From: Brian Hescock (bhescock@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Sat May 27 2000 - 14:30:26 GMT-3
David,
Have you ever used the stack decoder on CCO? As long as you haven't
reloaded the router since the crash, you should be able to decode the
stack and have it point the function at which the router crashed. I can't
recall if the CCO stack decoder then lists possible bugs or if you need to
look for the possible bug (if it's not a harware error). If you have a
SmartNet contract with Cisco you can always open a case. Whatever you do,
please go into enable mode and capture the ouput of "show tech" before you
reload the router. The reason for being in enable mode is it includes
the configuration and other key commands that aren't otherwise collected..
Brian
Cisco TAC
On Fri, 26 May 2000, David H. Brown wrote:
> Kinton (& all),
>
> I had several good replies, yours wins the prize! I ran debug serial int,
> and it is sending packets about every second instead of every 10 sec.
> Changed the cable, no difference. Then I set the clock to the current time
> and turned on debug timestamps debug datetime msec localtime, then watched
> the debug ser int. The clock is running 10x faster than it is supposed to!!
> I did show version and the uptime is already 3 1/2 days, and I started this
> guy up at 10AM this morning, rebooted at 11 something!! I also didn't see
> this before: System restarted by error - Level 3, PC 0x317B54A at 14:29:30
> EDT Tue May 23 2000, what does this mean to anyone (OK, other than my router
> is broke!)??
>
> Summary: Looks like a hardware failure. I will be trying a reboot and
> change RAM chips, any other possible course of action on this one? Thanks
> for all the time and ideas everybody!
>
> David
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kinton Connelly [mailto:kinton@oldmedia.com]
> Sent: Friday, May 26, 2000 3:48 PM
> To: David H. Brown
> Subject: Re: Simple OSPF over FR
>
>
> Hi, David. With just a quick glance at your configs, I couldn't find
> anything glaringly wrong - maybe someone else on the list will find
> something.
>
> Have you done a "debug serial interface" to make sure your interface isn't
> restarting? If that doesn't show anything, how about a long ping (2000+
> pings) to see if there is any loss of connectivity. I'd start there...at
> layer 1...and then work my way up to the dlci's and then to ospf - maybe
> throw in some ospf debug's to see what's happening.
>
> Good luck!
>
> Kinton
>
>
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