You should check a log files during the time of high cpu load. ASR9K do most of 
the packet processing on NP.
High CPU load may happen during some control plane processing, like bgp 
neighbor flapping.

Отправлено с iPhone

> 20 апр. 2016 г., в 2:17, Micah Croff <micahcr...@gmail.com> написал(а):
> 
> I've experienced similar behavior on other platforms as well.  Sometimes
> the output of the box is not correct.  We were able to prove this to the
> vendor by conducting experiments and graphing the CPU.  One of the
> protocols they said "couldn't possibly be causing this" turned out to be
> the root of the problem.
> 
> I live by one rule when troubleshooting:
> The box is a lie.
> 
> Micah
> 
> 
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 4:06 PM, Laurent Dumont <ad...@coldnorthadmin.com>
> wrote:
> 
>> It coincides with nothing else? More traffic? CPU increasing at regular
>> intervals every day without any obvious reasons is probably something worth
>> looking into!
>> 
>>> On 4/18/2016 2:14 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --- rege...@gmail.com wrote:
>>> From: Rukka Pal <rege...@gmail.com>
>>> 
>>> How do you guys troubleshoot high CPU utilization on the ASR-9K platform?
>>> Detailed guides are available for IOS platforms, but I can't seem to find
>>> anything useful for the ASR.
>>> 
>>> The average line-card (0/0/CPU0: A9K-24x10GE-TR) CPU utilization of my
>>> routers is about 10%, however recently I have noticed that 3-5 times a day
>>> it increases to 40% and stays there for about an hour (20% spp + 10% netio
>>> + the rest).
>>> 
>>> I know this is well withing the acceptable range, but I am the kind of
>>> person who likes to understand every change in his network and during the
>>> investigation I had to realize that I simply don't have the tools to
>>> troubleshoot the ASR CPU.
>>> -----------------------------------
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On cisco: sho proc cpu
>>> 
>>> scott
>> 
>> 

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