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Hello,I am reading some documentation and learning about queuing on the C9000s. This whitepaper, section egress toolset, goes into detail about default queue configurations on the C9000. Cisco Catalyst 9000 Switching Platforms: QoS and Queuing White ...
Hi, I was looking at the datasheets for the 9400s. Taking the example of a 9410, I see that all supervisors currently support 80Gbps per slot. I was confused as to if that rating was unidirectional or bidirectional.
Cisco had listed hardware requirements to support various install versions on a virtual machine. I specifically want to try the device compliance feature, but I am barely using the required resources for the express install. For compliance the standa...
I am new to understanding the power requirements for these devices. I have been using the power calculator tool and reading the 4500 installation guide here, which outlines the power supply requirements.
I would like to run a 4200W power supply wit...
Hello, quick question. Let's say you have a standalone ASA in the your data path, it is currently passing a number of previously initiated TCP sessions. Then, there is a network failure that causes traffic to transition to a different standalone ASA ...
Thank you, I will read through it. I was speculating that the numbers were 80Gbps for TX plus 80Gbps for RX (160Gbps total) based on their over subscription ratios and 10G/40G port configurations on the supervisors. *edit* - I need to be more clear ...
Thanks, something is still not quite right regarding the 4200W PSU in 2100 operation. I think what is confusing people is that it says two dedicated circuits per PSU are required. But it also says each individual outlet can pull 12amps. So 2x 15 or 2...
The route-map in looks okay to me. I am not too familiar with the local-as flag, but based upon my limited understanding your router and this router are eBGP neighbors given that command, so the default route should propagate by default.
-> Please...
The info is great but unfortunately I think router B's config is what we really need, the ASNs here are good to see though. From that we can find out if there are any filters and see what peering (internal or external) router B has with the other spo...
External routes always show up as O E1|2 (unless you are in an nssa area). O E1|2 has no bearing on the area of origin. You cannot accurately say both routes were learned via an ASBR that's intra area based upon that information alone.
Pretty sure ...