George is right next to me. I'm here if he needs help. ;-) 



----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 

Midwest Internet Exchange 

The Brothers WISP 




----- Original Message -----

From: "Josh Reynolds" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2016 12:11:53 PM 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Load Balance Dual GigE Circuits 


Full 10G is around $2,200/mo here. No port charge. 


Just have to find the fiber POPs. 


On Dec 14, 2016 2:22 PM, "George Skorup" < [email protected] > wrote: 



The problem in most instances outside of a co-lo/IX is the LEC. Around here, 
AT&T won't deliver a 10G hand-off until you're committed to 4Gb/s. And a 10Gb 
port is like $7k minimum. 


On 12/14/2016 2:09 PM, Sean Heskett wrote: 

<blockquote>

In my opinion anytime you need more than 1gbps just order a 10gig circuit and 
purchase 1 or 2 gig burstable. 


The only time you wouldn't do this is if you want path diversity. But it sounds 
like you are looking for capacity not diversity. 


Bonding 1gig circuits is not like bonding T-1s. Also with seperate 1gig 
circuits it's hard to load balance because it's harder to instruct the traffic 
coming to your network to use circuit or the other. You can control how traffic 
leaves your network but you can't really control how it gets to you. (There are 
ways to trick bgp yes but why bother, just get a burstable 10gig and move on) 


2 cents 


-Sean 





On Wed, Dec 14, 2016 at 10:02 AM Matt < [email protected] > wrote: 

<blockquote>
> This this one circuit from multiple upstreams? If so, BGP, is this two 1gig 

> circuits from the same upstream? If so, BGP. Let me think, when in doubt 

> BGP. J 



So if we have two BGP sessions at this location with them over two 

GigE pipes the traffic should balance across both of them? They say 

its more cost effective for multiple GigE circuits until you reach ~4 

rather then a fractional 10G. 



I remember years back load balancing T1 circuits. VOIP hated out of 

order packets. Switching to MLPPP made life better there. 



>> If you receive two GigE Internet circuits from your upstream how do 

>> you load balance them to work as a 2 Gigabit Internet circuit? They 

>> use Juniper and we use Mikrotik. 

>> 

>> Just wandering what we do after we out grow our single GigE at this 

>> location. 

>> 

> 

> 

> Load balancing is barf. Try to get a 10G port first. If I was stuck with 

> Nx1G I'd aim for BGP multipath load sharing. 




</blockquote>


</blockquote>

Reply via email to