Basically, as I understand it, you can get input/output drops with a busy CPU 
on the 7200 not just with interface buffer overruns but generic queue buffers. 
The default values were set when T1s were the standard. The  article shows how 
to see which buffers are being overrun and how to adjust them.




> On Jul 7, 2015, at 4:27 PM, Gert Doering <g...@greenie.muc.de> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2015 at 07:16:10PM +0000, Matthew Huff wrote:
>> I would strongly recommend picking up a refurb NPE-G2. They should be cheap 
>> and available. We are running 15.2(4)S7 on ours with BGP/EIGRP. Very stable. 
>> You might also want to bump up your buffers on the 72xx. 
>> 
>> http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/routers/10000-series-routers/15091-buffertuning.html
> 
> Never understood buffer tuning on 7200s, tbh.  This feels like a relict
> from 7500 days, which had a totally different architecture...
> 
> 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/

Reply via email to