Hello Everyone,
According to mtr command we are consistently seeing
level3_bx4-montrealak.net
dropping 30-50% of packets. Our ISP is Bell Canada. Any ideas on how to get
this resolved are greatly appreciated.
HOST: victoriaLoss% Snt Last Avg Best Wrst StDev
1.|-- 19
| Since you dont see packet loss on the subsequent hops, this is likely
just ICMP rate limiting on the control plane. MTR
| sends quite a bit of ICMP so this is very common when using MTR.
Not a "possible" reason for the degradation of voip from us to our service
provider?
Is there a more accurat
Makes even more sense when you're a CS student working on getting your PPL ;)
N.
Thank you all for clarifying. Really appreciate it.
Hello Everyone,
We are in the market for a used integrated service router and switch to manage
our network. A 24 port gigabit switch should suffice accompanied with
an industry
grade router. We like buying used (still under warranty) equipment as
long as there
is good feedback. Which make and mode
On 11/15/13, Eric Tykwinski wrote:
> Nick,
>
> It really depends on your deployment. If you are looking at Cisco and doing
> BGP, I wouldn't go with a 3800 series.
> Memory constraints will kill you, especially in dual stack.
>
> If I was looking for an all in one on the cisco side of things, I'd
> Post Script: I just went to vyatta.com, and apparently they've been
> acquired by Brocade. The former content of their web site is gone, and
> as far as I can tell from the Brocade site
> (http://www.brocade.com/products/all/network-functions-virtualization/index.page)
> they *seem* to be calling
Your feedback is greatly appreciated.
N.
If anyone has one for sale that has not had it's ports beat to hell
please let us know.
We would be interested.
They are all the same, ATT, Bell Canada, Cogeco..
On 11/29/13, jean-francois.tremblay...@videotron.com
wrote:
>> De : Mikael Abrahamsson
>> A : Mark Andrews ,
>> >>> You can hand out /48 as easily with 6rd as you can natively.
>>
>> "As easily". It's easier to either hand out /64 by means of
Sir whatever that is an acronym for, you have my undivided.
This is going to make for an interesting thread in about 6 hours.
Hello Everyone,
I have a customer that is looking for a voip router. The router part
is easy however,
they need it to support their ADSL/VDSL connection PPoE, and all that lovely
stuff. Can you gents and ladies kindly recommend something that would fit
all. preferably the cisco route.
If you have
Ooops, I should have mentioned. We do not need an ISDN gateway
(FXO/FXS). The connection is purely SIP. What is important is support
for ADSL/ADSL2 VDSL/VDSL2 and PPoE. Bell Canada..
N.
> convert to SIP, transcode, or deploy any
> local voice services via the router such as conference bridging. Then you'd
> need something in the ISR/ISRG2 line w/ PVDMs installed.
Very interesting point! We would the router to do some transcoding yes, to take
some load off of the servers. That bei
Hello Everyone,
We are looking to put together a 2u server with a few PCIe 3 x8
(recommendations appreciated). The router will take a voip transcoding
line card, and will act as an edge router for a telecom company.
For things like BGP (Quagga, Zebra, all that lovely stuff!!!), static
routes, and
> Have you tried labbing BSD vs Linux to see which you like better? I'd
> probably do that before throwing it in to production.
> --
Great advice Thomas! I will be creating a BSD virtual machine to get a
feel however, with linux I can think broad scale and forcast better.
With BSD, I am concerned
On 12/26/13, Faisal Imtiaz wrote:
> I am a believer of not having to re-invent the wheel...
>
> Having said that.. have you looked at 'purpose built appliances' e.g.
>
> http://www.lannerinc.com/
> http://us.axiomtek.com/
>
> If you are looking for a full router
> Consider such as these...
>
On 12/26/13, Alessandro Ratti wrote:
> if you want build by yourself I will suggest gentoo and/or freebsd with
> bird (http://bird.network.cz/) for routing stuff (maybe with 10G nics).
Hello Alessandro,
Any benchmarks of freebsd vs openbsd vs present day linux kern?
Inline response exist,
On 12/26/13, Ray Soucy wrote:
> You can build using commodity hardware and get pretty good results.
>
> I've had really good luck with Supermicro whitebox hardware, and
> Intel-based network cards. The "Hot Lava Systems" cards have a nice
> selection for a decent price if
> One of the biggest advantages is the low cost of hardware allows you to
> maintain spare systems, reducing the time to service restoration in the
> event of failure. Dependability-wise, I feel that whitebox Linux systems
> are pretty much at Cisco levels these days, especially if running
> in-me
Oh my bad. I did not mean it like that at all! I am more that capable
of putting it
together using gentoo instead of debian (a little pedagogy goes a long way). And
if he would like, he can post the ISO on his webstie alongside the
different distro.
This is what I was leaning too...
Please don't b
>> Unless they deem that it's "outside of scope". Or they can't get anyone to
>> you inside of SLA[1]. Or they send someone incompetent. Or it's a problem
>> that's never happened before.
Amen!
>> *Everything* is a nightmare to support. A DIY project just means that
>> you're betting you're s
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