Ok Tacacs, from your mail I understand that if there are no replies for all
the three packets within 1 sec then it is considered to fail. Evev, if one
reply
comes within the 1 sec then it is considered as pass, waits for 10 secs and
goes for next try.


With regards
Kings

On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 7:14 PM, Vybhav Ramachandran <[email protected]>wrote:

> Alrighty Kings,
>
> I did some tests.
>
> I was wrong :) The only time the SLA shows the test as timeout is if "ALL"
> the pings fail to get a response within the configure timeout interval.
>
> ex : Suppose the frequency is 10 seconds, and the num-of-packets is 3 and
> the timeout is 1000 ( 1 second ).
>
> The asa sends out 3 pings once every 10 seconds. I configured CPPR on R1 to
> only permit 1 echo-request and the 2 were dropped. But the ASA was still
> saying that the timeout didn't occur, but i could see the "NumofRTT" field
> in "show sla monitor operational-state" go down to 1 ( it was 3 originally,
> i.e 3 echo-replies were received) .
>
> But as soon as i dropped all icmp traffic on R1, the ASA immediately showed
> that the timeout had occurred.
>
> So as a summary, for the SLA to timeout , all the pings have to timeout,
> not just 1.
>
> Cheers,
> TacACK
>
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