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Table of Contents

Show Commands

Show Commands

The commands shown in this chapter apply to the Catalyst 8540 MSR, Catalyst 8510 MSR, and LightStream 1010 ATM switch routers. Where an entire command or certain attributes of a command have values specific to a particular switch or switch router, an exception is indicated by the following callouts:


Note   Commands that are identical to those documented in the Cisco IOS software documentation have been removed from this chapter.


Note   Commands that no longer function as expected in ATM environments have also been removed from this chapter.

Refer to Appendix D of this command reference for a detailed list of commands that have been removed, changed or replaced.

show access-lists

To display information about the access list, use the show access-lists EXEC command.

show access-lists [aclnumber | aclname]

Syntax Description

aclnumber

Number from 1 through 1299 that identifies the access list.

aclname

Character string that identifies the access list.

Defaults

The system displays all access lists.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3.(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show access-lists command when access list 101 is specified.

Switch# show access-lists 101
Extended IP access list 101
    permit tcp host 198.92.32.130 any established (4304 matches)
    permit udp host 198.92.32.130 any eq domain (129 matches)
    permit icmp host 198.92.32.130 any
    permit tcp host 198.92.32.130 host 171.69.2.141 gt 1023
    permit tcp host 198.92.32.130 host 171.69.2.135 eq smtp (2 matches)
    permit tcp host 198.92.32.130 host 198.92.30.32 eq smtp
    permit tcp host 198.92.32.130 host 171.69.108.33 eq smtp
    permit udp host 198.92.32.130 host 171.68.225.190 eq syslog
    permit udp host 198.92.32.130 host 171.68.225.126 eq syslog
    deny   ip 150.136.0.0 0.0.255.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 171.68.0.0 0.1.255.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255 (2 matches)
    deny   ip 172.24.24.0 0.0.1.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.82.152.0 0.0.0.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.122.173.0 0.0.0.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.122.174.0 0.0.0.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.135.239.0 0.0.0.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.135.240.0 0.0.7.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.135.248.0 0.0.3.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
    deny   ip 192.150.42.0 0.0.0.255 224.0.0.0 15.255.255.255
 

An access list counter counts how many packets are allowed by each line of the access list. This number is displayed as the number of matches.

For information on how to configure access lists, refer to the ATM Switch Router Software Configuration Guide.

Related Commands
Command Description

access-list (extended)

Used to define an extended IP access list. Currently, this command only supports the IP host.

access-list (standard)

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

clear access-list counters

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

clear access-template

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show accounting

To step through all active sessions and to print all the accounting records for actively accounted functions, use the show accounting EXEC command. To disable this function, use the no form of the command.

show accounting

no show accounting

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Defaults

Disabled

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show accounting command allows you to display the active accountable events on the system.
It provides systems administrators with a quick look at what is going on, and can also help collect information in the event of a data loss on the accounting server. The show accounting command displays additional data on the internal state of AAA if debug aaa accounting is turned on.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show accounting command.

Switch# show accounting
Active Accounted actions on tty0, User chard Priv 1
 Task ID 4425, EXEC Accounting record, 0:04:53 Elapsed
 task_id=4425 service=exec port=0
 Task ID 3759, Connection Accounting record, 0:01:06 Elapsed
 task_id=3759 service=exec port=0 protocol=telnet address=171.19.3.78 cmd=grill
Active Accounted actions on tty10, User chard Priv 1
 Task ID 5115, EXEC Accounting record, 0:04:07 Elapsed
 task_id=5115 service=exec port=10
 Task ID 2593, Connection Accounting record, 0:00:56 Elapsed
 task_id=2593 service=exec port=10 protocol=tn3270 address=172.21.14.90
cmd=tn snap
Active Accounted actions on tty11, User mary Priv 1
 Task ID 7390, EXEC Accounting record, 0:00:25 Elapsed
 task_id=7390 service=exec port=11
 Task ID 931, Connection Accounting record, 0:00:20 Elapsed
 task_id=931 service=exec port=11 protocol=telnet address=171.19.6.129 cmd=coal

Related Commands
Command Description

show hosts

Displays the default domain name, the style of the name lookup service, a list of name server hosts, and the cached list of host names and addresses.

show line

Displays terminal line parameters.

show aliases

To display all alias commands or the alias commands in a specified mode, use the show aliases EXEC command.

show aliases [mode]

Syntax Description

mode

Command mode. You can show the alias commands for the following modes by entering the corresponding keywords.

  • acctng-file—ATM accounting file configuration mode

  • acctng-sel—ATM accounting selection configuration mode

  • atm-router—ATM router configuration mode

  • atmsig-cug—Closed user group configuration mode

  • atmsig-diag—Diagnostics configuration mode

  • atmsig_e164_table_mode—ATMSIG E164 table mode

  • configure—Global configuration mode

  • exec—EXEC mode

  • interface—Interface configuration mode

  • lane—ATM LAN Emulation LECS configuration table mode

  • line—Line configuration mode

  • map-class—Map-class configuration mode

  • map-list—Map-list configuration mode

  • null-interface—Null interface configuration mode

  • pnni-router-node—PNNI router node configuration mode

  • route-map—Route map configuration mode

  • router—Router configuration mode

  • subinterface—Subinterface configuration mode

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

All modes except for the null interface mode have their own prompts. For example, the prompt for interface configuration mode is:

Switch(config-if)# 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show aliases exec commands. The default aliases for commands in EXEC mode are displayed.

Switch# show aliases exec
 
Exec mode aliases:
  h                     help
  lo                    logout
  p                     ping
  r                     resume
  s                     show
  w                     where

Related Commands
Command Description

alias

This command or some of its parameters might not function as expected. Refer to Appendix D. Refer also to the Router Products Command Reference publication for more information about the alias command.

show arp

To display the entries in the ARP table, use the show arp EXEC command.

show arp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show arp command.

Switch# show arp
Protocol Address Age (min) Hardware Addr Type	 nterface
Internet 	172.20.42.112 	120 	0000.a710.4baf 	ARPA	Ethernet3
AppleTalk 	4028.5 	29 	0000.0c01.0e56	SNAP 	Ethernet2
Internet 	172.20.42.114 	105 	0000.a710.859b 	ARPA	Ethernet3
AppleTalk 	4028.9 	- 	0000.0c02.a03c	SNAP 	Ethernet2
Internet 	172.20.42.121 	42 	0000.a710.68cd 	ARPA	Ethernet3
Internet 	172.20.36.9 	- 	0000.3080.6fd4	SNAP 	TokenRing0
AppleTalk 	4036.9 	- 	0000.3080.6fd4	SNAP 	TokenRing0
Internet 	172.20.33.9 	- 	c222.2222.2222	SMDS 	Serial0
 

Table 18-1 describes the significant fields shown in the first line of output in the display.


Table 18-1: show arp Field Descriptions
Field Description

Protocol

Type of network address this entry includes.

Address

Network address that is mapped to the MAC address in this entry.

Age (min)

Interval (in minutes) since this entry was entered in the table, rather than the interval since the entry was last used. (The timeout value is 4 hours.)

Hardware Addr

MAC address mapped to the network address in this entry.

Type

Encapsulation type used for the network address in this entry. Possible values include:

  • ARPA

  • SNAP

  • ETLK (EtherTalk)

  • SMDS (Interface) Interface associated with this network address.

Related Commands
Command Description

arp (interface)

Controls the interface-specific handling of IP address resolution into 48-bit Ethernet.

show async bootp

To display the extended BOOTP request parameters that were configured for asynchronous interfaces, use the show async bootp EXEC command.

show async bootp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following is a sample output of the show async bootp command.

Switch# show async bootp
 
The following extended data will be sent in BOOTP responses:
 
bootfile (for address 128.128.1.1) "pcboot"
bootfile (for address 131.108.1.111) "dirtboot"
subnet-mask 255.255.0.0
time-offset -3600
time-server 128.128.1.1
 

If no extended data is defined, you receive the following response.

No extended data will be sent in BOOTP responses:

Table 18-2 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-2: show async bootp Field Descriptions
Field Description

bootfile... "pcboot"

Boot file for address 128.128.1.1 is named pcboot.

subnet-mask 255.255.0.0

Subnet mask.

time-offset -3600

Local time is one hour (3600 seconds) earlier than UTC time.

time-server 128.128.1.1

Address of the time server for the network.

Related Commands
Command Description

async-bootp

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual.

show async status (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

To list the status of the asynchronous interface 1 associated with the auxiliary port, use the show async status user EXEC command.

show async status

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Shows all SLIP asynchronous sessions.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show async status command.

Switch# show async status
 
Async protocol statistics:
  Rcvd: 5448 packets, 7682760 bytes
        1 format errors, 0 checksum errors, 0 overrun, 0 no buffer
  Sent: 5455 packets, 7682676 bytes, 0 dropped
 
Int           Local          Remote Qd InPack OutPac Inerr  Drops  MTU Qsz
   1     192.31.7.84         Dynamic  0      0      0     0      0 1500  10
 

Table 18-3 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-3: show async status Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Rcvd:

Statistics on packets received.

5548 packets

Packets received.

7682760 bytes

Total number of bytes.

1 format errors

Packets with a bad IP header, even before the checksum is calculated.

0 checksum errors

Count of checksum errors.

0 overrun

Number of giants received.

0 no buffer

Number of packets received when no buffer was available.

Sent:

Statistics on packets sent.

5455 packets

Packets sent.

7682676 bytes

Total number of bytes.

0 dropped

Number of packets dropped.

Int

Interface number.

*

Line currently in use.

Local

Local IP address on the link.

Remote

Remote IP address on the link. "Dynamic" indicates that a remote address is allowed but has not been specified. "None" indicates that no remote address is assigned or being used.

Qd

Number of packets on hold queue (Qsz is max).

InPack

Number of packets received.

OutPac

Number of packets sent.

Inerr

Number of total input errors; sum of format errors, checksum errors, overruns, and no buffers.

Drops

Number of packets received that would not fit on the hold queue.

MTU

Current maximum transmission unit size.

Qsz

Current output hold queue size.

Related Commands
Command Description

slip

Used to attach or detach a SLIP interface.

show atm accounting

To show the ATM accounting configuration information, use the show atm accounting
EXEC command.

show atm accounting

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show atm accounting EXEC command for a switch router that has remote logging configured.

Switch# show atm accounting
ATM Accounting Info:     AdminStatus - UP; 	OperStatus : UP
Trap Threshold - 90 percent (4500000 bytes)
Interfaces:
     AT1/0/0
     AT2/0/0
File Entry 1 -
     Name: acctng_file1
     Descr: atm accounting data
     Min-age (seconds): 0
     Failed_attempt : soft regular 
     Interval (seconds) : 60
     Collect Mode : on-release periodic 
     Sizes: Active 68 bytes (#records 0); Ready 74 bytes (#records 0)
     Remote Log and local storage are enabled.       
     Primary Log Host: eagle, TCP listen port: 2001, OperStatus: DOWN
     Alternate Log Host: eagle, TCP listen port: 2002, OperStatus: DOWN
Selection Entry 1 - 
     Subtree OID : 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.18.1.1
     List Bitmap : FF.FE.BF.FC
     Conn Type : svc-in svc-out pvc pvp spvc-originator spvc-target 
   Active List Bitmap - FF.FE.BF.FC

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show atm accounting EXEC command.

Switch# show atm accounting
ATM Accounting Info:     AdminStatus - DOWN;    OperStatus : DOWN
Trap Threshold - 90 percent (4500000 bytes)
Interfaces:
File Entry 1: Name acctng_file1
    Descr: atm accounting data
    Min-age (seconds): 3600
    Failed_attempt : 0xC0
    Interval (seconds) : 3600
    Collect Mode : 0x80
No file buffers initialized
selection Entry -
    Selection entry 1, subtree OID - 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.18.1.1
    Selection entry 1, list bitmap - FF.FE.BF.FC
    Selection entry 1, connType bitmap - F0.00
Active selection -
    Selection entry 1, subtree OID - 1.3.6.1.4.1.9.10.18.1.1
    Selection entry 1, list bitmap - FF.FE.BF.FC
    Selection entry 1, connType bitmap - F0.00
Debug output:
Active Connection/Leg/Party counters
src_legparties (0), dest_legs (0), dest_parties (0)
Sig API: Err - 0
New_Conn: OK - 0; Err - 0
Rel_Conn: OK - 0; Err - 0
New_Leg: OK - 0; Err - 0
Rel_Leg: OK - 0; Err - 0
New_Party: OK - 0; Err - 0
Rel_Party: OK - 0; Err - 0
Switch# 

Related Commands
Command Description

atm accounting collection

Controls the collection of ATM accounting data into a specific file.

show atm addresses

To display the active ATM addresses on a switch router, use the show atm addresses EXEC command.

show atm addresses

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The first switch router address is displayed with the word "active" to indicate the current address of the switch router. The output also includes automatically generated soft VC addresses, switch refix(es) used by ILMI, configured interface-specific ILMI prefixes, and the configured LECS addresses.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm addresses command.

