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Routers in Data Centers
the power/cooling budget for a rack full of router vs a rack
full of cores might be distinction to make. I know that
historically, the data center operator made no distinction
and a client decided to "push past the envelope" and replaced
their kit with space heaters. most data centers now are fairly
restrictive on the power/cooling budget for a given footprint.
--bill
On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 01:08:23PM -0400, Warren Kumari wrote:
>
> On Sep 24, 2010, at 6:22 AM, Venkatesh Sriram wrote:
>
> >Hi,
> >
> >Can somebody educate me on (or pass some pointers) what differentiates
> >a router operating and optimized for data centers versus, say a router
> >work in the metro ethernet space? What is it thats required for
> >routers operating in data centers? High throughput, what else?
>
>
> While this question has many dimensions and there is no real
> definition of either I suspect that what many people mean when they
> talk about a DC routers is:
> Primarily Ethernet interfaces
> High port density
> Designed to deal with things like VRRP / VLAN / ethernet type features.
> Possibly CAM based, possibly smaller buffers.
> Less likely to be taking full routes.
>
> This is very similar to the religious debate about "What's the
> difference between a 'real' router and a L3 switch?"
>
> Just my 2 cents.
> W
>
>
> >
> >Thanks, Venkatesh
> >
>
> --
> Consider orang-utans.
> In all the worlds graced by their presence, it is suspected that they
> can talk but choose not to do so in case humans put them to work,
> possibly in the television industry. In fact they can talk. It's just
> that they talk in Orang-utan. Humans are only capable of listening in
> Bewilderment.
> -- Terry Practhett
>
>