No, our needs are much simpler but we saw similar issues on 5 routers
from 750's to 1100's.  Went back to 6.15 and haven't had a problem in 3
weeks.

 

Rory

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Chris Wright via Af
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2014 9:24 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CCR-1036 fun with PPPoE

 

Rory, thanks for your reply. Is your setup fairly similar to ours?
PPPoE, Accounting, and BGP all done by the Mikrotik? How many sessions
do you have and what kind of throughput?

 

Chris Wright

Velociter Wireless <http://www.velociter.net/> 

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Rory Conaway via Af
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2014 7:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CCR-1036 fun with PPPoE

 

On the older routers, we went back to 6.15 and things have been rock
solid.  We saw similar problems with 6.19.

 

Rory

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of James Howard via Af
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2014 6:39 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CCR-1036 fun with PPPoE

 

Have you tried taking down the BGP session on the Edge router for a
couple minutes and then restart it?

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Chris Wright via Af
Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2014 5:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AFMUG] CCR-1036 fun with PPPoE

 

CCR-1036 running RouterOS 6.19

 

After some serious amounts of testing, we felt our CCR was ready to take
the plunge. The core router talks BGP to our two Imagestream Edge
routers and gets all 500k+ routes from each in about three minutes. Its
PPPoE server manages to authenticate the bulk of nearly 1800 customers
in four minutes. All's fine and dandy for about 12 hours, then not so
fine and dandy things start happening. Overall traffic that should be
near 600mbps seems to top off around 400mbps. Edge 1 goes unresponsive,
VRRP doesn't kick in on Edge 2 and the entire network degrades. All
devices on our public switch go partially unresponsive to pings
including our DNS servers, other various VM's, and ESXi hosts
themselves.

 

Here's the fun part: We took the CCR out, just flat out unplugged it and
turned on our old Core routers. They start authenticating customers but
they're insanely slow in doing it. It's not until we reboot our Edge 1
router that things get back to normal and the old Core routers
authenticate at acceptable speeds. Could the CCR be inducing a problem
in our Edge routers perhaps?

 

 

Chris Wright

Velociter Wireless <http://www.velociter.net/> 

 

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