From: Lupi, Guy (Guy.Lupi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Mar 04 2002 - 14:09:03 GMT-3
Well, if you are using PPP, you could do ppp quality monitoring. I believe
that you give a percentage to the interface, "ppp quality 80" would mean
that the link would have to have 80 percent of the incoming packets with no
errors, and if it fell below that the link would be shut down. It causes
the router to send quality report packets of some sort instead of normal
keepalives, and it would have to be implemented on both the customer and
provider side to work properly. I have never used it in production, but it
may be worth looking into.
-----Original Message-----
From: McCallum, Robert [mailto:Robert.McCallum@let-it-be-thus.com]
Sent: Monday, March 04, 2002 11:42 AM
To: 'Jeffrey Levine'; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: "fuzzy" HSRP failover
very much doubt you can. Be interested to see if you can however.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeffrey Levine [mailto:jeffrey_levine@hotmail.com]
Sent: 04 March 2002 15:43
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: OT: "fuzzy" HSRP failover
This is off-topic, but I am interested in feedback.
Here's the situation: I have two DS3 lines between two sites with routers
at each end configured using HSRP. This works fine. When the main DS3 goes
down, failover works. Here's the question: How can I cause a failover if
there is degraded performance on the primary line, but not a complete
failure?
thank!
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