On 2013-08-23 2:58 AM, Piotr wrote:
Hello,
I looking some 10G switches, 24-48 ports, it will be work in DC in access.
Something cheaper ( for port) than extreme 670 ?
Take a look at this list. These folks are putting a commodity Linux environment
with binary drivers to merchant silicon switc
How about the Force10 S48xx series? They're pretty decent today.
On Thu, Aug 22, 2013 at 1:03 PM, Phil Bedard wrote:
> Quanta is pretty cheap, basically a bare bones reference design.
> Mellanox as well. Juniper EX4550. Any other features you are looking
> for? From: Piotr
> Sent: 8/22/2013 10:
Quanta is pretty cheap, basically a bare bones reference design.
Mellanox as well. Juniper EX4550. Any other features you are looking
for? From: Piotr
Sent: 8/22/2013 10:59
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: 10G standalone switch to access in data center, cheap
Hello,
I looking some 10G switches, 24-48
most of tor, 1u, standalone 10G, switches have only 8-9 MB shared buffers..
Peter
W dniu 2013-08-22 17:39, Jeroen Wunnink | Atrato IP Networks pisze:
Juniper EX4500 or EX4550, they have fairly small send buffers though, so
don't expect line-rate forwarding on all your ports.
On 8/22/13 4:58 PM
Juniper EX4500 or EX4550, they have fairly small send buffers though, so
don't expect line-rate forwarding on all your ports.
On 8/22/13 4:58 PM, Piotr wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I looking some 10G switches, 24-48 ports, it will be work in DC in
> access. Something cheaper ( for port) than extreme 670 ?
Well, "cheap" (and new), i.e.
- take 1-2 Netgear XSM7224 with 24x 10GBaseT and 4x SFP+ (shared) each
- take 1-2 Netgear XSM7224S with 24x SFP+ and 4x 10GBaseT (shared) each
or
- take 3-6 Netgear XS708E with 8x 10GBaseT and 1x SFP+ (shared) each
- take 2-4 Netgear XS712T with 12x 10GBaseT and 2x SF
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