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Device ProblemsLast Update 2011.07.01
1.5.0
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Objectives
• Learn about the common problems seen on devices such as workstations, switches, and routers
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Configuration Problems
• Sometimes the problem is due to a device being configured incorrectly
• Here is how to examine the devices for this type of problem
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Show Commands
• The most common command is the show command
• There are several of these• Let’s look at some of the most useful ones
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Show ip int brief
• The show ip int brief command shows a summary of all three layers of a router
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Show ip int brief
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Show Interfaces Command
• When using a Cisco device some common commands include the show interfaces command
• It supplies a lot of important information about interfaces, such as the status of the interfaces, statistics about packets sent and received, and a wide variety of error counters and configuration settings
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Show Interfaces Command
• You can see the many variations of the show interfaces command by using the show interfaces ? command on a router CLI
• The following three are the main variations– show interfaces– show interfaces type number– show interfaces description
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Lab
• Start Packet Tracer• Create the network shown in the following
slide using RIP as the routing protocol• Once this network is communicating we
will use it to look at the output of several commands
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Show Interfaces
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Small Internetwork with Two Routers Connected by a Serial Link
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Show Interfaces
• Cisco routers give two indications about whether each interface is working, as listed in the first line of output in the show interfaces command
• Together, these two indicators are called the interface status, and individually, they are called the line status and line protocol status
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Show Interfaces
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Show Interfaces
• An interface must have both a line status and a line protocol status of up to send and receive traffic
• All other combinations of status mean that the interface cannot currently be used
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Show Interfaces
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Show Interfaces
• The line status - the first of the two status values in the show interfaces command output - mainly relates to hardware or layer 1
• As a result, many people refer to this first status value as either the hardware status or layer 1 status
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Show Interfaces
• A line status of down means that the interface has some physical problem
• To troubleshoot such problems, you can follow some obvious steps, such as checking the cable or checking whether the device on the other end of the cable is powered off
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Show Interfaces
• Additionally, the show interfaces commands list some counters that can be helpful in determining why an interface has a line status of down
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Show Interfaces
• The input errors counter lists the number of frames that the router received but for which the FCS - Frame Check Sequence process determined that the frame experienced errors during transmission, meaning that the router had to discard the frame
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Show Interfaces
• A high value for the input errors counter could mean that the link has been experiencing a large number of bit errors, possibly due to poor but working cables, bad connectors, or too-long cable lengths
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Show Interfaces
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Show Interfaces
• The other highlighted counter, the carrier transitions counter, relates to a pin lead on serial cables
• The CSU/DSU signals the router serial interface that the link is working by raising the carrier detect - also called data carrier detect, or DCD - pin lead on the serial cable
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Show Interfaces
• The last two lines of the output show that the router has seen the DCD transition from up to down, or from down to up, a total of five times
• The last line of output also lists the current state of the DCD pin
• A link on which a large number of carrier transitions occur means that the link has been going up and down a lot
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Show Interfaces
• In most cases, when an interface’s line status is up but its line protocol status is down, the problem relates in some way to layer 2
• Many times the problem relates to some configuration problem like– Mismatched layer 2 protocols configured on
the routers on the ends of a serial link
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Show Interfaces
– On a serial link with a back-to-back serial connection in a lab, the absence of a clock rate command on the router with the DCE cable
– The failure to receive keepalive messages
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Show Interfaces for Layer 1
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Show Interfaces for Layer 2
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Examining the Routing Table
• Several aspects of the routing table configuration may cause problems with connectivity
• In this section we will discuss several considerations related to routing
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Show IP Route
• The show ip route command displays the contents of the IP routing table
• This table contains entries for all known networks and subnetworks
• It also shows a code that indicates how the route was learned
• The table includes all the routes that the router can currently use when forwarding packets
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Show IP Route
• These routes include the following– Connected routes
• Routes to subnets connected to this router’s interfaces
– Static routes• Routes configured on this router using the ip route
global configuration command
– Dynamically learned routes• Routes learned by using a dynamic routing
protocol
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Show IP Route
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Show IP Route
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Route Source and Destination
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Lab
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• Go back to the previous Packet Tracer lab using the same configuration used above and examine the routing table
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Checking for Routing Updates
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• Sometimes you need to know if a routing update has been received, as well as when the next one will be received
• For example as shown in the output of the show ip route rip command, each RIP learned route lists the time that has elapsed since the last routing update about the route
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Checking for Routing Updates
