Hi!
We are an ISP with a lot of RB1100AHX4 and the same problem. There are a lot of rx-drop e the CPU load is low.
I tried update and even prey.
Anybody can help me?
Thanks,
Yes. But ignoring warning signals is a bad idea too. Customer behind this interface might see slower connections. So digging into RX-Drops is a good idea imho, MIght be packet bursts overload packet buffers of the internal switch or flow control problems.i can't say if rx-drop it is necessarily a problem or failure or not i think
when searching about this there is no there is no concrete or definitive explanation
I think that in the statistical sense, the number of discarded packets vs. the total packages must be checked to establish a percentage ratio to establish their relevance
we cannot attribute any fault that is being presented simply to find a non-zero error counter
I have multiple routers with rx-drop counters and working correctly
for example in a interface 2 days up i have 224.808 rx-drop counter vs a total of 4.776.741.456 rx packets in that interface
that is 0.005 percent only
keep an eye on that rx-drop counter monitoring it to see if it increases in correlation with some other event, fail, condition or situation , but without it we don't have arguments to infer there is a problem
the best and professional approach to solve technical problems is to be objective to identify problems avoid playing guessing games