Maxing the memory of a 3825 is going to be way cheaper than an asr1k.
Connected by DROID on Verizon Wireless
-----Original message-----
From: Ronnie Angello <ronnie.angello_at_gmail.com>
To: Jay McMickle <jay.mcmickle_at_yahoo.com>
Cc: Dennis Worth <dennis.worth_at_gmail.com>, ftt <femi0802_at_gmail.com>, Cisco
certification <ccielab_at_groupstudy.com>
Sent: Mon, Jan 23, 2012 19:16:11 GMT+00:00
Subject: Re: OT - Cisco 3825
...or go w/ ASR 1000.
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 2:14 PM, Ronnie Angello
<ronnie.angello_at_gmail.com>wrote:
> Yep, we had a 3825 w/ 256MB as our primary Inet router at an old job a few
> years back. It couldn't handle it... I'd recommend maxing the RAM out.
>
>
> On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 12:59 PM, Jay McMickle
<jay.mcmickle_at_yahoo.com>wrote:
>
>> Yes, but with 51b ram. Default is 256mb.
>>
>> PS- current number of BGP routes as of yesterday was 419k.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Jay McMickle- CCNP,CCSP,CCDP
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> http://mycciepursuit.wordpress.com
>>
>>
>> On Jan 23, 2012, at 9:33 AM, Dennis Worth <dennis.worth_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > It will work fine. There is plenty of memory. I would be more concerned
>> > about throughput and processing.
>> >
>> > On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 7:09 AM, ftt <femi0802_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >> Hi Experts,
>> >>
>> >> As anyone had experience of cisco 3825 being used to connect to an ISP
>> >> where the global BGP table is being received.
>> >>
>> >> Is the 3825 capable of receiving 300-400 thousand routes? if it has
>> enough
>> >> DRAM onboard?
>> >>
>> >> Or is this a big NO NO?
>> >>
>> >> Regards
>> >>
>> >> FTT
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net
>> >>
>> >>
Received on Mon Jan 23 2012 - 14:40:48 ART
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Thu Feb 02 2012 - 11:52:51 ART