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I'll bear this in mind but hopefully version 3.x is stable?
Rest assured that I worked on this project in 2008/09 -- they've fixed a lot of things since then (and it was version 2 obviously). It was usable in 2009 for us. Having said that, I would highly recommend typing "pfr" in bug toolkit for your code. There is no such thing as code without bugs -- but you can usually find code that doesn't have any bugs affecting your specific needs. Here is one bug on a 7200 running 15.1 and PfR v3:
Symptoms: Memory leaks on OER border router while running PfR-IPSLA configuration.
Conditions: This symptom is seen on a Cisco 7200 router that is running Cisco IOS Release 15.1(4)M.
Workaround: There is no workaround.
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I was thinking of using with BGP in honesty. Thanks for the advice on the UDP jitter probes. Would a scenario work if two BR were actually MC in redundancy as well?
Good choice. I tested all kinds of topologies -- 2 dedicated 7200 NPE-G2s running as dedicated MCs with 4 BRs, 2 BR/MCs, 1 BR/MC with 3 BRs ... all of it worked. We ended up using dedicated MCs in prod, though. I tested 3800s, 7200s as both BR and MC ... and sup720s and 2800s only as BR.
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My idea for one instance is that if one site routes outbound via one circuit, then I would want the remote circuit to also route via that same path for return traffic. I suppose another view could be that a full duplex circuit with 2 sites and 2 MPLS circuits to each could be thought of as eight individual paths in an MPLS environment (four paths for point to point links).But thinking about it, it wouldn't really matter as long as traffic was taking the best path - which is the purpose of PfR..
Makes sense. I'll tell you from experience though -- SPs are notorious for screwing things up in one direction. Also, keep in mind that probes are sent out of each BR exit interface. So, say you have an MPLS cloud with 4 branches hanging off of it. If one branch begins to have issues out of primary MPLS and backup MPLS cloud is better. If PfR prepends your routes outbound, all of your branches are going to use the backup path even if the other 3 were ok. IMO, if you control both sites and have SP clouds in the middle, then I would just do what PfR/OER was originally designed to do -- outbound traffic optimization. It would have avoided this problem.
If you want simplicity/have P2P links, it looks like cisco came out with inbound traffic optimization in 2010 -- all it does is either set an AS prepend or community.