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I'm kind of at a loss. We have an old Cisco 2600 series router, running a single T-1 line, AT&T is the carrier. Very standard stuff.The T-1 works perfectly on the old router. Cisco 2600 with a WIC-1DSU-T1 card. We have a brand new 2911 router with a ...
What kind of port are you using? Copper or fiber?The problem is the line cards in these chassis normally do not support traffic shaping like you can with a router. The only ways I have found to do this are to insert a router in the path to shape with...
Double ugh, that was not the right link... Try these for a better explanation. I think this applies equally to Cisco even though Adtran is a competitor of theirs...https://supportforums.adtran.com/servlet/JiveServlet/previewBody/1401-102-1-1428/ATLAS...
Ugh, one other thing to mention. I have seen issues in the past with multilink t1s when the circuits ride different spans and have different clock sources as a result. This has been a problem at my current job which the carrier has resolved by moving...
This is the worst kind of answer to give, but someone else wound up looking at it, they say they replaced the T1 card and it worked. Not sure if they used an older model of card or what. I still think it has to be an issue with the signal on the line...
My bad, in windows world it's a "string" value. In Cisco world it's an ascii value. The main two you will use for most purposes are ascii or IP. If you're serving something that is just an IP address, like a DNS server, a NTP server, etc, you use IP....