Switch# show atm addresses
 
Switch Address(es):
  47.00918100000000000CA79E01.00000CA79E01.00 active
  88.888888880000000000000000.000000005151.00
 
Soft VC Address(es):
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.8000.00 ATM3/0/0
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.8010.00 ATM3/0/1
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.8020.00 ATM3/0/2
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.8030.00 ATM3/0/3
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9000.00 ATM3/1/0
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9010.00 ATM3/1/1
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9020.00 ATM3/1/2
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9030.00 ATM3/1/3
 
ILMI Switch Prefix(es):
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01
  88.8888.8888.0000.0000.0000.0000
 
ILMI Configured Interface Prefix(es):
 
LECS Address(es):
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9030.01
  47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.9e01.4000.0c81.9030.02

Related Commands
Command Description

atm address

Used to assign a 20-byte ATM address to the switch router.

show atm arp-server

To display the ATM ARP server table, use the show atm arp-server command.

show atm arp-server atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port numbers for the ATM interface.

subinterface

Specifies the number for the subinterface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The command only applies to the CPU interface. Use this command to see the ARP server configured on the subinterface CPU.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm aesa gateway

Used to configure an AESA gateway address on an ATM switch router interface that connects to a service provider maintaining a separate ATM addressing plan.

show atm connection-traffic-table

To display a table of connection traffic parameters used by network and connection management, use the show atm connection-traffic-table EXEC command.

show atm connection-traffic-table [row row-index | from-row row-index]

Syntax Description

row

Displays a single row by the row-index number.

from-row

Display the entire connection traffic table starting with the row-index.

row-index

Index of the single or starting row, in the range of 1 through 2147483647.

Defaults

Display the entire connection traffic table.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

An asterisk (*) is appended to row indexes created by SNMP but not made active. Because these rows are not active, they cannot be used by connections.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm connection-traffic-table command.

Switch# show atm connection-traffic-table
Row      Service-category    pcr        scr/mcr       mbs         cdvt
1            ubr          7113539        none                     none
2            cbr              424                                 none
3            vbr-rt           424         424          50         none
4            vbr-nrt          424         424          50         none
5            abr              424        none                     none
6            ubr              424        none                     none
64000        cbr             1741                                 none
2147483645*  ubr                0        none                     none
2147483646*  ubr                1        none                     none
2147483647*  ubr          7113539        none                     none
 

Table 18-4 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-4: show atm connection-traffic-table Field Descriptions
Field Description

Row

Index to the connection traffic table.

Service-category

One of the following:

ubr

cbr

vbr-rt

vbr-nrt

abr

pcr

The value of the peak cell rate. The peak cell rate is measured in kbps, and is used to transmit whole cells, including the header.

scr/mcr

The value of the sustained cell rate/maximum cell rate. These values are measured in kbps, and are used to transmit whole cells, including the header.

mbs

The value of the MBS.

cdvt

The value of the cell delay variation tolerance.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm connection-traffic-table-row

Used to create a table entry.

show atm filter-expr

To display a specific ATM filter expression or a summary ATM filter expression, use the
show atm filter-expr EXEC command.

show atm filter-expr name [detail]

Syntax Description

name

Name of the ATM filter expression.

detail

Displays more detailed information; must be the last keyword of the command.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following displays assume filter expressions were defined using the commands shown in the example. The names fred, barney, wilma, and betty are all filter sets.

Switch# atm filter-expr MEN fred or barney
Switch# atm filter-expr WOMEN wilma or betty
Switch# atm filter-expr ADULTS MEN or WOMEN
 

The show atm filter-expr command produces the following output.

Switch# show atm filter-expr
MEN = fred or barney
WOMEN = wilma or betty
ADULTS = men or women

The show atm filter-expr detail command produces the following output.

Switch# show atm filter-expr detail
MEN = fred or barney
WOMEN = wilma or betty
ADULTS = (fred or barney) or (wilma or betty)

Related Commands
Command Description

atm filter-expr

Configures an ATM address filter that matches patterns.

show atm filter-set

To display a specific ATM filter set or a summary ATM filter set, use the show atm filter-set
EXEC command.

show atm filter-set name

Syntax Description

name

Name of the ATM filter set.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following display assumes the filter sets were defined with the commands shown in the example.

Switch# atm filter-set US-OR-NORDUNET 47.0005...
Switch# atm filter-set US-OR-NORDUNET 47.0023...
Switch# atm filter-set LOCAL 49.0003...
 

The following is a sample output from the show atm filter-set command.

Switch# show atm filter-set
ATM filter set US-OR-NORDUNET
permit 47.0005...
permit 47.0023...
ATM filter set LOCAL
permit 49.0003...

Related Commands
Command Description

atm filter-set

Creates an ATM address filter set.

show atm ilmi-configuration

To display the switch router configuration, use the show atm ilmi-configuration EXEC command.

show atm ilmi-configuration

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Displays the information and status about the switch configuration.

Examples

The following example is sample output of the show atm ilmi-configuration command.

Switch# show atm ilmi-configuration
 
Switch ATM Address (s): 
1122334455667788990112233445566778899000 
LECS Address (s):
1122334455667788990011223344556677889900
 

Table 18-5 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-5: show atm ilmi-configuration Field Descriptions
Field Description

Switch ATM Address

Displays the current switch router address for the ATM interface.

LECS Address

Displays the current LECS address for the ATM interface.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm ilmi-enable

Enables the ILMI on a port.

show atm ilmi-status

To display the ILMI-related status information, use the show atm ilmi-status EXEC command.

show atm ilmi-status atm card/subcard/port

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output of the show atm ilmi-status atm command.

Switch# show atm ilmi-status atm 0/1/2
 
Interface : ATM0/1/2 Interface Type : Private NNI 
ILMI VCC : (0, 16) ILMI Keepalive : Disabled
ILMI State:       UpAndNormal
Peer IP Addr:     172.20.41.93    Peer IF Name:     ATM1/0/3
Peer MaxVPIbits:  8               Peer MaxVCIbits:  14
Peer MaxVPCs:     255             Peer MaxVCCs:     16383
Peer MaxSvccVpi:  255
Peer MinSvccVci:  255
Peer MaxSvpcVpi:  33
Configured Prefix(s) :
47.0091.8100.0000.0040.0b0a.2a81
 

Table 18-6 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-6: show atm ilmi-status Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the specified ATM interface.

Interface Type

Displays the type of interface for the specified ATM interface.

ILMI VCC

Displays the number of the current ILMI VCC for the specified ATM interface.

ILMI Keepalive

Displays the status of ILMI keepalive packets.

ILMI State

Displays the status for the ILMI for the specified ATM interface.

Peer IP Addr

Displays the IP address of the peer.

Peer IF Name

Displays the card, subcard, and port of the peer interface.

Peer MaxVPIbits

Displays maximum number of bits allowed for VPIs on the peer interface.

Peer MaxVCIbits

Displays maximum number of bits allowed for VCIs on the peer interface.

Peer MaxVPCs

Displays the maximum number of switched and permanent VPCs supported on the peer IME ATM interface.

Peer MaxVCCs

Displays the maximum number of switched and permanent VCCs supported on the peer IME ATM interface.

Peer MaxSvpcVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the peer IME ATM interface is configured to support for allocation to SVPCs.

Peer MaxSvccVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the peer IME ATM interface is configured to support allocation to SVPCs.