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• In this case, it has been 7 seconds since this router last heard the update that advertised the route to 172.16.3.0/24
• At the bottom of the example, the show ip protocols command lists the time since the last update from each neighbor
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Checking for Routing Updates
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Last Routing Update
• Use the following commands to find the last routing update–show ip route –show ip route network –show ip protocols –show ip rip database
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Show IP Protocols
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Show Controllers Serial
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Lab
• What do the– show ip protocols– and– show controllers serial
• commands show you
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Cisco Online Tools
• Next is some information on some tools found on the Cisco web site that will help you understand what the error messages and show command outputs are telling you
• It is from a presentation at the 2011 Cisco Academy Conference titled Cisco Tools, Online Resources and IOS Fundamentals by Jessie Pagan
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Error Message Decoder
• He says– The Error Message Decoder helps you to
understand the meaning of the error messages displayed on the console of Cisco routers, switches and firewalls
– Error messages should be copied and pasted into the Error Message Decoder exactly as they appear in the console logs
– System error messages begin with a percent sign (%)
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Error Message Decoder
– Standard error messages are generally all structured as follows• %FACILITY-SEVERITY-MNEMONIC: Message-
text
– Here is what the parts of the message mean• FACILITY is a code consisting of two or more
uppercase letters that indicates the facility to which the message refers. A facility can be a hardware device, a protocol, or a module of the system software
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Error Message Decoder
• SEVERITY is a single-digit syslog code from 0 to 7 that reflects the severity of the condition
• MNEMONIC is a code that uniquely identifies the error message
• Message-text is a text string describing the condition
– This portion of the message sometimes contains detailed information about the event, including terminal port numbers, network addresses, or addresses that correspond to locations in the system memory address space, because the information in these variable fields changes from message to message, they are not required when using this tool
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Error Messages
• For example– %SYS-2-MALLOCFAIL: Memory allocation of
68 bytes failed from 0x604CEF48, pool Processor, alignment 0 Process=2, ipl= 3• This means the Operating System (SYS) is
reporting a critical (2) message about a memory allocation that failed (MALLOCFAIL)
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Error Messages
– %C6KPWR-SP-STDBY-4-DISABLED: Power to module in slot [dec] set [chars]• This means the Catalyst Power System
(C6KPWR) standby supervisor (SP-STDBY) is reporting a warning (4) message about power failure in a module (DISABLED)
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Error Message Decoder
• Here is the Error Message Decoder on the Cisco web site
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Error Message Decoder
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Output Interpreter
• Pagan goes on to say– The Cisco Output Interpreter is a very
powerful tool that allows for obtaining instant troubleshooting analysis and course of action for your device, using collected show commands output
– It analyzes output from show commands
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Output Interpreter
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Routing Protocol Commands
• There are several commands that show aspects of the routing protocol configuration
• Here is a nice discussion of these from a 2010 white paper by Global Knowledge
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OSPF Commands
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OSPF Commands
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EIGRP Commands
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RIP Commands
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Show CDP Neighbors
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Show CDP Neighbors Detail
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Debug
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• The debug command tells a router to display messages when certain events happen in a router
• Unlike a show command, which displays a set of messages about the then-current status of the router, the debug command tells the router to watch for certain events
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Debug
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• When those events occur, the router then sends a message, called a log message, to the console
• These messages allow the CLI user to see information about the dynamic operations of the router, instead of the snapshot of information displayed by a show command
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Debug
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Lab
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• Run debug on the network
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Lab
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• Let’s do the same thing using real routers instead of Packet Tracer
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Common Problems
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• On end devices problems commonly seen and possible solutions for these problems include– No Link State– No or Bad IP Address– Cannot Connect– Connection Dropped– Poor Performance
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No Link State
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• If the link state cannot be established, in other words the link light does not come on or ipconfig says the cable is disconnected check these things– Bad cable– Bad connector on the cable– Errors on the link– Failed, marginal, blocked, or misconfigured
port
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No or Bad IP Address
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• If a valid IP address is not shown– Determine if the address should be a static or
dynamically assigned address– If static
• Is it the correct one• Is the subnet mask correct• Is the default gateway correct• Are the DNS servers correct
– If dynamic• The same as above if there is an address shown
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No or Bad IP Address
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– If dynamic and the address shown is a Link Local address from the 169.254.0.0 range, then find out why a connection cannot be made to the DHCP server
– Which could be• A network problem• A router configuration problem
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No or Bad IP Address
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• A bad IP address can also be a case where there are duplicate IP addresses on the network
• The Fluke troubleshooting book says this about the technique to discover these– A simple method to discover stations with
duplicate IP addresses is to send ARPs to the problem IP address
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No or Bad IP Address
