Then, two seconds later—red: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Tunnel14, changed state to down
The NOC was drowning in noise. Alarms chirped, phones buzzed, and across six monitors, Simon watched a waterfall of green-on-black console text scroll past. He was troubleshooting a BGP route flap that had taken down a remote office in Jakarta. The problem was simple: find the neighbor flapping. The reality was hell: 10,000 lines of Cisco debug output. xshell highlight sets cisco
The NOC went quiet. His boss looked over. "Fixed?" The problem was simple: find the neighbor flapping
He called it "Cisco_Filter."
He saved the session log, named it Jakarta_BGP_Fix.log , and closed his laptop. Another night, another flap—killed by a few clever regex rules in a terminal emulator that knew exactly what a network engineer needed to see. His boss looked over