The message shows that the scheduler slips were caused due to a user process taking up CPU for longer than 4 seconds. This could very well be some task/job inside RPD or could be some other process. Was there any configuration change done recently on the router that triggered these messages? Are they seen after running any command? What is the role of this router in your network? I would suggest running the "show system processes extensive" and "show chassis routing-engine" immediately after the message shows up in the syslog.
You could, for short term, also enable task accounting with "set task accounting on" from operational level and monitor the output of "show task accounting" after the message is seen. Usually, there will be an additional message after enabling task accounting, showing which task inside RPD (if it is indeed RPD) is taking up the CPU. Do not forget to disable it after you have seen a couple of incidents of these messages. Thanks, Nilesh. On 4/9/10 3:00 AM, "Juniper" <juni...@iber-x.com> wrote: > Hello there, > > Since few days we are detecting these message in our log message in a > Juniper M20 with the JUNOS version 7.3R1.4 : > > Apr 6 06:00:15 xxxx-yyy2.abc-d.net LEV[2625]: RPD_SCHED_SLIP: 5 sec > scheduler slip, user: 4 sec 940542 usec, system: 0 sec, 14925 usec > Apr 6 05:58:07 xxxx-yyy2.abc-d.net LEV[2625]: RPD_SCHED_SLIP: 4 sec > scheduler slip, user: 4 sec 75182 usec, system: 0 sec, 0 usec > > Does anyone know what could be the problem? > > Thanks in advance, > > > > _______________________________________________ > juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp