Anyone do anything with LISP, if so do you have a good resource to learn about it?
Which dialect of LISP are you using?
I don't program, myself, but I know those who do.
I believe he's referring to the protocol, not the programming language.
Quote from: fsck on May 22, 2015, 03:44:50 PM
I believe he's referring to the protocol, not the programming language.
He was probably being sarcastic. :)
Quote from: AnthonyC on May 22, 2015, 03:46:26 PM
Quote from: fsck on May 22, 2015, 03:44:50 PM
I believe he's referring to the protocol, not the programming language.
He was probably being sarcastic. :)
umm okay. I don't see why he needs to be. dlots is asking a legitimate question.
I legitimately took that to be the programming language. It's almost as old as FORTRAN, but it's still out there because of its use in AI programming.
So, uh, dlots, could you be more specifice? The protocol, or the language?
Run away, snake oil, stretched vlan designs are so 2012
Sarcasm aside I'd try to find some Cisco live presentations, I sat through one back in 2012 I think... HERE'S ONE I PREPARED EARLIER (attached)
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/8648738/BRKRST-3045%20%20LISP%20%E2%80%93%20A%20Next%20Generation%20Networking%20Architecture.pdf (https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/8648738/BRKRST-3045%20%20LISP%20%E2%80%93%20A%20Next%20Generation%20Networking%20Architecture.pdf)
Do you really want 'DNS' for IP? (runs away screaming in horror)
I was looking at the protocol, decided not to go for it cause it hurts our MTU and it's already getting pretty small (down in the high 1300s) and I don't want to hack it down yet again. I don't want to do it, but currently we have xconnect running around and using 2 /28 static routes for our /29 to make our FWs work. We have to move a device from 1 server room to another without changing IP addresses... It kinda sucks.
We were looking at it for use in combo with OTV for internal VM mobility...then our SE told us it wasn't really designed for internal use, but instead for exteranl use. It would have been a realy cool project, though.
Here's a link with consolidated LISP information:
http://lisp.cisco.com
Thank you :-)
Some work Arista did with A10, Aruba, and HP:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcj_4DgUJsI (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcj_4DgUJsI)
Not your use case, but i just realised EIGRP Over-The-Top uses LISP tunnels - although like ISIS underlying Fabricpath/Trill, its transparent and no manual config required
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/ios-xml/ios/iproute_eigrp/configuration/xe-3s/ire-xe-3s-book/ire-eigrp-over-the-top.html