Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Curtis Doty
1:54pm wingying said: A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? If you administer the metro MPLS for a large city, apparently about "1,100...modems hidden away in locked filing cabinets in public buildings around the city." http://weblog.infoworld.com/venezia/ar

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Seth Mattinen
Leigh Porter wrote: And be careful.. It's easy to have simple local passwords, a dial-in modem and then get pwned.. Were I used to be, we had encrypted modems for POP dialin. I have my POTS modem set up to accept PPP too so there's the option of being a little more secure than a plain text te

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Leigh Porter
And be careful.. It's easy to have simple local passwords, a dial-in modem and then get pwned.. Were I used to be, we had encrypted modems for POP dialin. -- Leigh Porter On 27/1/09 21:43, "Seth Mattinen" wrote: > chuck goolsbee wrote: >> On Tue, 27 Jan 2009 13:54:10 -0500, wingying wrote: >

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Seth Mattinen
chuck goolsbee wrote: On Tue, 27 Jan 2009 13:54:10 -0500, wingying wrote: A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? Thanks. Clearwire + POTS as a backup. POTS + CDMA cellular for me. There's a lot of ways to do it. It really depends on what you want to do, what

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Leigh Porter
We used a 3rd party Frame Relay network for out of band access. On 27/1/09 19:37, "chuck goolsbee" wrote: > On Tue, 27 Jan 2009 13:54:10 -0500, wingying wrote: >> A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? >> Thanks. > > Clearwire + POTS as a backup. > > --chuck >

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Brian Raaen
Many times I've used 9600 or 2400 baud over dail-up for OOB of routers. On the other hand some enterprises use a seperate 1Gbps Vlan for management. Again it depends on the type of traffic (i.e. snmp(traps), telnet, ssh, graphical, web, syslog, netflow etc..). For ssh/telnet without the need

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Steve Meuse
Michael K. Smith - Adhost expunged (mksm...@adhost.com): > > Hi all, > > A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? > > Thanks. > > > In the optical world it's often 192 Kb/sec. I think that was common circa late 90's, I've seen at least two optical providers that us

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread chuck goolsbee
On Tue, 27 Jan 2009 13:54:10 -0500, wingying wrote: > A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? > Thanks. Clearwire + POTS as a backup. --chuck

RE: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Church, Charles
-Original Message- From: wingying [mailto:wingy...@umich.edu] Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 1:54 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Cc: Xu (Simon) Chen Subject: out-of-band access bandwidth >Hi all, >A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? >Thanks. Probably depend

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Scott Weeks
--- wingy...@umich.edu wrote: A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? -- I would say that varies. Size them based on needs and expected traffic levels. There is no common BW, but it would be small as compared to production li

RE: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Michael K. Smith - Adhost
> Hi all, > A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? > Thanks. > In the optical world it's often 192 Kb/sec. Mike PGP.sig Description: PGP signature

Re: out-of-band access bandwidth

2009-01-27 Thread Brian Wallingford
On Tue, 27 Jan 2009, wingying wrote: : :Hi all, :A quick question, what is the common bandwidth for out-of-band access? :Thanks. That would depend on what your OOB uses for an interface (cli/gui), or what bandwidth you have to spare. Not necessarily in any given order. Overprovisioning allevia