On Mon, 28 Sep 2020 at 07:35, Eugene Grosbein <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi! > > One of my 7201 routers has four GigabitEthernet interfaces but uses only two, > one for IP uplink and another as client-sided downlink with multiple > sub-interfaces named like GigabitEthernet0/1.10 (encapsulation dot1Q). > > It need reconfiguration to use 2x1G port-channles. I already did such > reconfiguration > for same 7201 router with small number of sub-interfaces and know this is > doable > changing sub-interfaces from GigabitEthernet0/1.N to Port-channel1.N > > This time the router has about 800 sub-interfaces. I can do some scripting > to prepare incremental configuration removing/re-creating sub-interfaces, > but I presume high CPU load for router while reconfiguring, long procedure > time > and notable service degradation or even interruption. > > Is there same another, more lightweight way to mass-rename sub-interfaces > while switching from single parent interface to Port-channel?
Hi Eugene, If you don't want to do this over a series of incremental changes then you can make one "big bang" change by taking a copy of the running configuration, making all the changes to that, and uploading it to the router as a replacement start-up config file, then just reboot the router to apply the config in one action. However, this approach is risky, you need to test that new full configuration file (confirm that the change only relate to the interface renaming, and that there are no mistakes, typos, wrong VLAN numbers etc.), which is quite tricky. If you've ever wanted a pet project to get you into some network automation and programming stuff this sounds like an ideal project to me. You can definitely do this with Python tools like NAPALM and Nornir. Then you can automate the changes and automate the testing of the changes, and the rollback if required, in either multiple stages or as one giant change; whatever suits your circumstances best. Cheers, James. _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list [email protected] https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/
