Heavy Networking 541: An Update On Free Range Routing

Heavy Networking - Un pódcast de Packet Pushers - Viernes

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Free Range Routing (FRR) is an open source routing protocol suite you can run on Linux. Armed with nothing more than a basic understanding of Linux and the FRR docs, I was able to get a BGP session nailed up quickly. The CLI has a familiar vibe if you’ve been working on networking gear for a while.
Today we jump into updates on Free Range Routing and see where the project is at. Our guest is Donald Sharp, a longtime FRR contributor and  Principle Engineer at NVIDIA.
We discuss:

* Who’s deploying FRR and its common use cases
* The throughput you can expect
* Project goals and community growth
* Highlights of the 7.4 release
* What’s coming in future releases
* FRR and automation
* More

Sponsor: Unimus
Unimus is an easy to use network automation and configuration management solution. Discover how to start automating your network in under 15 minutes at unimus.net/packetpushers.
Sponsor: Dell Technologies
If you’re interested in an enterprise-ready, open source NOS for your data center, Dell Technologies’ Enterprise SONiC Distribution is open source networking made real. It brings together the innovation and scalability of open source SONiC with the trusted enterprise expertise of Dell Technologies with its family of open networking PowerSwitch platforms, enterprise-ready features, and global support. Visit packetpushers.net/dellsonic for more details.
Show Links:
FRRouting.org – Linux Foundation
Donald Sharp on LinkedIn
@menotyousharp – Donald Sharp on Twitter
Show 401: A Deeper Understanding Of Free Range Routing (FRR) – Packet Pushers
PQ Show 112: Free Range Routing At IETF 98 – Packet Pushers
History Of Networking Podcast – Rule11.tech

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