Linked by Adam S on Sat 11th Oct 2003 16:18 UTC, submitted by Frank
Linux Zebra is open source TCP/IP routing software that is similar to Cisco's Internetworking Operating System (IOS). Flexible and powerful, it can handle routing protocols such as Routing Information Protocol (RIP), Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), and all of their various flavors. This article shows you how to set up Zebra and used it to manage routes dynamically in conjunction with real Cisco hardware.
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v I use Fedora 0.94 and got an error
by pussy-sucker on Sat 11th Oct 2003 17:58 UTC
RE: Build a Network Router on Linux
by can ugur ayfer on Sat 11th Oct 2003 18:03 UTC

We have been using zebra on our Linux router for more than a year with three connections to three different ISP's. BGP is working like a piece of cake. Absolutely no glitches, no restarts no reboots at all.
Very happy with zebra. saved us thousands of dollars; cost Cisco thousands of dollars.

RE: can ugur ayfer
by jan.de.boer on Sat 11th Oct 2003 19:28 UTC

As we getting multihomed too soon, this is interesting. We saw some nice cheap junipers, but cheap is still 6500 euro. But if this will work as good, we will try this first! Ugur you only use one zebra machine?

wow
by tony on Sat 11th Oct 2003 19:39 UTC

that looks awesome..

Good Enough?
by linux_baby on Sat 11th Oct 2003 20:14 UTC

Anybody know if this is good enough for ISP-level routing??

linux_baby
by jan.de.boer on Sat 11th Oct 2003 23:03 UTC

It is I think, BGP 4/RIP is fully implented so I don't see much probs with it. With 2 transit lines, it's doable with more you need a router. As a fact I know quiet some ISP who use Zebra as a cheap/good start to do some peering with other isps



Re: Good Enough?
by DebMan on Sat 11th Oct 2003 23:05 UTC

It is good enough for a company (big one, I do not want to mention names here) to use it in the deployment of DWDM backbone (OS is LynxOS, an RTOS). First, the tests are done using Debian, and then, the deployment (compilation) is at the Network Elements which use the above-mentioned OS. Pretty powerful stuff.

Good luck
by al_pettit11 on Sun 12th Oct 2003 01:23 UTC

Zebra is pretty cool. It's been around for a while and is fairly stable. You can do some neat stuff.

There are guys who use it to put webservers at different points in their network, they all announce the same ip into BGP. So when traffic enters their network looking for that website, they go to the closest box on the network announcing that IP.

I also know guys who use it for looking glass box

But I wouldn't have it as a backbone/peer router for ISPs..

If you have two T1s or T3s with 2 providers and full routing tables, ok... But stick that in a NAP and use it to conntect to other providers and I say.. Good luck.

Yea it can handle routing tables, but you get your first DoS and try and filter...................

Also I don't know of any PCI OC3-OC192 cards.

There are some good reasons why people buy Cisco/Juniper

RE: can ugur ayfer
by can ugur ayfer on Sun 12th Oct 2003 05:46 UTC

yes. we use only one zebra machine since we need only one router which can talk BGP. We have an identical box sitting next to it as a spare.

Someone asked about the size of the net behind this. We have about 4500 hosts behind this zebra box.

Question
by Don Cox on Sun 12th Oct 2003 11:05 UTC

This all looks very interesting, but it is a subject I know little about. I can set up a simple LAN with a mixture of OSes, but routers are the next level of complexity.

Can anyone recommend a good book (perhaps from O'Reilly) that will explain all those acronyms and how to use them in practice?

ISP and larger buisness
by jking on Sun 12th Oct 2003 14:14 UTC

For people that want to run zebra on their backbone for ISP or larger buisnesses but do not want to use zebra due to support reasons or the like. ZebOS is the commercial alternative. They are the same guys that wrote Zebra. Its much more refined, and has a more features. Its a proven piece of software. I've used it extensively, and a customer of ours also deployed it on their backbone. They are an ISP. Good luck and have fun.

www.ipinfusion.com

routerlinux
by John Gisclon on Mon 13th Oct 2003 07:17 UTC

routerlinux, a linux router distro, also uses Zebra

http://www.routerlinux.com/about/

Check out these guys for a SUPPORTED solution
by BustaRhymes on Mon 13th Oct 2003 15:05 UTC


They have a range of Linux-based routers, claiming connectivity up to OC12

www.imagestream.com
www.routerrevolution.com