[c-nsp] how can I know which process takes over CPU and memory?
Ivan Pepelnjak
ip at ioshints.info
Tue Mar 3 15:32:39 EST 2009
Your IOS is too old, tclsh was introduced in 12.3(2)T. Cisco recommends
using at least 12.3(14)T; 12.4 might be even better.
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/ios/12_3t/12_3t2/feature/guide/gt_tcl.html
If you want to know when a particular command (for example, tclsh) was
introduced in Cisco IOS, the Command Lookup Tool is a great place to start;
you can even install it in your browser's toolbar.
Best regards
Ivan
_____
From: Deric Kwok [mailto:deric.kwok2000 at gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 03, 2009 9:26 PM
To: Ivan Pepelnjak
Cc: cisco-nsp at puck.nether.net
Subject: Re: [c-nsp] how can I know which process takes over CPU and memory?
Hi Ivan
Now I am trying on the router but it won't work also
What wrong I did?
Thank you
router#dir
Directory of flash:/
1 -rw- 8624196 Mar 5 1993 00:05:02 +00:00 c3725-i-mz.123-6e.bin
2 -rw- 1142 Mar 3 2009 15:05:26 +00:00 top.tcl
31936512 bytes total (23306240 bytes free)
router#config t
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
router(config)#alias exec top tclsh flash:top.tcl
router(config)#exit
router#top
Translating "top"...domain server (202.64.2.36) (202.64.3.5)
Translating "top"...domain server (202.64.2.36) (202.64.3.5)
(202.64.2.36) (202.64.3.5)% Unknown command or computer name, or unable to
find computer address
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