❦ 15 novembre 2019 09:33 +00, ERCIN TORUN :
> Generally chipset is what limits the scale (e.g. trident2 is 128k ipv4
> lpm https://docs.cumulusnetworks.com/cumulus-linux/Layer-3/Routing/ ).
> If you disable "zebra" daemon, FRR works only in control-plane then
> you would most likely have a limita
Hi Adam,
The intention is not to put in the Data Plane at all but use it for control
functions and calculating optimal paths, we are happy with how FRR is
handling small network islands to Route traffic in Data Plane and wanted to
test this as a candidate for Hierarchical Route-Reflection at site
> ERCIN TORUN
> Sent: Friday, November 15, 2019 9:34 AM
>
> Hello Rakesh,
>
> As James said, better to ask it at FRR mailing list.
>
> Generally chipset is what limits the scale (e.g. trident2 is 128k ipv4 lpm
> https://docs.cumulusnetworks.com/cumulus-linux/Layer-3/Routing/ ). If
> you disable
would most
likely have a limitation with memory/RAM only. (speed is another issue).
Regards
Erçin TORUN
-Original Message-
From: NANOG On Behalf Of James Bensley
Sent: Thursday, November 7, 2019 5:39 PM
To: Rakesh M ; NANOG Mailing List
Subject: Re: FRR as Route-Reflector & Scaling st
On Thu, 7 Nov 2019 at 14:36, Rakesh M wrote:
>
>
> Hi Nanog,
>
>
> We want to Deploy and use FRR for Route reflection on a Dell Edge. Any one
> has expereience with it and can give insight into number of routes and scale
> that you used FRR to do Route Reflection
There is possibly no better pla
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