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– For each ARP request, you should usually see only a single ARP response
– There are at least three situations where you might receive multiple responses, though• Two Stacks
– If a host has more than one IP protocol stack loaded, each stack responds to the ARP request
– All such responses have the same MAC and IP address in the response
– This is often a mysterious surprise but is not a problem situation
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No or Bad IP Address
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• Proxy ARP– If Proxy ARP is running on a router servicing your
subnet, the router may respond to local queries in addition to off-subnet queries
– You might receive a response from the target address as well as the router
– Routers that are acting in this manner simply forward subsequent traffic to the correct address, so this apparently duplicate response is not generally problematic
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No or Bad IP Address
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• Improper Configuration– If two or more hosts are improperly configured to share
the same IP address, each responds to the ARP– Each responding host will answer with its own unique
MAC address and the duplicated IP address
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Cannot Connect
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• If a connection cannot be made to the resource needed the source of the problem can be local or remote
• To check for local problems– See if another user id and password work– Observe the user logging in to check the
procedure being used– Determine which NIC is being used, wired or
wireless, which one should be used
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Cannot Connect
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– Ensure the port in use is in the correct VLAN• To check for remote problems
– Look for a failed upstream connection– See if the wrong route is being advertised– Look for a broadcast storm– Check the firewall configuration
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Connection Dropped
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• If the network connection is lost after the initial connection– Look for errors on the port– Check the duplex settings on both ends– Check the speed settings on both ends– Look for a misconfigured spanning tree layout– Test for EMI interference– See if an application is using too many
resources
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Connection Dropped
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– Look for a loose connection somewhere in the link to the resource
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Poor Performance
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• Poor performance is usually manifested by complaints that the network is slow
• In addition to the cannot connect and dropped connection procedures check– That nothing has been recently changed on
the problem station, or on the server, or service that may have caused this problem, such as reconfiguring or adding new software or hardware
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Poor Performance
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– Eliminate potential station memory allocation problems and software conflicts on the station by unloading all but the minimum software required to operate a test application across the network
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Poor Performance
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– Test the user’s station for viruses and look for applications that are consuming disproportionate amounts of the microprocessor resources or hanging the system long enough to exceed connection timers• For this test disable any virus checking or security
software, but re-enable it immediately after the test
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Poor Performance
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• Check the speed and duplex settings as the autonegotiation process may not have connected the switch port and the NIC as the correct speed and duplex setting
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Duplex Mismatches
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• On any device and especially on switches a duplex mismatch can be difficult to detect
• When the interface is examined using the show interfaces status command the state will show up/up since the port will work, but just not well
• The only wall to check for this is to check the duplex settings on each end
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Duplex Mismatches
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• Then watch for increasing collision and late collision counters see in the show interfaces command
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Cabling Problems
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• When the CRC counters seen in the show interfaces command for a port increase then a cabling or other hardware problem is likely the cause
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Common Layer 1 Problems
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• Here is a table from the Wendell Odom ICND1 book that list the common layer 1 problems seen on ports
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Common Layer 1 Problems
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Poor Performance
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• The most common reasons for slow or poor performance include overloaded or underpowered servers, unsuitable switch or router configurations, traffic congestion on a low capacity link, and chronic frame loss
• Tiered applications may suffer poor performance when any one of the servers in the tiered hierarchy suffers delays
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Exogenous Factors
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• Also consider seemingly innocuous things that might impact the network, such as– Temperature changes as heat is often a
problem– Electrical use from adjacent spaces –
including nearby businesses, time of day, and influences from electronic sources
– Even the passage of an elevator, or use of a cordless phone, should be noted
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Broadcast Storm
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• There is no easy way to detect a broadcast storm as the nature of the storm is to produce such high utilization on all the links that getting access to the equipment to diagnose the problem is very difficult
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Broadcast Storm
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• About the only way to stop such as storm is to disconnect cables upstream from where the problem is being see until it stops
• STP should prevent this problem• So check to see if it is in operation
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Sources
• Several of the passages here are copied directly or adapted from several articles and books by Laura Chappell and a white paper and book on network troubleshooting from Fluke Networks
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For More Information
• Introduction to Network Analysis, 2nd Edition– Laura Chappell– ISBN 1-893939-36-7
• Network Maintenance and Troubleshooting Guide– Neal Allen– ISBN 978-0-321-64741-2
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For More Information
• Frontline LAN Troubleshooting Guide– A white paper from Fluke– 2008
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