11-18-2003 10:11 PM - edited 03-02-2019 11:49 AM
Dear All,
Would appreicate if anyone can help me with some BGP problem
I have a 7206 VXR router running 12.3(2)T IOS. I am doing BGP with my customer who is using a 3640 with c3640-ix-mz.123-3a.bin as its IOS with about 128mb of ram.
What happen is that when I try to give him full routes, my router CPU will shoot up beyond 90% and stay up. Only when I put in a filter-list did the problem got resolved. Meaning, we can do BGP with each other and our advertisement is going through. Just that he can only received partial routes from me.
I am wondering where is the limitation on why my customer is not able to receive full routes from me and how can I go about resolving those problems.
Any assistance will be appreciated. Thanks.
Vincent
Solved! Go to Solution.
11-21-2003 11:13 AM
I would say that 128MB is on the edge or two little. First, the Internet routing table is always growing, and I don't think 128MB will handle the number of routes we're talking about plus CEF tables and other things. Second the size of images has grown, so there is less and less of that 128MB available for the routing table each time you upgrade.
:-)
Russ.W
11-19-2003 06:46 AM
Do you have log adjacency tables on? I'd think that what's happening is the other router is either crashing or terminating the BGP sessions, which then causes your router to have to start over on the session constantly, which drives your cpu up. It's also possible that the other router is being pathological because it's running out of memory trying to receive all the routes, and causing your router to retransmit a lot, etc.
I woudl suggest either having the customer upgrade their memory, or accept partial routes.
Russ.W
11-19-2003 07:07 PM
Sorry, log adjacency changes! :-)
Russ.W
11-20-2003 06:41 PM
Dear Russ,
Thanks for the reply.
I do have log-adjacency-changes but only on my OSPF not on my BGP. The following is my router setting:
...
no synchronization
no bgp fast-external-fallover
bgp log-neighbor-changes
...
no auto-summary
...
I am just puzzled would not 128Mb of RAM be more than sufficient to meet the demand of full internet route? I have successful experience with getting the full routes at 70Mb.
Just wondering is there any possibility that it is in fact an IOS issue.
Regards,
Vincent
11-21-2003 11:13 AM
I would say that 128MB is on the edge or two little. First, the Internet routing table is always growing, and I don't think 128MB will handle the number of routes we're talking about plus CEF tables and other things. Second the size of images has grown, so there is less and less of that 128MB available for the routing table each time you upgrade.
:-)
Russ.W
11-21-2003 05:45 PM
Gee, thanks for the info Russ. Really appreciate your help in getting the answers for me.
Vincent
11-19-2003 07:31 PM
We have had success running a 3640 receiving full Internet routes before, but that was maybe 3 or 4 years ago. I'm not sure though that the routing table has grown significantly.
If you are still having a problem, try to see if the customer has configured any filter list or as-path list at their end, which could not limit you sending the routes to them, but which would limit which routes they accept.
But it is more likely that the customer router cannot handle the full Internet routes. If you do not find a solution, or the customer cannot upgrade, then consider advertising partial routes only.
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