that they are not making their virtual 
offerings (VMX, VSR) attractive enough pricing wise at the small scale, we have 
successful virtual Juniper and Nokia BNG's in production but pricing wise it 
generally ends up with the service provider thinking that hardware was probably 
a better choice in the long run.

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