[AusNOG] RouterBoard

Matt Perkins matt at spectrum.com.au
Mon Mar 10 14:42:49 EST 2014


My opinion and we have been using CCR's since the first one arrived in 
Australia is they are reasonable kit.   Overall I find the performance 
and price excellent. But there have been just to many unexplained 
problems for my liking. Not that we dont still use them on the edge we 
do. Im about to roll one out to quite a far destination over the next 
week. But the site has a backup and it is non essential.  They are not 
ready for the core and they are not ready for a network that needs 4 
9's   Perhaps we are at 99.9 now.  Then again if I had to run on a tight 
budget and I had the opportunity to trade off reliability. It would be 
the number one on my list.

Speed
Reliability
Price

Pick any 3 CCR's fit in to the Speed and Price corner of the triangle.


Matt



On 10/03/14 2:04 PM, Alex Samad - Yieldbroker wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> Yeah I have read a bit about the single core issues on the CCR, the 
> last time I looked because of this I saw 3 cpu's floating around 
> 30-60% non-maxed
>
> I started this by looking at VM routers, but I couldn't get pas the 
> 1Gb/s nic. There is Brocades vyatta, but its just way to expensive 
> compared to routeros
>
> My constraints are more along the lines of, I have core switching 
> already, I wanted to add some core routing.
>
> I am happy with the CCR on $$ on CLI
>
> I am not so happy about the current performance, be that limited to my 
> testing via iperf...  I am nearly ready to live with that, on the 
> presumption I can get 8+Gbs with multi stream tcp.
>
> My current risk is support, especially as I have had a hard time 
> working through this CCR performance issue.  I don't want to roll out 
> 2 of these at each DC and then run into a bug, where the only solution 
> is to throw it away.  I can duplicate about all the functionality of 
> routeros on linux apart from BGP and OSPF. And I am guessing if I 
> looked really hard and spent some time I could get that working as well.
>
> So taking into account their low $$ I can also live with minimal 
> support if I have another hardware solution to match up with it on a 
> similar $$ level.  If they can talk iBGP, OSPF and VRRP, then I am 
> just about set. J
>
> So I thought I would dig into the knowledge pool that is AUSNOG and 
> find out what other devices like RouterOS are being used..
>
> Alex
>
> *From:*AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] *On Behalf Of 
> *Tom Berryman
> *Sent:* Monday, 10 March 2014 1:45 PM
> *To:* David Bomba; Damian Guppy
> *Cc:* ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
> *Subject:* Re: [AusNOG] RouterBoard
>
> David is correct, the Tilera CPU with RouterOS does struggle with 
> single threaded processes -- worse than just BGP operating on a single 
> core, all routing (OSPF, RIP and static) processing will happen on the 
> same core. ROS7 is likely to change this (rumours).
>
> But still, the CCR range has forced a lot of people to change how they 
> think about routing (at a relatively small scale) -- and has certainly 
> bought the cost down. "Routed" packets per dollar, I don't think 
> anything in the new hardware market can compete.
>
> Vyatta has other challenges like x86 PCI architecture that will limit 
> your total throughput -- however things like processing BGP are 
> drastically improved compared to ROS. Ubiquity has ported the 
> Vyatta/VyOS to MIPS processors, possibly worth a look but I don't 
> think it has any SFP+.
>
> Given Alex's application -- storage -- a layer 3 solution is not 
> likely to be the best.
>
> Alex, have you considered something like the Brocade VDX Ethernet 
> fabric (VDX could enable 40g native interfaces)? Or at least other 
> layer 2 solutions? I noticed that you have tried routing on switches 
> (Dell) perhaps something with some more power with this design would 
> yield better results for you?
>
> Tom**
>
> **
>
> *From:*AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] *On Behalf Of 
> *David Bomba
> *Sent:* Monday, 10 March 2014 12:32 PM
> *To:* Damian Guppy
> *Cc:* ausnog at lists.ausnog.net <mailto:ausnog at lists.ausnog.net>
> *Subject:* Re: [AusNOG] RouterBoard
>
> I believe he has the CCR1036-8G-2S+ which has 2x10GB SFP+ ports.
>
> I think the issue he is hitting is the single threaded nature of 
> routerOS for a lot of its functionality.
>
> BGP, for instance spins on a single core. Until ROS becomes multi-core 
> aware/capable a lot of its functionality will be capped at the per 
> core performance.
>
> On 10 March 2014 12:26, Damian Guppy <the.damo at gmail.com 
> <mailto:the.damo at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     CCR1036 has no 10G ports, only 1G, so im not sure why you would
>     expect to get a single TCP stream past 1G (even with LACP since
>     that is not how LACP works)
>
>     --Damian
>
>     On Mon, Mar 10, 2014 at 6:58 AM, Alex Samad - Yieldbroker
>     <Alex.Samad at yieldbroker.com <mailto:Alex.Samad at yieldbroker.com>>
>     wrote:
>
>         Hi
>
>
>         So I have tested routerOS ... in VM and also bought the ccr1036.
>
>         I'm not 100% happy with the ccr1036.  Basically can't push 1
>         tcp stream past 1Gb/s I can get 8-9Gb/s with multiple streams.
>         I can get UDP up to 9.8Gb/s
>
>         I like routerOS interface (have to admit I like the vyatta
>         better from what I saw).
>
>         But now I need to find something similar to these devices
>         around the same price and around the same performance, I would
>         like to push it all to a VM but Brocade want my 1st and 2nd
>         child ...
>
>         So routerOS support is nowhere close to Cisco and rightly so
>         for the price, so I have some hesitancy in rolling these
>         things out, especially if they are going into the core.
>
>         So are there any suggestions from the list ?
>
>         Alex
>
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-- 
/* Matt Perkins
         Direct 1300 137 379     Spectrum Networks Ptd. Ltd.
         Office 1300 133 299     matt at spectrum.com.au
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