Arista Routing Solutions

Colton Conor colton.conor at gmail.com
Mon Apr 25 22:41:07 UTC 2016


Ryan,

What routing platform were you coming from before? What features does
Arista not have that you find limiting that the old platform did have?

How does Astira's Sflow only compare to having Cisco Netflow or Juniper
JFlow for traffic monitoring which I assume Netflix does alot of?

On Wed, Apr 20, 2016 at 3:48 PM, Ryan Woolley <rwoolleynanog at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Colton Conor wrote:
> > I know Arista is typically a switch manufacturer, but with their recently
> > announced Arista 7500R Series and soon to be announced but already
> shipping
> > 7280R Series Arista is officially getting into the routing game. The
> fixed
> > 1U 7280R Series looks quite impressive. The 7500R series is your
> > traditional chassis and line card based solution.
> >
> > Both of these products have the ability to hold the full internet routing
> > table, and Arista is working on MPLS features. Both of these new products
> > use the latest Broadcom Jerico chipsets.
>
> We (Netflix) have been deploying the previous gen (7500E) as edge routers
> for about two years in high traffic, low route count applications in our
> CDN, and have been working with Arista for almost as long to improve route
> scale so that we could turn off all our traditional routers.
>
> The features that enable full routes on Jericho are running in our
> production network today and we also have the 7500R and 7280R working with
> full tables.
>
> I can't speak to MPLS, but for our use case (all L3, very high-density
> 10/40/100G, BGP, IS-IS and light QoS), it's working well.
>
> So, yes, I'd say those two products are quite viable and competitive
> options in the edge router space.
>



More information about the NANOG mailing list