We've had broadcast/multicast problems due to faulty customer routers. Two years ago, Linksys bfsr41's and their like were causing a problem. We worked with Cisco and they made a fix for it that they incorporated into the next firmware. More recently we had the problem with gigafast routers. Gigafast said I could return them for exchange, (which I didn't want), took my details, and never did anything about it. We've just yanked every gigafast that participates in the traffic storm. I've used wrt54g and Airnet routers in their place.
We graph every customer radio with mrtg, so we know who is broadcasting. The actual traffic is full of spoofed mac addresses and spoofed IPs, so there' s not much value to it. As you can see, all three customers in this pic are broadcasting, but the second and third are the worst offenders.
The gigafast routers don't seem to misbehave when on small networks, so we ocassionaly reuse them on a smaller routed networks. We are also gradually changing the network from a few seperately routed multi-site bridged networks to lots of small routed cells with small netblocks.
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