1 / 18

NETS Training

Troubleshooting Scot Colburn and David Mitchell 5/1/07. NETS Training. What Is Troubleshooting. The fixing of problems Problems reported by users Problems detected by monitoring Problems you made for yourself. How Is It Done?. Identify undesirable behavior Locate root cause

lovie
Télécharger la présentation

NETS Training

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Troubleshooting Scot Colburn and David Mitchell 5/1/07 NETS Training

  2. What Is Troubleshooting • The fixing of problems • Problems reported by users • Problems detected by monitoring • Problems you made for yourself

  3. How Is It Done? • Identify undesirable behavior • Locate root cause • Fix the problem • Finding the root cause is usually most of the battle • Many problems are easy to fix once the source is identified

  4. What Makes It So Hard? • Pressure: the clock is ticking • Unfamiliar territory • Management Access is Broken • Counters Sometimes Lie • Preconceived Notions

  5. Pressure • Operations is calling • Users are standing in your office • Have you sent an outage notice? • Your outage window is over

  6. Unfamiliar Territory • Running commands which are not normally used • Looking at counters which are not normally looked at • You can find errors all over the place once you start looking. How many of those are normal?

  7. Management access is broken • Can't get to the device you need to look at • No direct access • Perhaps only one at a time via serial or dialup • DNS may be unavailable

  8. Sometimes counters lie • A zero isn't always a zero. It may just mean the value isn't being properly counted. • Some counters only update periodically, so repeated 'show' commands may show the same value even though it's going up.

  9. Preconceived notions • Sometimes the real problem is overlooked because of bad assumptions made early on. • Assuming a historically problematic device is part of a current problem • Skipping past the simple explanations

  10. How Can We Make It Easier • Use the OSI Seven Layer Model • Isolate A Specific Reproducible Problem • Know Your Commands • Know Your Other Tools

  11. Use The OSI Model • Layer 1: Physical • Do we have link? • Layer 2: Data Link • Is the port in the correct VLAN? • Do we have CAM entries?

  12. Use The OSI Model • Layer 3: Network AKA IP • Does the router have an ARP entry • Can the router ping it? • Does the router have a route? • Layer 4: Transport AKA TCP • Is DNS working? • Is TCP tuned properly for the path?

  13. Isolate A Specific Problem • Find a specific host or pair of hosts which is having problems • Look for where in the path things break • Remember, direction is important!

  14. Know Your Commands • traceroute / tracert • ping • nslookup / dig • ipconfig / ifconfig • mtr / winmtr

  15. Know Your Commands • 'show' commands a generally safe. • Spend some time exploring them. • What does what. • What is normal? • CatOS: show port, show mac, show cam, show module, show log, show logging buffer, show counters, show channel, show cdp neighbor, show inline power • IOS: show interface, show ip arp, show ip route, show ip ospf, show ip bgp

  16. Know Your Tools • Port Lists • Cricket Statistics • Searches • Nagios • Configuration Archive • Syslog

  17. Demonstration • Tools • Common Show Commands

More Related