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Getting pretty close to default IPv4 route maximum for 6500/7600 routers.
- Subject: Getting pretty close to default IPv4 route maximum for 6500/7600 routers.
- From: rs at seastrom.com (Rob Seastrom)
- Date: Tue, 06 May 2014 16:20:03 -0400
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]> (Vlade Ristevski's message of "Tue, 06 May 2014 12:35:43 -0400")
- References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
I just recently got four sets off eBay. Purportedly genuine Cisco. A
shade over $100. Raid the departmental beer fund. :)
-r
Vlade Ristevski <vristevs at ramapo.edu> writes:
> It would probably be a good time to upgrade the memory on my 7206
> NPE-G1 as well (512MB). I was going to replace the router but am going
> to keep it around for the Fall Semester. Anyone know of any good 3rd
> party memory modules that are equivalent to the MEM-NPE-G1-1GB? I got
> a quote for the official Cisco ones last summer and it was around
> $5,000 lol
>
> On 5/6/2014 11:39 AM, Drew Weaver wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I am wondering if maybe we should make some kind of concerted effort to remind folks about the IPv4 routing table inching closer and closer to the 512K route mark.
>>
>> We are at about 94/95% right now of 512K.
>>
>> For most of us, the 512K route mark is arbitrary but for a lot of folks who may still be running 6500/7600 or other routers which are by default configured to crash and burn after 512K routes; it may be a valuable public service.
>>
>> Even if you don't have this scenario in your network today; chances are you connect to someone who connects to someone who connects to someone (etc...) that does.
>>
>> In case anyone wants to check on a 6500, you can run: show platform hardware capacity pfc and then look under L3 Forwarding Resources.
>>
>> Just something to think about before it becomes a story the community talks about for the next decade.
>>
>> -Drew
>>
> Vlad