BGP Enabled transit in Chicago (River North) and equipment recommendation

Ross Tajvar ross at tajvar.io
Tue Sep 3 20:11:13 UTC 2019


I will note that Comcast will do BGP on their enterprise fiber circuits.
Comcast DIA (which they call EDI) comes in increments of 1M up to 10M, then
10M up to 100M, etc. So you could get 10M or 80M (not sure if "10MB/Sec"
means 10Mbps or 80MBps) and do BGP over that, if it's available. RCN is
likely similar but I'm not as familiar with their offerings.

On Tue, Sep 3, 2019 at 3:35 PM Brielle <bruns at 2mbit.com> wrote:

> On 9/3/2019 12:19 PM, Matt Harris wrote:
> > But even the higher-end Ubiquiti EdgeRouter series products can handle
> > full tables if you understand and accept their limitations in doing so
> > if budget is a huge concern but you still need to take full tables.
>
> As long as you stick with the 1.10.10 series of firmware, the EdgeRouter
> series is pretty stable.  I run an EdgeRouter Infinity (8 x 10G SFP+) at
> home with both IPv4 and IPv6 BGP feeds on a CenturyLink Fiber+ connection.
>
> You can get the original EdgeRouter Lite for sub $100 and it will have
> no problem taking a full feed for both v4 and v6...  However, better
> choice is the EdgeRouter 4, which is a bit newer and much faster.
>
> There's also the ER6P if you need something with more ports, or even the
> ER12/12P if you want something with a built in network switch.  Just
> avoid the budget oriented ERX and ER10X which lack the RAM.
>
> All of the ERs are low power consumption and Linux based with a
> Vyatta/VyOS/Juniper-like CLI, so pretty easy to work with.
>
> (I do Ubiquiti deployments, so can answer a lot of questions anyone
> might have).
>
> --
> Brielle Bruns
> The Summit Open Source Development Group
> http://www.sosdg.org    /     http://www.ahbl.org
>
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