Introduction: The Silent Guardian of Your ASR 1000 In the world of enterprise and service provider networking, the Cisco ASR 1000 series stands as a workhorse for aggregation, WAN edge, and broadband access. While network engineers spend most of their time worrying about IOS XE versions, feature sets, and license levels, there is one tiny, often overlooked file that holds the power to resurrect a bricked router: asr1000-rommon.173-1r.spa.pkg .
Whether you are running a global backbone or a regional aggregation point, verifying and upgrading your ASR 1000 series ROMMON to version 173-1r is a low-risk, high-reward maintenance task. Don’t wait for a boot failure to discover you are running outdated, buggy firmware. asr1000-rommon.173-1r.spa.pkg
| Platform | Applicable | Notes | |----------|------------|-------| | ASR 1001 | Yes | Integrated RP/ESP | | ASR 1001-X | Yes | Common bootflash issues resolved | | ASR 1002-X | Yes | Widely deployed – highly recommended upgrade | | ASR 1004 | Yes | Most benefits for dual-ESP setups | | ASR 1006 | Yes | Chassis with redundant RPs | | ASR 1013 | Yes | High-end chassis – critical for large bootflash | | ASR 1002-HX / 1006-HX | Partial | Newer generation uses different ROMMON branch, but this file works as fallback | : Do not attempt to load this package on an ASR 9000 or ISR 4000 series. It is strictly for ASR 1000. Part 4: How to Verify Your Current ROMMON Version Before upgrading, always verify what you are running. Connect via console or SSH and use these commands: Introduction: The Silent Guardian of Your ASR 1000
show platform show rom-monitor RP0 show rom-monitor ESP0 Look for output like: Don’t wait for a boot failure to discover
This article provides an exhaustive breakdown of this file—what it is, why version 173-1r matters, how to upgrade it safely, and how to troubleshoot when things go wrong. Before diving into procedures, let’s decode the filename. Cisco’s naming convention is deliberate and informative.
RP0: ROMMON Version: 16.4(1r) [or 173-1r] ESP0: ROMMON Version: 16.4(1r) Or, during boot, watch for: