Standby node in 0/RP0/CPU0 is ready
Standby node in 0/RP0/CPU0 is NSR-ready
Node 0/RP1/CPU0 is in process group PRIMARY role
Process Redundancy Partner (0/RP0/CPU0) is in BACKUP role
Backup node in 0/RP0/CPU0 is ready
Backup node in 0/RP0/CPU0 is NSR-ready
Group
Primary
Backup
Status
---------
---------
--------- ---------
v6-routing
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
mcast-routing
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
netmgmt
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
v4-routing
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
central-services
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
dlrsc
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
dsc
0/RP1/CPU0
0/RP0/CPU0
Ready
Active node reload "Cause: Initiating switch-over."
Standby node reload "Cause: Initiating switch-over."
Step 2
Remove the standby RP1 card and insert RP2. Follow the procedure explained in the topic
Replacing Cards from the Chassis, on page 245
Step 3
Connect to RP2 console port and type CTRL+C to break into ROMMON.
Step 4
From the ROMMON prompt of RP2, set ROMMON variable to activate 1GE mode for peer RP communication:
Example:
rommon B1> RSP_LINK_1G=1
rommon B1> sync
Step 5
Verify that config register is set correctly in ROMMON:
Example:
rommon B1> confreg
Step 6
Reset RP2 card in ROMMON. Now the RP2 becomes the standby RP in slot 0 and synchronizes configuration
from active RSP440 in slot 1.
Example:
rommon B1> reset –h
The RP2 card reloads and user is disconnected from ROMMON automatically.
Note
Step 7
Wait until standby node reach NSR-ready state and status of ALL the groups is Ready state. Use show
redundancy command to verify the same.
Step 8
From active RP, verify the both RPs have synchronized the SNMP engine ID and SNMP ifindex-table between
each other:
Example:
#more disk0:snmp/ifindex-table loc 0/rp0/cpu0
#more disk0:snmp/ifindex-table loc 0/rp1/cpu0
#more disk0:snmp/snmp_persist loc 0/rp0/cpu0
Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router Hardware Installation Guide
249
Replacing Cisco ASR 9000 Series Router Components
Migrating from RP1 to RP2 Card