On Mon, 20 Jul 2009, Edward B. DREGER wrote:
With a little creativity, it can _almost_ be done for IPv4.
That's most likely a big _almost_.
With an efficient FIB algorithm, a single core on a Xeon 5400 will
exceed 30 million lookups per second for IPv4 -- full table and lots
of peers.
When
MA> Date: Mon, 20 Jul 2009 04:45:17 +0200 (CEST)
MA> From: Mikael Abrahamsson
MA> There are no CPU based routers with proper 10GE forwarding
MA> capabilities that I am aware of, closest would be network processor
MA> based (which some might argue is a lot of CPUs in some cases, but
MA> it's not a
On Sun, 19 Jul 2009, William Pitcock wrote:
I'm looking for a Cisco 2600-like platform, except with the capability
of routing with gigabit and 10gigabit linecards (and not being EOL, of
course). Ideally it would be capable of doing full BGP tables in the
supervision engine, although that isn'
On Jul 20, 2009, at 9:09 AM, William Pitcock wrote:
Does anyone even make standalone modular routers anymore?
The Cisco ASR 1000 and the Juniper M7i/M10i routers are standalone
modular routers capable of handling mpps in hardware.
--
Hi,
I'm looking for a Cisco 2600-like platform, except with the capability
of routing with gigabit and 10gigabit linecards (and not being EOL, of
course). Ideally it would be capable of doing full BGP tables in the
supervision engine, although that isn't necessarily a show stopper right
now. Lac
A CMDB is simply a database.
The data model I built in Access was essentially a CMDB.
So yes, it can be done.
Windows Data Access can be used with lots of things. That's all Viso
uses for the integration.
I rather like http://onecmdb.org/wiki/
g...@centrum.is wrote:
Has anybody done the s
Has anybody done the same where a CMDB system was the data source?
Rgds,
GSH
--Original Message--
From: Charles Wyble
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Visio diag automations
Sent: Jul 19, 2009 17:49
This is built into visio.
You can link a drawing to an access database.
I did that a fe
This is built into visio.
You can link a drawing to an access database.
I did that a few years back. For all the desktops and servers. Right
click on the icon pulled up all the data.
Did layers... had the network jacks, furniture, computers, printers...
everything.
Peter Hicks wrote:
Bo
It was an early implementation of Nexus for an enterprise customer for their
existing data center. We did the implementation of the Nexus very early on
(January) to aggregate HP bladecenter 10G server access. Honestly, N5K's
would have made more sense at the end of the day but that wasn't the initi
Thank you, Ryan, for the info. Interesting your choice of 6500s at the
core. I would have expected that layer to be the first "recipient" of
N7Ks, then slowly moving into aggr., access, You are not running
some services modules in the core chassis, are you?
On 7/18/09, Ryan Hughes wrote:
>
Peter Dambier wrote:
Marc Manthey wrote:
> i hope i can visit wales someday :-))) , it looks very nice, but the
accent is for me as an europen non native english speaker
nearly incomprehensible :-0
Hello Marc,
it is not an accent. It is a language.
In fact most welsh do prono
Marc Manthey wrote:
>
> i hope i can visit wales someday :-))) , it looks very nice, but the
> accent is for me as an europen non native english speaker
>
> nearly incomprehensible :-0
>
Hello Marc,
it is not an accent. It is a language.
In fact most welsh do pronounce english
better than
On Sat Jul 18, 2009 at 09:31:56PM +0200, Marc Manthey wrote:
hey peoples sorry for my question
but a buddy in wales have massive problems with internet
connectivity
can someone confirm ?
I'm just on the welsh border, and I've not seen any issues reported
- my
home ADSL is up, our offic
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