nanog mailing list archives
Re: Open Souce Network Operating Systems
From: Kasper Adel <karim.adel () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 3 May 2018 00:29:39 -0700
Feedback about Cumulus has been positive : https://www.mail-archive.com/cisco-nsp () puck nether net/msg66192.html if i am not mistaken, they have added lots of networking enhancements to the OS, they have videos on youtube that will paint the picture. On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 11:26 AM, Colton Conor <colton.conor () gmail com> wrote:
Peter, Thanks for the information. Do you have a recommendation of which distribution of Linux to use for this? Is there one that is more network centric than another? On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 1:11 PM, Peter Phaal <peter.phaal () gmail com> wrote:On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 9:32 AM, Colton Conor <colton.conor () gmail com> wrote:My understanding if Free Range Routing is a package of software thatrunsin linux, but not a full and true NOS right?Why not consider Linux a NOS? Installing Free Range Routing adds control plane protocols: BGP, OSPF, ISIS, etc.I looked into Cumulus Linux, but it seems to only run on the supported hardware which is while box switches. Can you run Cumulus Linux on a X86 server with intel NICs? Can you run Cumulus on a raspberry pi?Cumulus Linux is basically Ubuntu with Free Range Routing pre-installed along with a daemon that offloads forwarding from the Linux kernel to an ASIC. CumulusVX is a free Cumulus Linux virtual machine that is usefulforstaging / testing configurations since it has the same behavior as the hardware switch. On X86 servers with Intel NICs, just run Linux. Cumulus Host Pack can be installed to add Free Range Routing and other Cumulus tools on theserver.Alternatively, you can choose any Linux control plane, automation, or monitoring tools and install them on the hosts and Cumulus Linux switches to unify management and control, e.g. Bird, collectd, telegraf, Puppet, Chef, Ansible, etc. Linux distros (including Ubuntu) are available for non-X86 hardware like Raspberry Pi etc.Ideally I think I am looking to a Linux operating system that can run on multiple CPU architectures, has device support for Broadcom and other Merchant silicon switching and wifi adapters.If you consider Linux as the NOS then it already meets theserequirements.
Current thread:
- Re: Open Souce Network Operating Systems Kasper Adel (May 03)
- Re: Open Souce Network Operating Systems Andrey Khomyakov (May 03)
- Re: Open Souce Network Operating Systems Vincent Bernat (May 04)
- Re: Open Souce Network Operating Systems Andrey Khomyakov (May 03)
