RE: [nsp] Overrun on the Pix 535

From: Zhang, Anchi (AZhang@reliant.com)
Date: Tue Jul 16 2002 - 12:08:28 EDT


Per Cisco, "overruns occur when the network interface card is overwhelmed and cannot buffer received information before more needs to be sent."
 
You have only 30 overruns. I have 30 of them a day and Cisco tells me not to worry.
 
The strange thing with your stats is that you have 0 input errors whereas everytime my overrun increases my input errors count increases by the same number.
 
If I were you, I would worry more about the no buffer count:
 
"no buffer, the PIX Firewall is out of memory or slowed down due to heavy traffic and cannot keep up with the received data."
 
Anchi
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Roberto Paoletti [mailto:roberto.paoletti@mail.wind.it]
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 10:39 AM
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: [nsp] Overrun on the Pix 535

Hi,
    
    i make to show interface and i saw :
  interface gb-ethernet1 "DMZ-Slot:2" is up, line protocol is up
  Hardware is i82543 rev02 gigabit ethernet, address is 0003.470d.1d87
  IP address 192.168.1.33, subnet mask 255.255.255.248
  MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1 Gbit full duplex
        3341141891 packets input, 13144045776340 bytes, 8518002 no buffer
        Received 7621 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants
        0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 30 overrun, 0 ignored, 0 abort
        3694112040 packets output, 2509048378726 bytes, 0 underruns
        input queue (curr/max blocks): hardware (255/255) software (0/0)
        output queue (curr/max blocks): hardware (0/21) software (0/0)
 
and i don't know the cause of the 30 overrun, because i didn't these errors in the port switch.
Can someone help me ?
 
Thanks
Roberto Paoletti



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