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#312260 - 18/07/2008 00:44 Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL
FireFox31
pooh-bah

Registered: 19/09/2002
Posts: 2494
Loc: East Coast, USA
At work, I recently had to discard a $9,000 Cisco router because it had reached End Of Life. I agree with the organization that EOL network hardware is a security risk because it's no longer being updated. But I'm upset that such an expensive and well functioning device must be simply taken from me because of its age.

How do you all feel about infrastructure routers and switches being treated as consumable supplies? $9k and it's gone in 6 years. $1500 a year for the privilege of routing or switching. Then you're hit with another huge $9k bill to repurchase the same thing you already had (with a few new features).

Maybe there's network hardware leasing. I wonder if it would cost the same amount. At least it wouldn't be a $9k hit all at once.

Stupid relentless march of "progress".
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FireFox31
110gig MKIIa (30+80), Eutronix lights, 32 meg stacked RAM, Filener orange gel lens, Greenlights Lit Buttons green set

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#312262 - 18/07/2008 02:03 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: FireFox31]
tman
carpal tunnel

Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
If its 6 years old then its nowhere near the performance of current routers. You don't really want to have any router that has gone out of support because of the various bugs and security holes in IOS.

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#312264 - 18/07/2008 06:30 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: FireFox31]
Roger
carpal tunnel

Registered: 18/01/2000
Posts: 5682
Loc: London, UK
Originally Posted By: FireFox31
Maybe there's network hardware leasing.


There is: http://www.google.com/search?q=cisco+leasing
_________________________
-- roger

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#312265 - 18/07/2008 10:14 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: Roger]
Dignan
carpal tunnel

Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12318
Loc: Sterling, VA
The last place I worked had moved to leasing all their networking components, much to the chagrin of the network admins. But that was mostly because they (the admins) all resided in the main office in Cleveland, and would now have to go out to the 9 satellite offices every 3-5 years to replace this equipment.
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Matt

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#312271 - 18/07/2008 11:58 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: FireFox31]
peter
carpal tunnel

Registered: 13/07/2000
Posts: 4174
Loc: Cambridge, England
Originally Posted By: FireFox31
How do you all feel about infrastructure routers and switches being treated as consumable supplies? $9k and it's gone in 6 years. $1500 a year for the privilege of routing or switching. Then you're hit with another huge $9k bill to repurchase the same thing you already had (with a few new features).

But are you buying the hardware, or the support? Hopefully the latter, as the hardware doesn't do anything a cheap Dell rackmount Linux box with sshd, two network cards and some firewall rules can't do for about $8000 less. So really you're paying $1333 a year for the privilege of Cisco's support operation for your routing and switching. That Cisco can afford to, effectively, supply their Certificates of Cisco Supportedness printed on chip-filled metal boxes as opposed to on plain paper, just goes to show how much of that $1333 must be profit margin.

Peter

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#312272 - 18/07/2008 12:07 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: tman]
DWallach
carpal tunnel

Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
Presumably, you could purchase "equivalent" performance for much less money now than you spent all those years ago.

For years, it seemed that a decent desktop workstation's price was holding constant while you were just getting more performance per dollar. Now, that's all blown apart. It seems every time I go to buy a new computer, I'm paying less than I paid before, and that's without even taking inflation into account.

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#312274 - 18/07/2008 18:37 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: DWallach]
andym
carpal tunnel

Registered: 17/01/2002
Posts: 3995
Loc: Manchester UK
Originally Posted By: DWallach
For years, it seemed that a decent desktop workstation's price was holding constant while you were just getting more performance per dollar. Now, that's all blown apart. It seems every time I go to buy a new computer, I'm paying less than I paid before, and that's without even taking inflation into account.


When I bought my first iBook I did so because it was the best laptop for under £1,000. The laptop in question ended up costing approx. £850 even with a discount. Nowadays there are some seriously capable and well specced laptops for under £500.
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Cheers,

Andy M

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#312277 - 18/07/2008 21:30 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: andym]
andy
carpal tunnel

Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5914
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
Originally Posted By: andym
Originally Posted By: DWallach
For years, it seemed that a decent desktop workstation's price was holding constant while you were just getting more performance per dollar. Now, that's all blown apart. It seems every time I go to buy a new computer, I'm paying less than I paid before, and that's without even taking inflation into account.