Peer MinSvccVci

Displays the minimum VCI value that the signalling stack on the peer IME ATM interface is configured to support for allocation to SVCCs. The same value applies to all SVCC VPI values for which the signalling stack is configured.

Configured Prefix

Displays any prefix for the ATM interface.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm ilmi-enable

Enables the ILMI on a port.

show atm interface

To display ATM-specific information about an ATM interface, use the show atm interface
EXEC command.

show atm interface {atm | atm-p}[card/subcard/port[.vpt#] | [card/subcard/imagroup]]
[bitmap | status | traffic]

Syntax Description

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies an ATM-P interface.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the ATM or ATM-P interface.

.vpt#

Specifies the virtual path tunnel number.

imagroup

Specifies the IMA interface group number (0 to 3).

bitmap

Displays the ATM interface bitmap.

status

Displays the ATM interface status.

traffic

Displays the ATM interface cell traffic.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

If you do not specify a specific interface, all interfaces on the switch are displayed.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm interface command for ATM
interface 3/0/0.

Switch# show atm interface atm 3/0/0
Interface:      ATM3/0/0        Port-type:      t1suni
IF Status:      UP              Admin Status:   up
Auto-config:    enabled         AutoCfgState:   completed
IF-Side:        Network         IF-type:        NNI
Uni-type:       not applicable  Uni-version:    not applicable
Max-VPI-bits:   8               Max-VCI-bits:   14
Max-VP:         255             Max-VC:         16383
ConfMaxSvpcVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvpcVpi: 255
ConfMaxSvccVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvccVpi: 255
ConfMinSvccVci: 35              CurrMinSvccVci: 35
Svc Upc Intent: pass            Signalling:     Enabled
ATM Address for Soft VC: 47.0091.8100.0000.0040.0b0a.2a81.4000.0c81.8000.00
Configured virtual links:
  PVCLs SoftVCLs   SVCLs   TVCLs   PVPLs SoftVPLs   SVPLs Total-Cfgd Inst-Conns
      4        0       0       0       0        0       0          4          4
Logical ports(VP-tunnels):     0
Input cells:    14587           Output cells:   14638
5 minute input rate:             0 bits/sec,       0 cells/sec
5 minute output rate:            0 bits/sec,       0 cells/sec
Input AAL5 pkts: 95092, Output AAL5 pkts: 95109, AAL5 crc errors: 0
 
 

Table 18-7 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-7: show atm interface Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Displays the card number, subcard number, port number, and VP tunnel number of the interface.

Port-type

Displays the type of port for the specified ATM interface.

IF status

Displays the operational status of the specified ATM interface.

Admin status

Displays the administrative status of the specified ATM interface.

Auto-config

Displays whether ILMI autoconfiguration is enabled or disabled.

AutoCfgState

Displays the state of ILMI autoconfiguration for the specified ATM interface.

IF-side

Displays the interface side for the specified ATM interface.

IF-type

Displays the type of ATM interface (UNI, NNI, or IISP).

Uni-type

Displays whether a UNI interface type is public or private.

Uni-version

Displays the version of a UNI.

Max-VPI-bits

Displays the maximum number of VPI bits.

Max-VCI-bits

Displays the maximum number of VCI bits.

Max-VP

Displays the maximum number of virtual paths on the specified ATM interface.

Max-VC

Displays the maximum number of virtual channels on the specified ATM interface.

ConfMaxSvpcVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the ATM interface is configured to support for allocation to SVPCs.

CurrMaxSvpcVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the ATM interface currently supports for allocation to SVPCs.

ConfMaxSvccVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the ATM interface is configured to support for allocation to SVCCs.

CurrMaxSvccVpi

Displays the maximum VPI that the signalling stack on the ATM interface currently supports for allocation to SVCCs.

ConfMinSvccVci

Displays the minimum VCI value that the signalling stack is configured to support for allocation to SVCCs.

CurrMinSvccVci

Displays the minimum VCI value that the signalling stack currently supports for allocation to SVCCs.

Svc Upc Intent

Displays the intended UPC mode to use for SVCs on the interface.

Signalling

Displays whether ILMI signalling is enabled.

PVCLs

Displays the number of active PVCs for the specified ATM interface.

PVPLs

Displays the number of active PVPs for the specified ATM interface.

SoftVCLs

Displays the number of active soft VCLs for the specified ATM interface.

SVCLs

Displays the number of active switched VCLs for the specified ATM interface.

SoftVPLs

Displays the number of active soft VPLs for the specified ATM interface.

SVPLs

Displays the number of active switched VPLs for the specified ATM interface.

Total-Cfgd

Displays the total number of configured virtual links.

Inst-Conns

Displays the number of installed connections for the specified ATM interface.

Input cells

Displays the number of cells received.

Logical ports (VP-tunnels)

Displays the number of the logical (subinterface) port.

Output cells

Displays the number of cells sent.

5 minute input rate

Displays the total number of cells received in 5 minutes, measured in bits per second and cells per second.

5 minute output rate

Displays the total number of cells sent in 5 minutes, measured in bits per second and cells per second.

Input, output, and CRC errors

Displays the number of AAL5 packets that were input, output, and had CRC errors for the specified ATM interface.

The following is sample output from the show atm interface command for the subinterface.

Switch# show atm interface atm 0/1/0.2
 
Interface:	ATM0/1/0.2	Port-type:	vp tunnel
IF Status:	UP	Admin Status:	up
Auto-config:	enabled	AutoConfigState:	waiting for response from peer
IF-Side	Network	Interface-type:	UNI
Uni-type:	Private	Uni-version:	V3.1
Max-VPI-bits:	0	Max-VCI-bits:	10
Max-VP:	0	Max-VC:	16383
ConfMaxSvpcVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvpcVpi: 255
ConfMaxSvccVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvccVpi: 255
ConfMinSvccVci: 33              CurrMinSvccVci: 33
Signalling:     Enabled
ATM Address for Soft VC: 47.0091.8100.0000.0041.0b0a.1581.4000.0c80.1000.02
Configured virtual links:
  PVCLs   SoftVCLs   SVCLs   Total-Cfgd   Installed-Conns
      4          0       0             4                4

Examples

The following is sample output from the show atm interface command for an IMA group.

