Cisco unveils long-awaited new edge router
Cisco’s new ASR 9000 aggregator bears much in common with its core router
Industry News
Blogs
Briefing Room
advertisement
Cisco unveiled today a new high-capacity edge router that it hopes will allow the vendor to take the lead against key rivals Juniper Networks and Alcatel-Lucent.
The new ASR 9000 aggregation services router was built using the same family of in-house processors that drive Cisco’s previously introduced edge router, the ASR 1000. But because it was designed to sit upstream of -- and aggregate traffic from -- the compact 1000s, the 9000 comes with a lot more capacity: 6.4 terabits per second in a half-rack chassis (that’s based on adding incoming and outgoing traffic together). With 6- and 10-slot versions, each slot can carry up to 400 gigabits per second.
One of the key features of the 9000 – available in next year’s first quarter starting at $80,000 -- is its distributed control plane architecture. With control plane resources pushed from the core to 9000s at the edge, services and applications can in essence be protected from one another in a multiservice environment. It will allow carriers to, for example, trial new residential services using the same box that already delivers a different set of services to business customers.
“You don’t have to worry about if this particular service is compromised, you’re not compromising the entire control plane,” said Ray Mota, chief strategy officer at Synergy Research Group. “You’re just compromising that particular BGP service or app being deployed.”
That architectural move echoes one made by Cisco’s rival, Juniper Networks, earlier this year, when it unveiled a discrete, external control plane, the JCS 1200, for its routers.
Notably, the 9000 is managed not by IOS-XE operating system that manages the ASR 1000 but by the IOS-XR operating system that manages Cisco’s CRS-1 core router. Cisco is touting the XR’s high availability aspects and its proven track record, having been deployed in hundreds of carrier networks.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
advertisement
Learning Library
Webcasts
Using Real-Time Offers, Alerts and Interactions To Improve the Mobile Broadband Experience
In this Webinar you will learn how to create a real-time relationship with your customers, how to proactively improve the customer experience, and how to successfully target and cross-sell services to boost incremental revenue.
- Megabytes to Megabucks, Bandwidth to Business Models: How 4G Is Changing Everything
- How to Unplug Your Redundant Telco Apps To Save Money and Improve Efficiency
- When IaaS Isn't Enough: Service Provider Business Models to Drive Growth and Build Margin
- How to Transform Your Aging Telco Voice Network to Drive New Profits and Revenue
- Creative Licensing Approaches for Telcos & Their Network Equipment Vendors
- Smart Home Opportunity: Balancing Customer Data & Privacy
White Papers
The Role of Diameter in All-IP, Service-Oriented Networks
This paper discusses the rise of Diameter and benefits of Diameter Protocol.
- Conducting The Orchestration – Order Management at the Speed of Business
- Toward a Converged Network Edge
- Beyond Spam – Email Security in the Age of Blended Threats
- 6 Important Steps to Evaluating a Web Filtering Solution
- The Expertise to Protect You from Botnet and DDoS Attacks
- Seeing is Believing – Bridging the Order Visibility Gap
Featured Content
A time and money saving approach to fiber deployment
Service providers are under tremendous pressure to turn up new services faster then before and, at the same time,
to do it at less expense - and intra-office fiber is one of the biggest challenges in terms of both cost and service
turn-up.
of interest
The Latest
News
From the Blog
Briefingroom
Join the Discussion
Resources
Get more out of Connected Planet by visiting our related resources below:
Connected Planet highlights the next generation of service providers, as well as how their customers use services in new ways.
Subscribe Now







