[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Low Cost 10G Router
I second the Mikrotik recommendation. You don?t get support like you would with Cisco but it?s a solid product.
Justin
Justin Wilson j2sw at mtin.net
http://www.mtin.net Managed Services ? xISP Solutions ? Data Centers
http://www.thebrotherswisp.com Podcast about xISP topics
http://www.midwest-ix.com Peering ? Transit ? Internet Exchange
> On May 19, 2015, at 3:16 PM, Keefe John <keefe-af at ethoplex.com> wrote:
>
> For about $1000 you could get a Mikrotik CCR1036-8G-2S+EM but it only has 2 SFP+ ports.
>
> http://routerboard.com/CCR1036-8G-2SplusEM
>
> Keefe
>
> On 5/19/2015 3:46 PM, Joe Greco wrote:
>>> How cheap is cheap and what performance numbers are you looking for?
>>>
>>> About as cheap as you can get:
>>>
>>> For about $3,000 you can build a Supermicro OEM system with an 8-core Xeon
>>> E5 V3 and 4-port 10G Intel SFP+ NIC with 8G of RAM running VyOS. The pro
>>> is that BGP convergence time will be good (better than a 7200 VXR), and
>>> number of tables likely won't be a concern since RAM is cheap. The con is
>>> that you're not doing things in hardware, so you'll have higher latency,
>>> and your PPS will be lower.
>> What 8 core Xeon E5 v3 would that be? The 26xx's are hideously pricey,
>> and for a router, you're probably better off with something like a
>> Supermicro X10SRn fsvo "n" with a Xeon E5-1650v3. Board is typically
>> around $300, 1650 is around $550, so total cost I'm guessing closer to
>> $1500-$2000 that route.
>>
>> The edge you get there is the higher clock on the CPU. Only six cores
>> and only 15M cache, but 3.5GHz. The E5-2643v3 is three times the cost
>> for very similar performance specs. Costwise, E5 single socket is the
>> way to go unless you *need* more.
>>
>> ... JG
>