10-21-2013 11:58 AM - edited 03-04-2019 09:22 PM
Hello,
long story short: I need to monitor and identify the traffic on the WAN GigabitEthernet0/3 interface. Recently after some changes to our network we discovered that our traffic to outside world via this link is doubled from 150-200 to 350 MB/sec (we use MRTG for bandwidth), we suspect there are something looping in the network. That is why I want to trace what is going via Gig0/3 in and out (mostly out). What are the suggestions on how to trace down and identify the what causing such a big spike in the outbound bandwidth?
While replication of the port seems to be a good tool Im not sure that any laptop with packet tracer can handle 300 mb/s of traffic. But, what are suggestions?
Tahnks =)
Router Specs:
cisco 7204VXR (NPE-G1) processor (revision B) with 983040K/65536K bytes of memory.
Processor board ID 18281405
SB-1 CPU at 700MHz, Implementation 1, Rev 0.2, 512KB L2 Cache
4 slot VXR midplane, Version 2.0
Last reset from power-on
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
SuperLAT software (copyright 1990 by Meridian Technology Corp).
TN3270 Emulation software.
PCI bus mb1 (Slots 1, 3 and 5) has a capacity of 600 bandwidth points.
Current configuration on bus mb1 has a total of 400 bandwidth points.
This configuration is within the PCI bus capacity and is supported.
PCI bus mb2 (Slots 2, 4 and 6) has a capacity of 600 bandwidth points.
Current configuration on bus mb2 has a total of 90 bandwidth points.
This configuration is within the PCI bus capacity and is supported.
Please refer to the following document "Cisco 7200 Series Port Adaptor
Hardware Configuration Guidelines" on Cisco.com <http://www.cisco.com>
for c7200 bandwidth points oversubscription and usage guidelines.
2 FastEthernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
3 Gigabit Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
1 ATM network interface(s)
509K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
10-21-2013 05:03 PM
Eric,
As a starting point you may be able to spot the top talkers by enabling ip accounting on the interface.
conf t
!
interface gi0/3
ip accounting output-packets
!
end
show ip account
This will build a table of bytes & packet sent from source ip adresses to destination ip addresses.
Something like this:-
router_10.64.7.2#
show ip account
Source Destination Packets Bytes
172.17.110.208 172.17.110.223 25 2500
10.64.7.26 172.17.111.59 13 1092
to turn off
conf t
!
interface gi0/3
no ip accounting output-packets
!
end
Regards,
Alex.
Please rate useful posts.
10-21-2013 08:43 PM
Hi Eric,
I would also suggest what campbell says, along with that you can also enable netflow to get a detailed information.
Regards,
Sathvik
10-22-2013 11:52 AM
Reporting back.
The ip accounting did it! We were able to identify spam host and eliminate the high traffic problem. Thank you for you help!
10-22-2013 08:49 AM
Thanks acampbell and sathvik.
IP accounting is a pretty good idea, i use it for my vpn connections on vpn router. I will try this one for sure. I dont know anything about Netflow. Is there any good examples on how to set it up for traffic identification?
Regards,
Eric
10-23-2013 08:46 PM
Hi Eric,
Good to know you could identify the source. Please refer the URL for mor details on netflow.
Regards,
Sathvik
10-24-2013 10:24 AM
Thanks again!
Seems like netflow is more precise then just ip accounting, I will set it first on the test router to see how it effects the performance, defiantly will need to have something like that in the near future on the core router. =)
If you have a time would you be able to help me with this thread https://supportforums.cisco.com/thread/2247398
so far have no answers on it. Thanks again. =)
10-24-2013 10:58 PM
Yes. netflow gives you indepth of the communication. Wireless i'm not good at.
Regards,
Sathvik
11-07-2013 10:14 AM
One more question, you dont happen to know anything about Cisco SMB routers?
https://supportforums.cisco.com/thread/2249641
regards,
Eric
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