Thanks, When you put a dud SFP in it only impacts a handful of ports at a time, depending on which port you stuck it in first. I haven't sat down and mapped out which ports are impacted etc, I may do that tonight to see if I can map it out. Also it only happens sometimes. The optic doesn't always cause an issue the first time, but after rebooting/swapping the sfp in and out, it can cause the issue.
Joe On 06/06/2013, at 8:30 PM, Saku Ytti <s...@ytti.fi> wrote: > On (2013-06-06 18:40 +0800), Joe Wooller wrote: > >> This is basically what is happening (i think) the PFE becomes unusable until >> you reboot. Is there a way to see what ports are on what PFE? > > I'm not familiar with EX4550, I would expect it's single PFE. > >> My biggest issue with this now is having remote hands work on a site, >> install a 3rd party optic (by mistake for argument sake) and have a whole >> PFE crash. > > It's very hard to find 3rd party optic which does not work, you've been > 'lucky'. Looking at any bug database from any vendor, you can have issues > with vendor optics too. > >> I personally think they should have some way of dealing with that without >> having to reboot. (Maybe they do, I just don't know what it is). > > You could restart the PFE, it's bit faster but still full outage. Just > change your optic supplier. > > -- > ++ytti > _______________________________________________ > juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp > > !DSPAM:1,51b0812567086143715338! > > _______________________________________________ juniper-nsp mailing list juniper-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp