ASE = AT&T Switched Ethernet. Comcast and others pretty much all do the
same shit for MetroE.
We have three ASE circuits at different locations. All are Ciena 3930s
with 1G optical hand-off direct to our routers. Each has a different
peer at the other end of the EVC.
I would get a complete halt in traffic for 2-3 seconds. It was easy to
catch while running a fast ping interval (50-100ms). I'd see "no route
to host" exactly when the traffic would quit. We were getting no ARP
replies. Like an ARP or broadcast rate limiter or filter was
mysteriously turned on. So I made the ARP entries for the upstream peer
static and didn't have any more problems.
I've had this problem on all three from time to time, lasting for
minutes, hours or days and then it just vanishes. Even had two circuits
doing this simultaneously. So I don't know if it's the 3930s or the ASE
core network. Although it has been a few months since I've seen it.
I couldn't say if this is your problem, just wanted to give my
experience because it sounds so similar.
On 11/20/2016 4:53 PM, TJ Trout wrote:
Att MIS not Ase, involves also another carriers "ase" product (not
at&t) but since all traffic through both peers goes to zero I'm
assuming it's elsewhere?
On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 2:48 PM, George Skorup <geo...@cbcast.com
<mailto:geo...@cbcast.com>> wrote:
Stupid question. Does this involve AT&T ASE at all?
On 11/20/2016 12:47 AM, TJ Trout wrote:
I have 2 peers, one CCR and 2 backhauls connected to a 10G
switch that I've recently installed, prior to installing the
10G switch everything functioned normally (had a CCR1009, now
CCR1036), currently during peak periods of traffic my traffic
will go from 1500mbps to 0mbps for just a instant then back to
1500mbps, other times it goes from 1500mbps to 750mbps and
back to 1500. Sometimes it happens 30 times a minute sometimes
2 times per hour.
I've swapped the switch, sfp's...
Anyone with any remotely plausible idea would be greatly
appreciated