Hmm, this happened to me a few years ago. If I recall correctly, you
can't pass traffic to the standby PIX in an active/standby pair. What
does "show failover" say on the active PIX - can it see it's standby
neighbor, and do the interfaces look normal?
--afsheenb
Ultramajestic wrote:
> I have an
From this post:
http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/2006-August/032846.html
It appears that the magic number, assuming you've tweaked the TCAM
appropriately, is somewhere between 244736 to 245546 routes.
I'd be interested to see what (if anything) happens when that number is
reached.
From the documentation:
"At Layer 1, autonegotiation takes care of physical signaling and fault
detection. UDLD performs tasks that autonegotiation cannot perform, such
as detecting the identities of neighbors and shutting down misconnected
interfaces. When you enable both autonegotiation and
Ah, think I've figured this out. This is bug CSCsc41813. Now to figure
out how to upgrade the switch in-situ when I don't have access to flash...
--afsheenb
Afsheen Bigdeli wrote:
> > I haven't dealt with this particular model of 3750 but it does look
> > as though
> I haven't dealt with this particular model of 3750 but it does look as
> though it's supported by the same IOS releases as the other 3750 and
> 3750G switches.
>
Yep. This makes me think I've stumbled upon a bug.
> > The other thing that stumps me is the odd failure mode. I'd expect the
> >
Brad Henshaw wrote:
> You've referred to the 3750 switches as Metro 3750's a number of times.
> This may be due to your application of the switches, but do not confuse
> the Cat3750 and 3750-E switches with the 3750 Metro's which are a
> different beast.
Ah, you're right. My mistake, I was confus
Hello,
I have several 3750G's running the advanced IP services firmware
(c3750-advipservicesk9-mz.122-25.SED.bin). These are all model
WS-C3750G-24TS. I've also got a Metro 3750G with a 10 GE port, model
WS-C3750G-16TD-E, that was formerly in a stack with several 3750G-24TS's.
I've decided to