Hello,
I am helping a small Service Provider in Sweden and we have some issues with IP
addresses having the wrong country in geolocation. They show up as Norwegian
even though they should be Swedish. The site we have most problems with and try
to solve is HBO. Can anyone maybe give some input a
NANOG,
We have a hybrid cloud model that includes an external cloud service that needs
to reach back into our internal network. The application documentation states
that this connection cannot go through a proxy server. I am not in a position
to redesign this solution or change the parameters.
You can use rpki without even touching your network just by enabling
the ROAs today in the RIPE database.
This is a harmless piece of work that you can do today
helping the wider community and raise awareness as a first step.
/nikos
On 2 May 2017 at 16:21, Compton, Rich A wrote:
> That零 the mil
Is it possible for you to get a private/direct connect service from your
network perimeter to the cloud provider and eliminate using the public
connectivity?
Or because its Internet-based you have to use public connectivity?
James W. Breeden
Managing Partner
Arenal Group: Arenal Consulting
Could someone from CenturyLink reach out to me off-list, please? You are
currently hijacking some of our space and it is causing an active outage
for many customers. We have someone calling in to CL support, as well, but
we typically get a basic help desk that is slow to respond and this is a
bit m
Since today seems like the day for IP geolocation related topics...
Does anyone have direct experience with third-party IP geolocation services
and o3b served enterprise/ISP-type high capacity customers?
For those who are not familiar with them, o3b satellite terminals can be
located literally an
We have a number of internet edge routers across several data centers
approaching EOL/EOS, and are budgeting for replacements. Like most enterprises,
we have been Cisco-centric in our routing/switching platforms. The ASR1Ks are
too small for our needs and the ASR9Ks are prohibitively expensive a
What have you compared so far yourself?
Job
On Thu, 4 May 2017 at 22:40, c b wrote:
> We have a number of internet edge routers across several data centers
> approaching EOL/EOS, and are budgeting for replacements. Like most
> enterprises, we have been Cisco-centric in our routing/switching pla
The ZTE 9000-2E4 might be fit for your requirements and affordable.
http://wwwen.zte.com.cn/endata/magazine/ztetechnologies/2016/no5/articles/201609/t20160912_460444.html
Den 4. maj 2017 22.40 skrev "c b" :
We have a number of internet edge routers across several data centers
approaching EOL/EOS
On 4 May 2017 at 23:39, c b wrote:
> * Affordable. I know that's subjective, but we need a solution that is as
> close as possible to commodity-pricing if this modernization effort balloons
> to include all of our data centers.
How many? For any non-trivial volume devices with equal ports
The ASR9k is certainly up to the task and it's one of the few we looked at
initially, but the pricing is nowhere near commodity even if we got a minimal
build.
As far as volume, the initial purchase for this round of budget will be an HA
pair. If the solution works well, we have potential to r
On 5 May 2017 at 01:04, c b wrote:
Hey,
> The ASR9k is certainly up to the task and it's one of the few we looked at
> initially, but the pricing is nowhere near commodity even if we got a
> minimal build.
What is commodity? Where are you comparing it to which satisfies your
requirements?
> As
Hi,
> But you probably should review at least:
> - Juniper MX204, MX480
> - Cisco ASR9k
> - Huawei NE20, NE40
> - Alcatel 7750SR
>
Having all of these somewhere in our network, and my heart being with JNPR
boxes, I'll say have a look at Huawei offerings.
+Dragan
On Fri, May 5, 2017 at
Can someone toss in a brief testimonial for huawei? In the US, I never hear
that name in enterprise space, only in carriers. No idea what day-to-day ops or
support is like with that vendor. All the others I am quite familiar with to
one degree or another.
From:
My limited experience is that you get the location of the gateway the traffic
it coming out of. This is very similar to the locations returned for Motorola
Canopy, Ubiquity and other wireless networks. Similar to IP location for cell.
> On May 4, 2017, at 2:33 PM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
>
> Since
anyone have thoughts about/experience with the Arista 7280R / their
flexroute engine?
/kc
On Thu, May 04, 2017 at 08:39:16PM +, c b said:
>We have a number of internet edge routers across several data centers
approaching EOL/EOS, and are budgeting for replacements. Lik
I use the 7280R in production. Love it.
Pros: Cheap, fantastic API, can take (current) full tables of v4 and v6.
6x100G w 48x1/10G gives lots of flexibility.
Cons: Lack of proper VRF support and minimal bgp address families. (If you
want strict isolation, or can use a separate device for route le
hows the power footprint? i never understood why each prefix cost
1mW to handle on most routers (and still took 2-3 minutes to converge)
/kc
On Thu, May 04, 2017 at 06:55:54PM -0600, Tyler Conrad said:
>I use the 7280R in production. Love it.
>
>Pros: Cheap, fantastic API, can take (curren
Mostly idle at around 102W atm.
On Thursday, May 4, 2017, Ken Chase wrote:
> hows the power footprint? i never understood why each prefix cost
> 1mW to handle on most routers (and still took 2-3 minutes to converge)
>
> /kc
>
>
> On Thu, May 04, 2017 at 06:55:54PM -0600, Tyler Conrad said:
> >
I've had no issues with their gear and have used the NE40/80 routers, some
of the switching gear and some FTTP, NE40e will do full tables. US support
is in Texas and has been good. Mostly my experience with Huawei support
has been that I don't need it. Once you get over the learning curve.. it
m
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