On Saturday, December 31, 2011 02:00:58 PM Koch, Andrew
wrote:
That is not my experience with preconfigure. If I have a
MSC go missing, all of the interfaces associated with
the line card become interface preconfigure xxx and
will restore when the MSC does. I have also seen the
interfaces
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 07:33 PM Mark Tinka wrote
We've used that before - what I know is that 'preconfigure'
will only display configurations of a previously removed
line card if the interfaces were initially configured with
the 'preconfigure' command.
We haven't tested this by
to see interface configuration after card failure on ASR9K
We had a 40-port card fail on an ASR9K and I'm trying to see what
configuration was on those interfaces, but I can't find the right
command. The router has basically decided that the card doesn't exist
for most purposes. I thought
Hi,
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 10:31:31AM +0800, Mark Tinka wrote:
I thought for sure there was a command that would show
the preconfigured interfaces. As soon as I insert the
new card, the preexisting configuration will magically
appear again.
That is the Juniper way :-).
Which is not
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 10:31:31AM +0800, Mark Tinka wrote:
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 03:13:35 AM John Neiberger
wrote:
I thought for sure there was a command that would show
the preconfigured interfaces. As soon as I insert the
new card, the preexisting configuration will
interface configuration after card failure on
ASR9K
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 10:31:31AM +0800, Mark Tinka wrote:
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 03:13:35 AM John Neiberger
wrote:
I thought for sure there was a command that would show
the preconfigured interfaces. As soon as I insert
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 01:37:34PM +0100, Vitkovsky, Adam wrote:
Pre-configuration is possible with XR as well
So you can preconfigure interfaces, but not see and edit the
remembered config of interfaces which got physically removed (or
linecard shut down)?
Best regards,
Daniel
--
CLUE-RIPE
, December 28, 2011 1:49 PM
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] How to see interface configuration after card failure on
ASR9K
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 01:37:34PM +0100, Vitkovsky, Adam wrote:
Pre-configuration is possible with XR as well
So you can preconfigure interfaces
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 08:14:58 PM Daniel Roesen
wrote:
No, with JUNOS adding/removing hardware won't change the
config at all. You can preconfigure interfaces that were
never installed in the chassis before, and config
remains present when shutting down or even removing
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 08:48:43 PM Daniel Roesen
wrote:
So you can preconfigure interfaces, but not see and edit
the remembered config of interfaces which got physically
removed (or linecard shut down)?
In IOS XR, if you preconfigure interfaces and the line card
on which they are
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 06:45:09 PM Gert Doering
wrote:
Actually, IOS does this as well, if you replace a PA on a
7200 or a board on a catalyst switch - if the board is
removed, the config isn't shown anywhere, but still
remembered. If you insert a board of compatible type
(PA-FE -
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 05:51:09 PM Vitkovsky, Adam
wrote:
Show run should display the configuration for the card
that was removed and all it's references in the config
It will jut list the interfaces as interface
preconfigure gig0/2/3/4 -same as when you pre-configure
interfaces
Hi,
On Wed, Dec 28, 2011 at 09:18:55PM +0800, Mark Tinka wrote:
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 06:45:09 PM Gert Doering
wrote:
Actually, IOS does this as well, if you replace a PA on a
7200 or a board on a catalyst switch - if the board is
[..]
Cool, but what I meant was more of a I
We had a 40-port card fail on an ASR9K and I'm trying to see what
configuration was on those interfaces, but I can't find the right
command. The router has basically decided that the card doesn't exist
for most purposes. I thought that if I did a show running-config I
would see those interfaces
On Tue, 27 Dec 2011, John Neiberger wrote:
We had a 40-port card fail on an ASR9K and I'm trying to see what
configuration was on those interfaces, but I can't find the right
command. The router has basically decided that the card doesn't exist
for most purposes. I thought that if I did a show
Show config rollback last X (or some variant of that) should show you what you
want to see.
--
Sent from my mobile device
On 2011-12-27, at 11:43 AM, John Neiberger jneiber...@gmail.com wrote:
We had a 40-port card fail on an ASR9K and I'm trying to see what
configuration was on those
You are right! My mistake.
--
Sent from my mobile device
On 2011-12-27, at 1:31 PM, Mark Tinka mti...@globaltransit.net wrote:
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 02:19:24 AM Jason Lixfeld
wrote:
Show config rollback last X (or some variant of that)
should show you what you want to see.
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 12:43:47 AM John Neiberger wrote:
We had a 40-port card fail on an ASR9K and I'm trying to
see what configuration was on those interfaces, but I
can't find the right command. The router has basically
decided that the card doesn't exist for most purposes. I
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 02:19:24 AM Jason Lixfeld
wrote:
Show config rollback last X (or some variant of that)
should show you what you want to see.
'sh configuration rollback changes last' to be exact.
But that will only show the OP changes that were applied to
a running
I thought for sure there was a command that would show the
preconfigured interfaces. As soon as I insert the new card, the
preexisting configuration will magically appear again. I just want to
verify what that configuration is. I just found the command show
running-config all-interfaces which at
On Wednesday, December 28, 2011 03:13:35 AM John Neiberger
wrote:
I thought for sure there was a command that would show
the preconfigured interfaces. As soon as I insert the
new card, the preexisting configuration will magically
appear again.
That is the Juniper way :-).
Which is not to
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