Switch# show atm interface atm 0/0/ima1
 
Interface:      ATM0/0/ima1     Port-type:      imapam_t1_ima
IF Status:      UP              Admin Status:   up
Auto-config:    enabled         AutoCfgState:   completed
IF-Side:        Network         IF-type:        NNI
Uni-type:       not applicable  Uni-version:    not applicable
Max-VPI-bits:   8               Max-VCI-bits:   14
Max-VP:         255             Max-VC:         16383
ConfMaxSvpcVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvpcVpi: 255
ConfMaxSvccVpi: 255             CurrMaxSvccVpi: 255
ConfMinSvccVci: 35              CurrMinSvccVci: 35
Svc Upc Intent: pass            Signalling:     Enabled
ATM Address for Soft VC: 47.0091.8100.0000.0040.0b0a.2a81.4000.0c80.0090.00
Configured virtual links:
  PVCLs SoftVCLs   SVCLs   TVCLs   PVPLs SoftVPLs   SVPLs Total-Cfgd Inst-Conns
      3        0       0       0       0        0       0          3          3
Logical ports(VP-tunnels):     0
Input cells:    14806           Output cells:   14730
5 minute input rate:             0 bits/sec,       0 cells/sec
5 minute output rate:            0 bits/sec,       0 cells/sec
Input AAL5 pkts: 95217, Output AAL5 pkts: 95193, AAL5 crc errors: 0

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pvp

Used to create a PVP.

show ip access-lists

Displays the contents of all current IP access lists.

show atm status

Displays current information about ATM interfaces and the number of installed connections.

show ima interface

Displays the IMA interface, IMA group, and ATM layer hardware configuration.

show atm interface resource

To display resource management interface configuration status and statistics, use the
show atm interface resource EXEC command.

show atm interface resource {atm | atm-p}{card/subcard/port | card/subcard/imagroup}]
[accounting]

Syntax Description

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies an ATM-P interface.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the ATM or ATM-P interface.

imagroup

Specifies an IMA group number (0 to 3).

accounting

Displays RM interface CAC statistics.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show atm interface resource command displays different information depending on the type of interface:

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example shows the resource management information displayed by the
show atm interface resource command for a physical interface with the switch processor feature card installed.

Switch# show atm interface resource atm 0/0/1
Resource Management configuration:
Service Classes:
Service Category map: c1 cbr, c2 vbr-rt, c3 vbr-nrt, c4 abr, c5 ubr
Scheduling: RS c1 WRR c2, WRR c3, WRR c4, WRR c5
WRR Weight: 8 c2, 1 c3, 1 c4, 1 c5
Pacing: disabled   0 Kbps rate configured, 0 Kbps rate installed
overbooking : 300%
Service Categories supported: cbr,vbr-rt,vbr-nrt,abr,ubr
Link Distance: 0 kilometers
Controlled Link sharing:
Max aggregate guaranteed services: 90% Rx,  90% TX
Max bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, 35% vbr RX, 35% vbr TX,
none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
Min bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
Best effort connection limit: disabled  0 max connections
Max traffic parameters by service (rate in Kbps, tolerance in cell-times):
Peak-cell-rate RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
Peak-cell-rate TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
Sustained-cell-rate: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
Minimum-cell-rate RX: none abr, none ubr
Minimum-cell-rate TX: none abr, none ubr
CDVT RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
CDVT TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
MBS: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
Resource Management state:
Physical Line Rate (in Kbps) : 155520
Available bit rates (in Kbps):
139967 cbr RX, 139967 cbr TX, 54431 vbr RX, 54431 vbr TX,
139967 abr RX, 139967 abr TX, 139967 ubr RX, 139967 ubr TX
Allocated bit rates:
0 cbr RX, 0 cbr TX, 0 vbr RX, 0 vbr TX,
0 abr RX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr RX, 0 ubr TX
Best effort connections: 0 pvcs,  0 svcs
Switch#

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example shows the resource management information displayed by the
show atm interface resource command for OC-48c ports only.

Switch# show atm interface resource atm 11/0/0
Resource Management configuration:
    Service Classes:
        Service Category map: c2 cbr, c2 vbr-rt, c3 vbr-nrt, c4 abr,
        Scheduling: RS c1 WRR c2, WRR c3, WRR c4, WRR c5
        WRR Weight: 15 c2, 2 c3, 2 c4, 2 c5
    CAC Configuration to account for Framing Overhead : Disabled 
    Pacing: disabled   0 Kbps rate configured, 0 Kbps rate installed
    Service Categories supported: cbr,vbr-rt,vbr-nrt,abr,ubr
    Link Distance: 0 kilometers
    Controlled Link sharing:
        Max aggregate guaranteed services: none RX,  none TX
        Max bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
        Min bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
    Best effort connection limit: disabled  0 max connections
    Max traffic parameters by service (rate in Kbps, tolerance in cell-times):
        Peak-cell-rate RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Peak-cell-rate TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Sustained-cell-rate: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
        Minimum-cell-rate RX: none abr, none ubr
        Minimum-cell-rate TX: none abr, none ubr
        CDVT RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        CDVT TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        MBS: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
Resource Management state:
Scheduler 1: 
        Available bit rates (in Kbps):
          590975 cbr TX, 590975 vbr TX, 590975 abr TX, 590975 ubr TX
        Allocated bit rates (in Kbps):
          0 cbr TX, 0 vbr TX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr TX
Scheduler 2: 
        Available bit rates (in Kbps):
          590975 cbr TX, 590975 vbr TX, 590975 abr TX, 590975 ubr TX
        Allocated bit rates (in Kbps):
          0 cbr TX, 0 vbr TX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr TX
Scheduler 3: 
        Available bit rates (in Kbps):
          590975 cbr TX, 590975 vbr TX, 590975 abr TX, 590975 ubr TX
        Allocated bit rates (in Kbps):
          0 cbr TX, 0 vbr TX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr TX
Scheduler 4: 
        Available bit rates (in Kbps):
          590975 cbr TX, 590975 vbr TX, 590975 abr TX, 590975 ubr TX
        Allocated bit rates (in Kbps):
          0 cbr TX, 0 vbr TX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr TX
Available bit rates (in Kbps):
        2363903 cbr RX, 2363903 cbr TX, 2363903 vbr RX, 2363903 vbr TX, 
        2363903 abr RX, 2363903 abr TX, 2363903 ubr RX, 2363903 ubr TX
    Allocated bit rates:
        0 cbr RX, 0 cbr TX, 0 vbr RX, 0 vbr TX, 
        0 abr RX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr RX, 0 ubr TX
    Best effort connections: 0 pvcs,  0 svcs
 

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example shows the resource management information displayed by the
show atm interface resource command for a physical interface with an FC-PCQ installed.

