Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733]

2001-07-26 Thread Tom Lisa
on a production router and watch the fun begin ;- -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 9:02 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733] Hi If you are just routing you should be fine. However

Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733]

2001-07-25 Thread Frank Kim
Hey guys, I know no one in the world would put two T1s on a 2501 router. But I maybe doing this soon. I am currently using a 7200 router for my two T1s but I feel like taking it offline and sell it to pay for my ECP1 and my trip to San Jose for the lab test. So I'm going take out my 2501 and

Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733]

2001-07-25 Thread John Hardman
Hi If you are just routing you should be fine. However if you are doing NAT, ACL, policy based routing or anything else that is CPU consuming you are likely to have some problems. Keep in mind that a Cisco router will start dropping packets at about 70% CPU and be totally brain dead at about 90%

RE: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733]

2001-07-25 Thread Chuck Larrieu
for proof of this, issue a debug all command on a production router and watch the fun begin ;- -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2001 9:02 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733] Hi If you

Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733]

2001-07-25 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: Re: Can 2501 handle two T1s [7:13733] Hi If you are just routing you should be fine. However if you are doing NAT, ACL, policy based routing or anything else that is CPU consuming you are likely to have some problems. Keep in mind that a Cisco router will start dropping packets at about 70% CPU