Kind of a strange problem. I have 2 vlans on my 4507. One VLAN is for the 192.168.1.0 subnet and the other is for the 192.168.15.0. Some of my servers have dual NICs and connect to both VLANS. On the NIC that interacts with the 1.0 subnet, there ...
Update: I recently swapped out cables and port configurations. The problem went from the NIC on VLAN 2 to the one on VLAN 1. Thinking that it could be a cable problem, I then swapped out cables but the problem stayed so I then moved the cable to a ...
I swapped out cables last night on the port and noticed that the CRC errors dropped. Thanks for your help. I will keep you posted on what has been found.
The cpu load on the switch is at 14%. Below is a show int of that particular port:GigabitEthernet4/11 is up, line protocol is up (connected) Hardware is Gigabit Ethernet Port, address is 0013.1a6b.6c6a (bia 0013.1a6b.6c6a) Description: PIX MTU 150...
Good point on the routing issue. Below is what I have for my routing table:S 192.168.12.0/24 [1/0] via 192.168.1.238S 192.168.13.0/24 [1/0] via 192.168.1.238S 192.168.14.0/24 [1/0] via 192.168.1.238C 192.168.15.0/24 is directly connected...
I wouldn't think that it would be a routing issue since the PIX's ip is: 192.168.15.10 and the 4507 vlan int ip is: 192.168.15.4 and sometimes they can talk and other times they can. I'll move the PIX config to a different port to see if the problem...