Packet Pushers - Fat Pipe   /     Show 401: A Deeper Understanding Of Free Range Routing (FRR)

Description

Free Range Routing is an open-source routing stack. On today's Weekly Show we get updates on the project, a peak at the roadmap, an insider's view of how features are chosen, architectural issues, and more. Donald Sharp is our guest. The post Show 401: A Deeper Understanding Of Free Range Routing (FRR) appeared first on Packet Pushers.

Summary

Free Range Routing is an open-source routing stack. On today's Weekly Show we get updates on the project, a peak at the roadmap, an insider's view of how features are chosen, architectural issues, and more. Donald Sharp is our guest.

Subtitle
Free Range Routing (FRR) is an open source routing project. It’s designed to provide a full routing stack that can run on top of a network OS. FRR is itself a fork from the Quagga routing p…
Duration
0:00
Publishing date
2018-08-03 17:16
Link
https://tracking.feedpress.it/link/12486/9925330
Contributors
  Ethan Banks
author  
Enclosures
https://tracking.feedpress.it/link/12486/9925331/Show_401_A_Deeper_Understanding_Of_Free_Range_Routing_FRR_.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Free Range Routing (FRR) is an open source routing project. It’s designed to provide a full routing stack that can run on top of a network OS. FRR is itself a fork from the Quagga routing project.

On today’s Weekly Show, recorded live from IETF 102, we talk with Donald Sharp to learn about FRR, understand its capabilities, and get an update on roadmap features.

We also get a behind-the-scenes look at how new features are chosen, architectural issues that can lead to performance bottlenecks (and how to overcome them), and the challenge of making a programmatic interface for a project that was not originally conceived with that in mind.

We also discuss open source communities–how to understand them, the sorts of people that are involved with them, and the role a developer plays vs. a product consumer.

Then we get specific as to how someone with no previous project involvement can vet the community, decide to become involved, and add value to the group at large–even if they aren t developers.

Donald Sharp is Principal Engineer at Cumulus Networks and a lead contributor to the FRR project.

Show Links:

Free Range Routing Home Page – frrouting.org

FRR Mailing Lists – frrouting.org

Donald Sharp on Twitter

Free Range Routing Project Forks Quagga – Packet Pushers

PQ Show 112: Free Range Routing At IETF 98 – Packet Pushers

The post Show 401: A Deeper Understanding Of Free Range Routing (FRR) appeared first on Packet Pushers.