Hi List, this maybe sounds like a novice question but the phenomenon i observe here is so peculiar to me that i like to share it and ask whether someone else has made similar observations. Everything started when a co-worker tried to troubleshoot a rapidly increasing output error counter on a 3850 Switchport. Neither replacing the switchport nor the patch cord or even the nic on the other side helped. For no precise reason i tried to compare the numbers with our older 3750 switches and it turned out, that around 5% of our 3850 switchports had "output errors" while not a single one our 3750 switchports had any. Even though we have five times more switchports on 3750 and these stacks have typically much higher uptimes (because they are operational for many years now). But they had output drops. So my suspicion is as follows:
The output errors counters count different things on a 3750 and a 3850. While the 3750 only counts "frames dropped due to physical media problems" the 3850 also adds "frames dropped due to filled buffer" to this number. As the numbers of the "Total output drops" and "output errors" counters on a 3850 are usually identical and if i assume that our cabling is of the same quality as it is on 3750 (where we have no "output errors" at all) this makes perfec sense. Any comments on that? Is that a stupid consideration? Best, Sebastian. _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/