Switch# show atm interface resource atm 1/1/0
Resource Management configuration:
    Service Classes:
        Service Category map: c2 cbr, c2 vbr-rt, c3 vbr-nrt, c4 abr, c5 ubr
        Scheduling: RS c1 WRR c2, WRR c3, WRR c4, WRR c5
        WRR Weight: 15 c2, 2 c3, 2 c4, 2 c5
    CAC Configuration to account for Framing Overhead : Disabled
    Pacing: disabled   0 Kbps rate configured, 0 Kbps rate installed
    Service Categories supported: cbr,vbr-rt,vbr-nrt,abr,ubr
    Link Distance: 0 kilometers
    Controlled Link sharing:
        Max aggregate guaranteed services: none RX,  none TX
        Max bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
        Min bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
    Best effort connection limit: disabled  0 max connections
    Max traffic parameters by service (rate in Kbps, tolerance in cell-times):
        Peak-cell-rate RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Peak-cell-rate TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Sustained-cell-rate: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
        Minimum-cell-rate RX: none abr, none ubr
        Minimum-cell-rate TX: none abr, none ubr
        CDVT RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        CDVT TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        MBS: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
Resource Management state:
    Available bit rates (in Kbps):
        147743 cbr RX, 147743 cbr TX, 147743 vbr RX, 147743 vbr TX,
        147743 abr RX, 147743 abr TX, 147743 ubr RX, 147743 ubr TX
    Allocated bit rates:
        0 cbr RX, 0 cbr TX, 0 vbr RX, 0 vbr TX,
        0 abr RX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr RX, 0 ubr TX
    Best effort connections: 1 pvcs,  0 svcs                                   

Examples

The following example shows the resource management information displayed by the
show atm interface resource command with the accounting parameter.

Switch# show atm interface resource atm 3/1/0 accounting
RCAC result statistics (by request service category):
    cbr:
        0 satisfied, 0 no bandwidth, 0 delay
        0 loss, 0 delay variation, 0 traffic parameter 
	vbr-rt:
        3 satisfied, 0 unsupported combination, 0 no bandwidth
        0 delay, 0 loss, 0 delay variation
        0 traffic parameter
    vbr-nrt:
        0 satisfied, 0 unsupported combination, 0 no bandwidth
        0 loss, 0 traffic parameter
    abr:
        0 satisfied, 0 traffic parameter, 0 best effort limit
    ubr:
        0 satisfied, 0 traffic parameter, 0 best effort limit

The following example shows the resource management information displayed by the
show atm interface resource command for an IMA interface.

Switch# show atm interface resource atm 0/0/ima1
Resource Management configuration:
    Service Classes:
        Service Category map: c2 cbr, c2 vbr-rt, c3 vbr-nrt, c4 abr, c5 ubr
        Scheduling: RS c1 WRR c2, WRR c3, WRR c4, WRR c5
        WRR Weight: 15 c2, 2 c3, 2 c4, 2 c5
    CAC Configuration to account for Framing Overhead : Disabled
    Pacing: disabled   0 Kbps rate configured, 0 Kbps rate installed
    Service Categories supported: cbr,vbr-rt,vbr-nrt,abr,ubr
    Link Distance: 0 kilometers
    Controlled Link sharing:
        Max aggregate guaranteed services: none RX,  none TX
        Max bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
        Min bandwidth: none cbr RX, none cbr TX, none vbr RX, none vbr TX,
                       none abr RX, none abr TX, none ubr RX, none ubr TX
    Best effort connection limit: disabled  0 max connections
    Max traffic parameters by service (rate in Kbps, tolerance in cell-times):
        Peak-cell-rate RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Peak-cell-rate TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        Sustained-cell-rate: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
        Minimum-cell-rate RX: none abr, none ubr
        Minimum-cell-rate TX: none abr, none ubr
        CDVT RX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        CDVT TX: none cbr, none vbr, none abr, none ubr
        MBS: none vbr RX, none vbr TX
Resource Management state:
    Available bit rates (in Kbps):
        4340 cbr RX, 4340 cbr TX, 4340 vbr RX, 4340 vbr TX,
        4340 abr RX, 4340 abr TX, 4340 ubr RX, 4340 ubr TX
    Available bit rates for SVCs (in Kbps):
        4340 cbr RX, 4340 cbr TX, 4340 vbr RX, 4340 vbr TX,
        4340 abr RX, 4340 abr TX, 4340 ubr RX, 4340 ubr TX
    Allocated bit rates:
        0 cbr RX, 0 cbr TX, 0 vbr RX, 0 vbr TX,
        0 abr RX, 0 abr TX, 0 ubr RX, 0 ubr TX
    Best effort connections: 0 pvcs,  0 svcs

Table 18-8 describes the field values shown in the previous displays.


Table 18-8: show atm interface resource Management Field Values
Field Values

Service category map

The service category-to-variable map.

Scheduling

Type of scheduling used by each service category.

WRR Weight

The weighted round-robin weight used by each service category configured for weighted round-robin scheduling.

Pacing

The status of pacing (enabled or disabled) and the rate in kbps.

Link distance

The link distance in kilometers.

Max aggregate guaranteed services

The maximum aggregate guaranteed services bandwidth allocatable to connections, expressed in percent of the bandwidth on the interface in a particular direction.

Max bandwidth

The maximum bandwidth allocatable to connections of a particular service type, expressed in percent of the bandwidth on the interface in a particular direction.

Min bandwidth

The minimum bandwidth allocatable to connections of a particular service type, expressed in percent of the bandwidth on the interface in a particular direction.

Best effort connection limit

The maximum number of best effort connections.

Peak-cell-rate RX

The peak receive cell rate by service category.

Peak-cell-rate TX

The peak transmit cell rate by service category.

Sustained-cell-rate

The sustained cell rate by service category.

Tolerance RX

The receive tolerance (cell delay variation or maximum burst size) by service category.

Tolerance TX

The transmit tolerance (cell delay variation or maximum burst size) by service category.

Available bit rates (in kbps)

The transmit and receive bit rates available by service category in kbps.

Allocated bit rates

The transmit and receive bit rates allocated by service category in kbps.

Best effort connections

The number of PVC and SVC best-effort connections.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm cac best-effort-limit

Changes or sets the interface limit on the number of best-effort connections.

atm cac framing overhead

Instructs CAC to consider framing overhead.

atm cac link-sharing

Changes the resource management interface controlled link-sharing parameters.

atm cac max-cdvt

Configures the maximum CDVT (per service category and direction) allowed for a connection on an interface by CAC.

atm cac max-mbs

Changes the interface maximum for incoming and outgoing MBS at connection startup.

atm cac max-min-cell-rate

Configures the maximum MCR for ABR and UBR service category traffic flowing into and out of the switch.

atm cac max-peak-cell-rate

Configures the maximum PCR for specific service categories and traffic directions.

atm cac max-sustained-cell-rate

Configures the maximum SCR for traffic flow in either direction.

atm cac overbooking

Configures overbooking on an ATM or IMA interface.

atm cac service-category

Permits or denies a service category on an ATM physical interface, shaped VP tunnel subinterface, or hierarchical VP tunnel subinterface.

atm link-distance

Alters the propagation delay component of the cell-transfer delay offered by an interface.

atm output-queue (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Changes the maximum queue size of the output queue.

atm output-threshold (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Changes the output queue thresholds.

atm pacing

Enables or changes the artificial limitation on interface output rate.

show atm map

To display the list of all configured ATM static maps to remote hosts on an ATM network,
use the show atm map EXEC command.

show atm map

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm map command.

Switch# show atm map
Map list ab: PERMANENT
ip 1.1.1.1 maps to VC 200

The following example is sample output from the show atm map command for a multipoint connection.

