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Cisco IE 3000 Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-13018-03
Chapter 39 Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting Tables
•
BGP or OSPF routing topology changes
•
HSRP flapping
Verifying the Problem and Cause
To determine if high CPU utilization is a problem, enter the
show processes cpu sorted
privileged
EXEC command. Note the underlined information in the first line of the output example.
Switch#
show processes cpu sorted
CPU utilization for five seconds: 8%/0%; one minute: 7%; five minutes: 8%
PID Runtime(ms) Invoked uSecs 5Sec 1Min 5Min TTY Process
309 42289103 752750 56180 1.75% 1.20% 1.22% 0 RIP Timers
140 8820183 4942081 1784 0.63% 0.37% 0.30% 0 HRPC qos request
100 3427318 16150534 212 0.47% 0.14% 0.11% 0 HRPC pm-counters
192 3093252 14081112 219 0.31% 0.14% 0.11% 0 Spanning Tree
143 8 37 216 0.15% 0.01% 0.00% 0 Exec
...
<output truncated>
This example shows normal CPU utilization. The output shows that utilization for the last 5 seconds is
8%/0%
, which has this meaning:
•
The total CPU utilization is 8 percent, including both time running Cisco IOS processes and time
spent handling interrupts
•
The time spent handling interrupts is zero percent.
\
For complete information about CPU utilization and how to troubleshoot utilization problems, see the
Troubleshooting High CPU Utilization
document
on Cisco.com.
Table 39-3
Troubleshooting CPU Utilization Problems
Type of Problem
Cause
Corrective Action
Interrupt percentage value is almost
as high as total CPU utilization value.
The CPU is receiving too many packets
from the network.
Determine the source of the network
packet. Stop the flow, or change the
switch configuration. See the section on
“Analyzing Network Traffic.”
Total CPU utilization is greater than
50% with minimal time spent on
interrupts.
One or more Cisco IOS process is
consuming too much CPU time. This is
usually triggered by an event that activated
the process.
Identify the unusual event, and
troubleshoot the root cause. See the
section on
“Debugging Active
Processes.”