[j-nsp] What do you think about the MX line?

Timothy Kaufman tkaufman at corp.nac.net
Sun Jun 26 23:48:50 EDT 2011


Which one are you looking at?
How many peers do you plan to configure?
How much traffic?
Thanks

Tim Kaufman
Sent via blackberry

----- Original Message -----
From: juniper-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net <juniper-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net>
To: mtinka at globaltransit.net <mtinka at globaltransit.net>; juniper-nsp at puck.nether.net <juniper-nsp at puck.nether.net>
Sent: Sun Jun 26 22:15:34 2011
Subject: Re: [j-nsp] What do you think about the MX line?

For us I will be looking at the MX Line mainly for peering.  Anyone
having issues with using them with peering?

Cheers
Ryan


-----Original Message-----
From: juniper-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net
[mailto:juniper-nsp-bounces at puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Mark Tinka
Sent: Sunday, June 26, 2011 9:19 PM
To: juniper-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [j-nsp] What do you think about the MX line?

On Monday, June 27, 2011 06:56:48 AM Keegan Holley wrote:

> I think the general attitude is positive towards them. 
> They are a good compliment to the M/T series and generally solid 
> flexible boxes.  You should probably include how you plan to use them 
> in your question.  For example a few list members complain about 
> multicast/IGMP bugs and other issues with the new trio based cards and

> some of the new code.  If you don't run alot of multicast these 
> wouldn't really apply to you.

For us, we use them heavily in the edge, and that hasn't been the
smoothest of rides.

My guess is if you need them for peering or in the core, you might have
less issues, but not necessarily (we already know of core applications
where the MX could be troublesome - but the edge role takes the cake, by
far).

There are also some limitations, so far, if we use them as BRAS's, but
these are mostly bugs are feature unavailability at this time. The
problem is that without the feature being present today, it's hard to
know how the box will scale, which could be a big problem unto itself.

All in all, it depends on the complexity/sophistication of your
deployment, the role you're placing the MX in, and what features you're
going to need. For some folk, it's the perfect box. For others, it's
less so.

Mark.


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