I do that too, but I’m referring to XR when you use different speed optics in a
multi-speed port; if you have a SFP+ port and 10gig SFP, you’ll get one
ifindex. New use case requires swapping to a gigE SFP and you’ll get a new
ifindex. Take the port out of service, remove the GigE SFP and the
David,
All you have to do is turn on IFindex persistence:
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/routers/crs/software/crs_r4-2/system_management/command/reference/b_sysman_cr42crs/b_sysman_cr42crs_chapter_01101.html#wp2192797756
We do this on our XRs and it works perfectly.
-mel via cell
On Oct
I had a customer with a similar issue. I statically assigned them a
different IP and it didn’t resolve it. The problem turned out to be tied
to their Hulu account.
The customer is going to need to keep pressing the issue with Hulu’s
technical support group. Make sure they’re not using
Hello,
I have a customer that is using Hulu Live to stream ESPN, however it
isn't showing up in their Channel list. They reached out to Hulu and
it's because their IP address is 'commercial'. We have many customers
using Hulu without problems, but it seems specific to ESPN. Anyone else
hav
Cisco tries very hard to make such useless data occur in XR. If you have a
gigE SFP in an SFP+ port, a new ifindex will appear for the resulting
GigabitEthernetX port, then it remains even if both the config and SFP have
been removed. Automated systems will keep querying it as if it were a dow
Dear John,
I'd like to thank you and the ARIN team for these efforts - in doing so
I feel that ARIN recognises issues & concerns related to the
distribution of the ARIN RPKI TAL. Acknowledging a problem is the first
step to solving it!
On Sat, Oct 13, 2018 at 09:35:36AM -0400, John Curran wrote:
On 25 Sep 2018, at 3:34 PM, Job Snijders wrote:
> ...
> What I'm hoping for is that there is a way for the ARIN TAL to be
> included in software distributions, without compromising ARIN's legal
> position.
>
> Perhaps an exception for software distributors would already go a long
> way?
>
>"
Saku,
The issue isn't that ifindexes change during operation. That would truly make
SNMP useless. The issue is that they change across reboots. That's where
features such as Cisco's Interface Index Persistence helps out.
-mel via cell
> On Oct 13, 2018, at 2:59 AM, Saku Ytti wrote:
>
>> On
On Fri, 12 Oct 2018 at 21:40, Chris Adams wrote:
> Is there any good excuse that SNMP client software can't handle a basic
> design of SNMP - indexed tables? ifIndex is far from the only index in
> SNMP, and many of them still change today at various times.
>
> It isn't that hard to fetch the in
9 matches
Mail list logo