Mark,

I think your problem could be that you did not wait till the port on 6500
goes down before plugging the cable to the new router. Sometime people want
to minimize the downtime and immediately move the cable from the old router
to the new one , 6500 will not realize the cable was moved, thus not flush
the old cache on the port.

You could try shutdown the port first or just wait for a bit longer.

HTH
--kent
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Smith" 
To: 
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2002 2:27 PM
Subject: RE: Forrest Gump-like arp(?) question [7:56680]


> Unfortunately I don't have access to the 6509 or it would be a done deal.
My
> stuff's at a Sprint co-lo facility and getting thru to a live tech across
> the country at Sprint is next to impossible. The 6509 is theirs and is
what
> I connect to on their network to get out to the world. I was just looking
> for a way to force their equipment to clear or refresh it's arp cache.
> Thanks.
>
> Quoting Priscilla Oppenheimer :
>
> > Can't you just do a "clear arp" on the 6509? That's a
> > commonly-used IOS
> > command. I would assume it works on the 6509. Or
> > should I say ass-u-me it
> > works. :-)
> >
> > Priscilla
> >
> > Mark Smith wrote:
> > >
> > > I need to replace a router in a cabinet at the
> > facility where
> > > my hosted servers and equipment is. My equipment is
> > "talking"
> > > to the hosting facility's network via a port on a
> > 6509 switch.
> > > I replaced my router and then nothing from my
> > network could
> > > connect to the outside world. I waited about 2
> > minutes (during
> > > which time my entire site's down and my bosses get
> > VERY
> > > nervous) and I never was able to connect from inside
> > and my
> > > tester on the outside was never able to get in to
> > me. I finally
> > > put router #1 back in and all was well again. I've
> > scoured the
> > > configuration and #2's is identical with #1 so I
> > don't believe
> > > that is the problem. I'm ass-u-me-ing that the
> > reason for this
> > > is the 6509 port's ARP cache is looking for the MAC
> > address of
> > > router #1 and it ain't there anymore. Would this
> > ass-u-me-ption
> > > be correct or is it possibly something else I'm not
> > > thinking/aware of? If it is an ARP issue, is there a
> > way that I
> > > can remotely force the 6509 port to
> > reset/clear/refresh it's
> > > ARP cache? I'm at a Sprint facility and I'd sooner
> > get a live
> > > body (that's not a first level phone answerer
> > anyway) to talk
> > > to me when I'm calling Mars than trying to get one
> > at Sprint.
> > >
> > > Any ideas/thoughts/chastisements on missing the
> > obvious here?
> > > As much as I'd like to work with Cisco gear full
> > time, it's
> > > only a very small part of my current job and,
> > consequently, due
> > > to my lack of familiarity with what you guys do all
> > day every
> > > day, it's very likely that I'm missing something
> > that all in
> > > the world except me know about.
> > > Thanks for any help or ideas.
> > >
> > > Mark
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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