[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
IGP choice
On Fri, 23 Oct 2015, Pablo Lucena wrote:
>> A lot of carriers use ISIS in the core so they can make use of the'
>> overload bit' with a 'set-overload-bit on-startup wait-for-bgp". Keeps
>> them from black holing Traffic while BGP reconverges., when you have
>> millions of routes to converge it can take forever. It's also a really
>> handy tool when you're troubleshooting or repairing a link, set the OL
>> bit, and traffic gracefully moves, then when you're done it gracefully
>> moves back. You can do the same thing with the Metric, and Cost in OSPF,
>> just not quite as elegant.
>>
>
> ?That feature is also present in OSPF. 'max metric router-lsa'. ?
This is not exactly the same thing as overload-bit set, but it can be
argued that setting max-metric actually makes more sense than what the
overload bit does.
The choice between IS-IS and OSPF depends more on soft than hard factors.
OSPF support is more widespread amongst smaller equipment vendors, IS-IS
is the traditional choice for large ISP core IGP, mostly due to the Cisco
codebase for IS-IS happened to be more stable than OSPF around 1995, and
that's when a lot of larger ISPs started running these protocols, and that
stuck.
There is no right or wrong IGP to run, both protocols have their quirks
and pro:s and con:s.
--
Mikael Abrahamsson email: swmike at swm.pp.se
- References:
- IGP choice
- From: marcel.duregards at yahoo.fr (marcel.duregards at yahoo.fr)
- IGP choice
- From: niels=nanog at bakker.net (Niels Bakker)
- IGP choice
- From: marcel.duregards at yahoo.fr (marcel.duregards at yahoo.fr)
- IGP choice
- From: mpetach at netflight.com (Matthew Petach)
- IGP choice
- From: Daniel.Jameson at tdstelecom.com (Jameson, Daniel)
- IGP choice
- From: plucena at coopergeneral.com (Pablo Lucena)