Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: randal
I hooked up four cable modems as a single link one time at a LAN party. We had some network support from the IT folks at Adelphia, and with a simple ospf config, were breaking 30mbps without issue. I think we set a record for Adelphia internally or something ... they mentioned they had never done such a thing before.
sweet. I was thinking more along the lines of the physical medium and how much it could push...the network gear could surely handle hundreds of Mbs, but the channel/cable plant was my concern.
Did you actually neighbor up with (OSPF) them and take their tables?
Unfortunately no. They made a stub for us, and we did standard equal cost multipath default routes across the links. We had tons and tons of little connections (websites, aim, irc, etc) for gamers, and only 10-20 large downloads going at a time, and with per-packet it really let everybody get as much as they could.
The physical layout was pretty conducive to the whole thing as well. The event was at a convention center and Adelphia has fiber to the facility. They have an OC3 coming into a Cisco CMTS (no idea what model, I'm not a cable guy) that connects to their HQ up north (direct area0 link). The CMTS then connected out to the conference room floor -- it was designed for having 200+ booths, all with individual cable modems, essentially creating a neighborhood in a big room. We just took four, hooked 'em up to a 6500, joined the stub and were ready to rock.
We were originally going to just use etherchannel to join the ports together on both ends, but the modems weren't transparent enough - didn't pass dot1q packets (MTU issue? Header parsing issues? Didn't waste time finding out). The cable modems went into the 6500 on the native VLAN, which also had eth0 of a FreeBSD traffic shaper attached. Then the 6500's other ports were the network core on another VLAN, which had the FreeBSD machine's eth1 attached. The BSD traffic shaper there filtered, managed, prioritized and NAT'd our internal networks appropriately, as I wasn't super-pro with Cisco QoS at the time.
That was 2 years ago? And I wasn't an OSPF guru by any stretch (still am not, learning more everyday), but that sounds right. We had ~650 gamers on it and it worked out great - even got accolades from several ESports commentator folks that the network was very snappy, which is apparently not standard fair at large events.
edit: edited for clarity