06-06-2017 05:18 AM - edited 03-03-2019 08:34 AM
Dear All,
I have 200mb live traffic running on Cisco 3845 router. But from past few days CPU utilization is going very high(80%).
Normal cpu utilization was upto 20% earlier.
I am not able to find out why utilization is going this high.
Please explain.
Solved! Go to Solution.
06-14-2017 02:43 AM
Well, if shifting traffic away from the router has brought the CPU down, then the high CPU was likely due to the traffic itself.
As a personal rule, I try to avoid having a 3845 deal with more than 100 Mbps. Normally, I would expect 200 Mbps to peg the CPU of a 3845.
The real question was whether your high CPU was almost all interrupt usage, normally indicating optimal performance, or whether there was another process driving the high CPU, like IP Input. The latter can sometimes be corrected allowing a higher forwarding rate.
06-06-2017 03:28 PM
Please post the complete output to the command "sh proc cpu sort | ex 0.00".
06-12-2017 05:05 AM
Router4#sh processes cpu sorted | ex 0.00
CPU utilization for five seconds: 27%/26%; one minute: 32%; five minutes: 23%
PID Runtime(ms) Invoked uSecs 5Sec 1Min 5Min TTY Process
91 1900 9100 208 0.24% 0.24% 0.23% 0 IP Input
116 24 729 32 0.08% 0.06% 0.05% 0 CEF process
76 4 14429 0 0.08% 0.07% 0.06% 0 EAP Framework
06-12-2017 02:04 PM
Looks OK to me.
06-13-2017 07:03 AM
Ideally, you want to capture the stats that Leo requested when the CPU is "very high(80%)."
06-13-2017 07:18 PM
I got Leo's reply after a day. Before that I had shifted some traffic to Cisco asr1001x.
Why would I keep working on a router with 80% cpu utilization?
Now everything is normal.
06-14-2017 02:43 AM
Well, if shifting traffic away from the router has brought the CPU down, then the high CPU was likely due to the traffic itself.
As a personal rule, I try to avoid having a 3845 deal with more than 100 Mbps. Normally, I would expect 200 Mbps to peg the CPU of a 3845.
The real question was whether your high CPU was almost all interrupt usage, normally indicating optimal performance, or whether there was another process driving the high CPU, like IP Input. The latter can sometimes be corrected allowing a higher forwarding rate.
06-14-2017 04:13 PM
Well, if shifting traffic away from the router has brought the CPU down, then the high CPU was likely due to the traffic itself.
I concur with Joe.
06-15-2017 08:10 PM
Hi joseph,
How much traffic do you recommend on ASR 1000 series?
06-16-2017 04:08 AM
That depends on the model, and also depending on the model, what's installed in it or what performance it's licensed for.
The ASR 1K (and the ISR 4K) differ from their earlier counterparts in that they have built in performance caps. This to try to insure they always can deliver the throughput noted in their data sheets.
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