Switch# show atm map
Map list atm_pri: PERMANENT
ip 4.4.4.4 maps to NSAP CD.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, multipoint connection up, VC 6
ip 4.4.4.6 maps to NSAP DE.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, connection up, VC 15, multipoint connection up, VC 6
 
Map list atm_ipx: PERMANENT
ipx 1004.dddd.dddd.dddd maps to NSAP DE.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, multipoint connection up, VC 8
ipx 1004.cccc.cccc.cccc maps to NSAP CD.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, multipoint connection up, VC 8
 
Map list atm_apple: PERMANENT
appletalk 62000.5 maps to NSAP CD.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, multipoint connection up, VC 4
appletalk 62000.6 maps to NSAP DE.CDEF.01.234567.890A.BCDE.F012.3456.7890.1234.12, broadcast, aal5mux, multipoint connection up, VC 4
 

Table 18-9 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-9: show atm map Field Description 
Field Description

Map list

Name of map list.

PERMANENT

This map entry was entered from configuration; it was not entered automatically by a process.

protocol address maps to VC x
or
protocol address maps to NSAP...

Name of protocol, the protocol address, and the VCD or NSAP the address is mapped.

broadcast

Indicates pseudo-broadcasting.

aal5mux

Indicates the encapsulation used, a multipoint or point-to-point virtual connection, and the number of the virtual connection.

multipoint connection up

Indicates that this is a multipoint virtual connection.

VC 6

Number of the virtual connection.

Connection up

Indicates a point-to-point virtual connection.

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pvc

Used to create a PVC.

map-list

Defines an ATM map statement for either a PVC or SVC.

show atm pnni aesa embedded-number

To show the E.164 AESAs with the E.164 AFI to the left-justified encoding format, use the
show atm pnni aesa embedded-number privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni aesa embedded-number

show atm pnni aesa embedded-number prefix

Syntax Description

prefix

E.164 AFI portion of the E.164 AESA.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays E.164 AESAs with the E.164 AFI to the left-justified encoding format.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aesa embedded-number command, without the prefix specified.

Switch# show atm pnni aesa embedded-number 
AESA embedded-number is left-justified.
 

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aesa embedded-number command, with the prefix specified.

Switch# show atm pnni aesa embedded-number 45001234
AESA embedded-number is left-justified.
Translating 45.0012.34/32 to 
            45.1234/24

Related Commands
Command Description

debug atm pnni

Enables PNNI debugging output.

show atm pnni aggregation link

To show the aggregated PNNI links on the switch, use the show atm pnni aggregation link privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni aggregation link [local-node node-index] [aggregation-detail | border-detail]

Syntax Description

local-node

Specifies the PNNI local node, where higher-level induced links are generated.

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node, in the range of 1 to 8.

aggregation-detail

Displays the aggregation table with aggregated metrics for the higher-level induced links.

border-detail

Displays the aggregation table with all border uplink metrics.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the aggregation table(s) for PNNI links.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aggregation link command.

Switch# show atm pnni aggregation link
PNNI link aggregation for local-node 2 (level=44, name=rhino18.2.44)
  Configured aggregation modes (per service class):
     CBR         VBR-RT       VBR-NRT       ABR           UBR
  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~
  best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    
  Aggregated outside links from child peer group:
  Upnode Number: 10   Upnode Name: rhino27.2.44
   AggToken  InducPort BorderPort    Border Node(No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  0          02202000  ATM0/1/2      1 rhino18
  Upnode Number: 11   Upnode Name: Switch.3.32
   AggToken  InducPort BorderPort    Border Node(No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  0          02CF2000  ATM0/0/2      1 rhino18
  5          02CF2005  ATM0/0/2.4    9 ls1010-1
  8197       02CF22A1  ATM0/0/1      9 ls1010-1
PNNI link aggregation for local-node 3 (level=32, name=rhino18.3.32)
  Configured aggregation modes (per service class):
     CBR         VBR-RT       VBR-NRT       ABR           UBR
  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~
  best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    
  Aggregated outside links from child peer group:
  Upnode Number: 11   Upnode Name: Switch.3.32
   AggToken  InducPort BorderPort    Border Node(No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  0          03CF2000  2CF2000       2 rhino18.2.44
  5          03CF2005  2CF2005       2 rhino18.2.44
  8197       03CF22A1  2CF22A1       2 rhino18.2.44

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pnni aggregation-token

Specifies the aggregation token for a PNNI interface.

show atm pnni aggregation node

To show the PNNI nodal aggregation tables for a complex node, use the
show atm pnni aggregation node privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni aggregation node [local-node node-index] [border-detail |
exception-detail |port hex-port-id [port2 hex-port-id]]

Syntax Description

local-node

Specifies the complex PNNI local node.

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node, in the range of 2 to 8.

border-detail

Displays the border path table with path metrics between all pairs of border nodes in the child peer group.

exception-detail

Displays the complex node radius, spokes, and exception bypasses.

port hex-port id

Displays the calculated metrics for all spokes and bypasses connected to the specified port. The metrics also display for nonexception spokes or bypasses.

port2 hex-port id

Specifies the second port of a port pair and displays the metrics for a single spoke or bypass.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the aggregation table(s) for a complex PNNI local node.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aggregation node command.

Switch# show atm pnni aggregation node
PNNI nodal aggregation for local-node 2 (level=56, child PG level=60)
  Complex node representation, exception threshold: 60%
 
  Configured nodal aggregation modes (per service class):
    CBR          VBR-RT       VBR-NRT      ABR          UBR      
  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~
  best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    aggressive 
 
Summary Complex Node Port List:
  Port ID  Rem Inn Agg-Token  Border Cnt In-Spoke  Out-Spoke Agg-Accur 
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
  21FB000  12      0          1          default   default   ok        
  2371000  13      0          1          default   default   ok        
 
Summary Complex Node Bypass Pairs  List (exception bypass pairs only)
  /~~~~~~~~ LOWER PORT ID ~~~~~~~~\ /~~~~~~~~ HIGHER PORT ID ~~~~~~~\ 
  Port ID  Rem Inn Agg-Token  Inacc Port ID  Rem Inn Agg-Token  Inacc Exceptns
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
  21FB000  12      0          no    2371000  13      0          no    fwd rev
 

Table 18-10 describes field descriptions for the show atm pnni aggregation node command.


Table 18-10: show atm pnni aggregation node Field Descriptions
Field Description

Port ID = 0

Represents the nucleus.

Agg-Accur

Displays the aggregation accuracy of the aggregated links.

Inacc

Indicates the state of the aggregation accuracy, either yes or no. If the aggregated links are on different border nodes that are distant from one another, it might not be possible to accurately represent their spoke and bypass metrics with a single set of metrics. In this case, they are shown as inaccurate.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aggregation node exception-detail command.

