North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: EIGRP / OSPF dampening
On Tue, Dec 17, 2002 at 06:02:48PM -0700, Donn Lasher wrote: > > > I'm looking for a way to way to either dampen, penalize, or otherwise slow > down a flapping interface, when the router has no "link state" information > about the Layer 2 connection, which is itself causing the flap... Example... http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/iosswrel/ps1829/products_feature_guide09186a00800ad25b.html Like BGP dampening, but more generic. Does that do what you want? eric > > Dec 17 08:23:50 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2106: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is down: peer restarted > Dec 17 08:23:52 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2107: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is up: new adjacency > Dec 17 08:24:09 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2108: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is down: peer restarted > Dec 17 08:24:11 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2109: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is up: new adjacency > Dec 17 08:24:42 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2110: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is down: peer restarted > Dec 17 08:24:43 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2111: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is up: new adjacency > Dec 17 08:25:18 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2112: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is down: peer restarted > Dec 17 08:25:20 xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 2113: 15w5d: %DUAL-5-NBRCHANGE: IP-EIGRP > 10: Neighbor xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (FastEthernet2/0.3) is up: new adjacency > > This type of flapping yields an effectively down interface, yet, appears > "up" so data gets blackholed while dead timers expire, etc. > > I'm very familar with doing this via BGP, but haven't found any good way > yet to do this with either EIGRP or OSPF. > > Any ideas? Feel free to either reply to the list, or privately. > > Thanks in advance..
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