When I bought my first iBook I did so because it was the best laptop for under £1,000. The laptop in question ended up costing approx. £850 even with a discount. Nowadays there are some seriously capable and well specced laptops for under £500.


My new Dell laptop was a third of the price I paid for the same level of Dell laptop four years ago.
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Remind me to change my signature to something more interesting someday

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#312278 - 18/07/2008 21:43 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: peter]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Originally Posted By: peter
the hardware doesn't do anything a cheap Dell rackmount Linux box with sshd, two network cards and some firewall rules can't do for about $8000 less.

I don't know what model Cisco equipment he's dealing with, but I don't think that your statement's strictly true.

First, I am unaware of NICs for PCs that support WAN interfaces like T1/E1, PRI, DS3, Sonet, etc. If they do exist, I can't imagine that the Linux support is all that great.

Second, his Cisco might have been a combination switch and router. I'd like to see you get 144 ethernet ports in a Linux box.

Third, there are a lot of features available on dedicated networking equipment that don't work as easily or well on non-dedicated equipment. 802.1Q VLAN tagging comes to mind, but I'm sure that there are a variety of others.

If you just want to connect two ethernet networks together, then, yeah, it doesn't make a lot of sense to pay gobs of money for a dedicated router, but many people have more needs than a Linux box with a couple of NICs in it can deal with.
_________________________
Bitt Faulk

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#312282 - 19/07/2008 01:03 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: wfaulk]
Attack
addict

Registered: 01/03/2002
Posts: 598
Loc: Florida
Originally Posted By: wfaulk
Originally Posted By: peter
the hardware doesn't do anything a cheap Dell rackmount Linux box with sshd, two network cards and some firewall rules can't do for about $8000 less.

I don't know what model Cisco equipment he's dealing with, but I don't think that your statement's strictly true.

First, I am unaware of NICs for PCs that support WAN interfaces like T1/E1, PRI, DS3, Sonet, etc. If they do exist, I can't imagine that the Linux support is all that great.

Second, his Cisco might have been a combination switch and router. I'd like to see you get 144 ethernet ports in a Linux box.

Third, there are a lot of features available on dedicated networking equipment that don't work as easily or well on non-dedicated equipment. 802.1Q VLAN tagging comes to mind, but I'm sure that there are a variety of others.

If you just want to connect two ethernet networks together, then, yeah, it doesn't make a lot of sense to pay gobs of money for a dedicated router, but many people have more needs than a Linux box with a couple of NICs in it can deal with.



At work we used a T1 card from Imagestream in a P3 500 linux boxfor about 2 1/2 years. We even ran a TFC server on it for almost 2 years. The card was replaced because we needed multiple paths into our network (BGP4) and a lot more bandwidth.
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Chad

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#312285 - 19/07/2008 07:46 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: wfaulk]
peter
carpal tunnel

Registered: 13/07/2000
Posts: 4174
Loc: Cambridge, England
Originally Posted By: wfaulk
First, I am unaware of NICs for PCs that support WAN interfaces like T1/E1, PRI, DS3, Sonet, etc. If they do exist, I can't imagine that the Linux support is all that great

If your telco's LTU doesn't terminate in Ethernet, the first avenue of investigation has to be getting a better telco. Failing that (or if running your own dark fibre or whatever), then yes, you do need a T1 or X.21 or whatever to Ethernet bridge, possibly even from Cisco, but that constitutes evidence of collusion between your telco and the "enterprise" networking vendors, not of any technical need. The first company I worked at that had an Internet connection, found that we had to spend £1500 on a Cisco "router" because the British Telecom LTU didn't terminate in RS232 or Ethernet or anything sane like that which we could just run into the Linux firewall, but in X.21. And that for a just 64kbps leased-line!

Quote:
Second, his Cisco might have been a combination switch and router. I'd like to see you get 144 ethernet ports in a Linux box.

144-port switches aren't cheap. But considering that the router-to-WAN connection won't be faster than Gbit Ethernet, the switch-to-router connection needn't be any faster than that either. In other words, there's no particular reason to build the switch into the router. (Which would also mean that the box with the switch itself in wouldn't be Internet-facing, and so you might be less worried about firmware updates being EOL'd.)

