12-13-2022 04:42 PM
HI.
As we know for ISR4000 series there are hardware throughput level, if my hardware license now is 100Mbps this mean 100Mbps for all port or for each port?
Solved! Go to Solution.
12-14-2022 08:36 AM - edited 12-16-2022 07:04 AM
I recall, for the ISR 4000 family (may be different for ASR 1K), it's the aggregate of all traffic that would cross the data plane. I.e. more-or-less, aggregate of all interfaces RX, or all interfaces TX, but not both. (Remember, [ignoring ACLs, shapers, policers, etc.], RX traffic becomes TX traffic, on the same device.)
I also recall, the license doesn't immediately drop overrate traffic, it shapes it. (At least that seems to be what https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/routers/4000-series-integrated-services-routers/217135-performance-license-on-cisco-isr4000.html documents.)
12-13-2022
05:28 PM
- last edited on
12-15-2022
10:19 PM
by
Translator
@hs08 wrote:
if my hardware license now is 100Mbps this mean 100Mbps for all port or for each port?
100 aggregate (total) throughput (input + output).
The router will "down-rate" to process only 100 Mbps traffic.
12-13-2022 06:03 PM
So let say i have 2 port (for LAN and WAN) and the hardware license is 100Mbps.
When the WAN traffic reach to 50Mbps for rx and this traffic routed to LAN interface (WAN rx is 50Mbps and LAN tx is 50Mbps) this mean the license reach the maximum limit?
12-13-2022 07:12 PM
Combined throughput (input + output) must not exceed 100 Mbps.
Example, 98 Mbps download + 2 Mbps upload.
12-13-2022 08:17 PM
Also combined with other port? Or each port having 100 Mbps dedicated speed?
12-14-2022 01:22 AM
You mean the device inside port to port that is different, the one given exmaple leaving from router and coming to router.
12-14-2022 01:28 AM
let say we have 3 interface utlization like this :
gi0/0/0 - 50Mbps
gi0/0/1 - 40 Mbps
gi0/0/2 - 30 Mbps
and the router hardware license is 100 Mbps, with that utilization are we will have bottleneck because 100 Mbps license is for all ports?
12-14-2022 02:01 AM
yes correct - that will be over subscription. and packets will be dropped.
12-14-2022 08:36 AM - edited 12-16-2022 07:04 AM
I recall, for the ISR 4000 family (may be different for ASR 1K), it's the aggregate of all traffic that would cross the data plane. I.e. more-or-less, aggregate of all interfaces RX, or all interfaces TX, but not both. (Remember, [ignoring ACLs, shapers, policers, etc.], RX traffic becomes TX traffic, on the same device.)
I also recall, the license doesn't immediately drop overrate traffic, it shapes it. (At least that seems to be what https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/routers/4000-series-integrated-services-routers/217135-performance-license-on-cisco-isr4000.html documents.)
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide