Create Date: Jan 19 2012 1:05PM
Hi Abhatt, thank you for your reply.
The switch will be used as a "router on a stick" in my scenario. It will be forwarding internet traffic between my BGP routers and my subnets.
Do you know if there is any way to check the actual hardware L3 forwarding table consumption? As I understand there is a way of tweaking how addresses are stored in the hardware, to adapt the network? then it wouldn't necessarily make sense just to count the ARP entries, IPv6 neighbors and LPM routes. Otherwise I could be just a couple of entries below a "catastrophic failure", without knowing it.
I think you may be right that the numbers are mainly from a marketing perspective. My understanding however, was that they were "safe limits" (i.e. the red-line on a tachometer).
The above examples in my original post (in bold) seems more like an elastic measurement, when you put them together. How does the switch cope with, e.g. 5000 IPv4 ARP entries and 3000 IPv6 neighbors in hardware, at the same time?
It's really important for me to know how the equipment will react to my network, as I am trying to replace existing software (x86) based routers, with Extreme Networks switches.
Best regards,
Kenneth
(from Kenneth_Oestrup)