Peter

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#312286 - 19/07/2008 09:15 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: wfaulk]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Linux WAN interfaces (2.6.25):
  • LanMedia family: most/all SSI/V.35, T1/E1, HSSI, T3 boards.
  • Generic HDLC: raw HDLC, Cisco HDLC, Frame Relay, sync-PPP, X.25.
  • Frame Relay: full protocol support.
  • Granch SBNI12 Leased-Line adapters: ISA SBNI12-xx cards.
  • ISDN support: pretty much anything works.
Those are the ones that are "in tree" in the released 2.6.25 kernel. But there are more "vendor drivers" available for stuff not "in tree".

Lots of the Big Boys of telephony are now basing most/all products on Linux platforms, so drivers should continue to become available in the future.

Cheers


Edited by mlord (19/07/2008 09:15)

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#312289 - 19/07/2008 13:15 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: peter]
wfaulk
carpal tunnel

Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
Originally Posted By: peter
If your telco's LTU doesn't terminate in Ethernet, the first avenue of investigation has to be getting a better telco.

That may be the case in the UK. It is most definitely not the case in the US.
_________________________
Bitt Faulk

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#312291 - 19/07/2008 13:32 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: mlord]
LittleBlueThing
addict

Registered: 11/01/2002
Posts: 612
Loc: Reading, UK
ADSL..... err, hmm, lemme see... nope. frown

I'd love an ADSL card with an in-tree driver. AFAIK there aren't any. I've got an ADSL accessrunner from Hussein but it uses a blob frown
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LittleBlueThing Running twin 30's

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#312294 - 19/07/2008 15:04 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: peter]
andym
carpal tunnel

Registered: 17/01/2002
Posts: 3995
Loc: Manchester UK
Originally Posted By: peter
Originally Posted By: wfaulk
First, I am unaware of NICs for PCs that support WAN interfaces like T1/E1, PRI, DS3, Sonet, etc. If they do exist, I can't imagine that the Linux support is all that great

If your telco's LTU doesn't terminate in Ethernet, the first avenue of investigation has to be getting a better telco. Failing that (or if running your own dark fibre or whatever), then yes, you do need a T1 or X.21 or whatever to Ethernet bridge, possibly even from Cisco, but that constitutes evidence of collusion between your telco and the "enterprise" networking vendors, not of any technical need. The first company I worked at that had an Internet connection, found that we had to spend £1500 on a Cisco "router" because the British Telecom LTU didn't terminate in RS232 or Ethernet or anything sane like that which we could just run into the Linux firewall, but in X.21. And that for a just 64kbps leased-line!


If my experience is anything to go by, anything that isn't presented as Ethernet (copper or optical) is considered legacy by BT and NTL these days.

Obviously there are times when only dark fiber will do, I prefer it for transporting video between sites. I've yet to find something that will do 8 uncompressed D1 resolution video feeds with no delay that uses Ethernet.
_________________________
Cheers,

Andy M

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#312295 - 19/07/2008 15:30 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: LittleBlueThing]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Originally Posted By: LittleBlueThing
ADSL..... err, hmm, lemme see... nope. frown

Err, yes actually. I only listed the WAN/router style interfaces, not all 3000 or so device drivers in the kernel!

So, yes, Linux has full ATM support, which means it also works fine with many popular USB ADSL routers, including: Speedtouch, Conexant AccessRunner, ADI 930 & Eagle, and others which share the same chipsets as those listed.

EDIT: Note that some of these (eg. AccessRunner) require downloadable firmware -- rightly not part of the Linux kernel -- and this all works fine with the in-tree kernel drivers.

Cheers


Edited by mlord (19/07/2008 15:32)

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#312296 - 19/07/2008 15:38 Re: Discarding Cisco routers due to EOL [Re: mlord]
mlord
carpal tunnel

Registered: 29/08/2000
Posts: 14484
Loc: Canada
Originally Posted By: mlord
So, yes, Linux has full ATM support, which means it also works fine with many popular USB ADSL routers, including: Speedtouch, Conexant AccessRunner, ADI 930 & Eagle, and others which share the same chipsets as those listed.

EDIT: Note that some of these (eg. AccessRunner) require downloadable firmware -- rightly not part of the Linux kernel -- and this all works fine with the in-tree kernel drivers.

The best solution for stuff like this, is to acquire hardware that has an ethernet interface on the downstream side (rather than only a USB interface).

Nice, open IP/PPP protocols there, and no drivers required for any kind of downstream equipment. Plus the option of having the device act as a small LAN gateway DHCP/DNS server, independent of any specific machine. That's not how I use mine, but many people do use them like that.

Cheers


Edited by mlord (19/07/2008 15:40)

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