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need a reason to go from MLXe to SLX

need a reason to go from MLXe to SLX

Aaron_wang
New Contributor

hi, experts,

our customer has been using  MLXe-32/16 for many years.  Recently they plan to upgrade their data center core equipment to replace these MLXe equipments. they are concerned about ipv6 and SDN, VxLAN support.We want to recommend the SLX series to them.Does anyone have any documentations or power point slide that illustrates the benefits from MLXe to SLX?

or any comments will be appreciated.

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

joergkost
Contributor II

Do you want to replace the MLXe chassis with another chassis solution like the SLX-9850 or would you like to go to the pizza box? What is the current use case for the MLXe?

Just asking, because the SLX is more like a concept and an OS, that comes bundled with different devices. Also I don't think there is a ready-to-use "why this is better"-for you presentation in this case.

The SLX series was once meant to supersede the CER/MLX slowly and is of course a much younger platform than the MLX.  E.g. MLX uses a lot of power-hungry PPCs and older Broadcom chips, while the SLX-series is almost state of the art (...depending on the device...).

Because of Brocades failed  strategy on "The New IP" (Brocades "SDN" predecessor), the Brocade <-> Broadcom sale and the delay in the Extreme acquisitions by the CFIUS, the original release and engineering schedule was ruptured heavily and the MLX still exists (for good, I love it).

So, but still some reasons to switch slowly from MLX to SLX and not to another vendor:

  • Keep your original vendor d07b76c6a10f4dc8bd47bc00386d349b_1f603.png and keep the network world diverse 
  • built on Broadcom newest commodity ASICs  (much more powerful in theory)
  • The CLI/CONF syntax is similar to MLX (with a bit of VDX), less training
  • lot of the code comes from MLX/VDX, so a lot of features are stable, e.g. MCT works the same way
  • better density, saving cooling capacity and rack capacity
  • pricing is reasonable
  • all the new features (VXLAN, EVPN) and will get all the newest features 
  • SDN features (see the SDN configuration guide)
  • "Insight" features, e.g. spin up VMs on the management board
  • lot of EXTREME VALIDATED DESIGNs available with setups between MLX and SLX (smoother transition)
  • comes in different hardware version for your requirements (e.g. the 9640 as full DFZ internet router or the 9850 as chassis version for core routing) but it is always the same OS underlying (one OS strategy)

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2

Aaron_wang
New Contributor

Dear bro, 

thank you very much for your detailed explanationab580600a609445a908b90f8bd056dad_1f600.png

Yes, the customer want to replace the MLXe chassis with another chassis solution. We want them to keep using Extreme products.

I fully agree with you. your comments is very helpful. we will collect these key points and discuss with customer.

thanks again~~

 

joergkost
Contributor II

Do you want to replace the MLXe chassis with another chassis solution like the SLX-9850 or would you like to go to the pizza box? What is the current use case for the MLXe?

Just asking, because the SLX is more like a concept and an OS, that comes bundled with different devices. Also I don't think there is a ready-to-use "why this is better"-for you presentation in this case.

The SLX series was once meant to supersede the CER/MLX slowly and is of course a much younger platform than the MLX.  E.g. MLX uses a lot of power-hungry PPCs and older Broadcom chips, while the SLX-series is almost state of the art (...depending on the device...).

Because of Brocades failed  strategy on "The New IP" (Brocades "SDN" predecessor), the Brocade <-> Broadcom sale and the delay in the Extreme acquisitions by the CFIUS, the original release and engineering schedule was ruptured heavily and the MLX still exists (for good, I love it).

So, but still some reasons to switch slowly from MLX to SLX and not to another vendor:

  • Keep your original vendor d07b76c6a10f4dc8bd47bc00386d349b_1f603.png and keep the network world diverse 
  • built on Broadcom newest commodity ASICs  (much more powerful in theory)
  • The CLI/CONF syntax is similar to MLX (with a bit of VDX), less training
  • lot of the code comes from MLX/VDX, so a lot of features are stable, e.g. MCT works the same way
  • better density, saving cooling capacity and rack capacity
  • pricing is reasonable
  • all the new features (VXLAN, EVPN) and will get all the newest features 
  • SDN features (see the SDN configuration guide)
  • "Insight" features, e.g. spin up VMs on the management board
  • lot of EXTREME VALIDATED DESIGNs available with setups between MLX and SLX (smoother transition)
  • comes in different hardware version for your requirements (e.g. the 9640 as full DFZ internet router or the 9850 as chassis version for core routing) but it is always the same OS underlying (one OS strategy)
GTM-P2G8KFN