Hi, my experience is not sticky concerning only OIR, but may be interresting for someone.
We had a 'new' (used, actually) 7606E, with Sup720-3CXL, X6724-SFP, and X6704-10GE. After boot, one of PSU's failed and X6704-10GE refused to boot because of low power. Both PSU's were 2700W. This was weird enough me to start thinking of some backplane failure. Then redemptive idea came to my mind.. To try non booting X6704-10GE in our production box (7606 as well). Viola, as soon as I inserted that card to slot, router rebooted with one PSU failed :). After this reboot (with X6704-10GE pulled of the router) I inserted xenpak (vendor PROLABS) from this 'faulty' card to another 10GE card in that box.. and that card turned off, with note FRU-POWER FAILED. Then I did a few tests with this transceiver and everytime I inserted it to some 10GE card it rebooted the card either whole box. Have you ever seen such behaviour? I'm thinking of this xenpak as ideal gift for my worst enemy :-). Kind regards, Jiri -----Original Message----- From: cisco-nsp-boun...@puck.nether.net [mailto:cisco-nsp-boun...@puck.nether.net] On Behalf Of Gert Doering Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2010 9:01 AM To: John Neiberger Cc: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net Subject: Re: [c-nsp] OIR on 7600s: Pretty much evil? Hi, On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 03:01:21PM -0700, John Neiberger wrote: > I'm just curious to hear your thoughts on OIR on this platform. Is > this something that you prefer to avoid? Do you have any OIR-related > horror stories you'd like to share? On 6500/7600 (and 7200), we *never* had any issues. On 7500, the "R" in "OIR" translates to "Reboot". gert -- USENET is *not* the non-clickable part of WWW! //www.muc.de/~gert/ Gert Doering - Munich, Germany g...@greenie.muc.de fax: +49-89-35655025 g...@net.informatik.tu-muenchen.de _______________________________________________ cisco-nsp mailing list cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/cisco-nsp archive at http://puck.nether.net/pipermail/cisco-nsp/