Switch# show atm pnni aggregation node exception-detail 
PNNI nodal aggregation for local-node 2 (level=56, child PG level=60)
  Complex node representation, exception threshold: 60%
 
  Metrics for Complex Node Default Radius (input 0x0, output 0x0):
   vp capable
            maxcr    avcr     ctd    cdv   clr0  clr01  aw      crm    vf
   CBR      155519   147743   128    115   10    10     4200    n/a    n/a  
   VBR-RT   155519   155519   589    576   8     8      4200    ---    ---  
   VBR-NRT  155519   155519   n/a    n/a   8     8      4200    ---    ---  
   ABR      155519   0        n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    4200    n/a    n/a  
   UBR      155519   n/a      n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    3360    n/a    n/a  
 
Detailed Complex Node Bypass Pairs List (exception bypass pairs only)
 
  /~~~~~~~~ LOWER PORT ID ~~~~~~~~\ /~~~~~~~~ HIGHER PORT ID ~~~~~~~\ 
  Port ID  Rem Inn Agg-Token  Inacc Port ID  Rem Inn Agg-Token  Inacc Exceptns
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~
  21FB000  12      0          no    2371000  13      0          no    fwd rev
 
  Remote nodes for this port pair:
  21FB000  2371000   Remote Node (No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  remote             12 pnni-09.2.56
           remote    13 pnni-11
 
  Border nodes for this port pair:
  21FB000  2371000   Border Node (No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  border             1 pnni-14
           border    9 pnni-12
 
  Metrics for Complex Node Bypass (input 0x21FB000, output 0x2371000):
   vp capable
            maxcr    avcr     ctd    cdv   clr0  clr01  aw      crm    vf
   CBR      155519   147743   154    138   10    10     5040    n/a    n/a  
   VBR-RT   155519   155519   707    691   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   VBR-NRT  155519   155519   n/a    n/a   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   ABR      155519   0        n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
   UBR      155519   n/a      n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
 
  Metrics for Complex Node Bypass (input 0x2371000, output 0x21FB000):
   vp capable
            maxcr    avcr     ctd    cdv   clr0  clr01  aw      crm    vf
   CBR      155519   147743   154    138   10    10     5040    n/a    n/a  
   VBR-RT   155519   155519   707    691   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   VBR-NRT  155519   155519   n/a    n/a   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   ABR      155519   0        n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
   UBR      155519   n/a      n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a 

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni aggregation node border-detail command.

Switch# show atm pnni aggregation node border-detail
Nodal aggregation is complex for local-node 2 (level=56, name=pnni-14.2.56),
No of border nodes 2, 
 Table version 13 active for 07:05:31 [hh:mm:ss]
 
  Configured nodal aggregation modes (per service class):
      CBR          VBR-RT       VBR-NRT      ABR          UBR    
  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~
  best-link    best-link    best-link    best-link    aggressive 
 
   Inter Border-Node Metric Table
   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
From border 1  ---> border 9   [pnni-14-->pnni-12]
   vp capable, (vp_cap_flags=0x1F)
            maxcr    avcr     ctd    cdv   clr0  clr01  aw      crm    vf
   CBR      155519   147743   154    138   10    10     5040    n/a    n/a  
   VBR-RT   155519   155519   707    691   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   VBR-NRT  155519   155519   n/a    n/a   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   ABR      155519   0        n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
   UBR      155519   n/a      n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
 
From border 9  ---> border 1   [pnni-12-->pnni-14]
   vp capable, (vp_cap_flags=0x1F)
            maxcr    avcr     ctd    cdv   clr0  clr01  aw      crm    vf
   CBR      155519   147743   154    138   10    10     5040    n/a    n/a  
   VBR-RT   155519   155519   707    691   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   VBR-NRT  155519   155519   n/a    n/a   8     8      5040    ---    ---  
   ABR      155519   0        n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a  
   UBR      155519   n/a      n/a    n/a   n/a   n/a    5040    n/a    n/a 

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pnni aggregation-token

Specifies the aggregation token for a PNNI interface.

nodal-representation

Specifies the type of PNNI LGN representation.

show atm pnni background routes

To show the precalculated background route table to other PNNI nodes, use the show atm pnni background routes EXEC command.

show atm pnni background routes [internal-node-num] [abr | cbr | vbr_rt | vbr_nrt | ubr]
[admin-weight | cdv | ctd]

Syntax Description

internal-node-num

Shows the background route tables for the node specified by this internal node number.

abr

Shows the background route tables for the available bit rate service category.

cbr

Shows the background route tables for the constant bit rate service category.

vbr_rt

Shows the background route tables for the real-time variable bit rate service category.

vbr_nrt

Shows the background route tables for the non-real-time variable bit rate service category.

ubr

Shows the background route tables for the unspecified bit rate service category.

admin-weight

Shows the background route tables based on administrative weight as the primary metric.

cdv

Shows the background route tables based on cell delay variation as the primary metric.

ctd

Shows the background route tables based on cell transfer delay as the primary metric.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally bg routes.

11.2(5)

Modified: changed to show atm pnni background routes.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display routes from the background route tables to all known nodes in the
PNNI network.

This command filters based on service category or metric information.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni background routes command.

Switch# show atm pnni background routes cbr admin-weight
Background Routes From CBR/AW Table
--------------------------------------
1 Routes To Node 2
    1. Hops 2. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3:ATM0/1/1 -> 2
        ->: aw 10080  cdv 276  ctd 308  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 10080  cdv 276  ctd 308  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
 
1 Routes To Node 3
    1. Hops 1. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3
        ->: aw 5040  cdv 138  ctd 154  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 5040  cdv 138  ctd 154  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
 
1 Routes To Node 4
    1. Hops 2. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3:ATM0/0/2 -> 4
        ->: aw 10080  cdv 276  ctd 308  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 10080  cdv 276  ctd 308  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
 
3 Routes To Node 5
    1. Hops 3. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3:ATM0/0/2 -> 4:ATM1/0/0 -> 5
        ->: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
    2. Hops 3. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3:ATM0/0/2 -> 4:ATM0/1/0 -> 5
        ->: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
    3. Hops 3. 1:ATM1/1/0 -> 3:ATM0/0/2 -> 4:ATM1/0/3 -> 5
        ->: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0
        <-: aw 15120  cdv 414  ctd 462  acr 147743  clr0 10  clr01 0

Related Commands
Command Description

background-routes-enable

Enables background route computation and specifies how often the switch polls for a significant change that activates a new computation of the background routes.

show atm pnni background status

To show the status of background route computation activity, use the show atm pnni background status privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni background status

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally bg status.

11.2(5)

Modified: changed to show atm pnni background status.

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the status of the background SPF activity.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni background status command.

Switch# show atm pnni background status
Background Route Computation is Enabled
Background Interval is set at 10 seconds
Background Insignificant Threshold is set at 32

Related Commands
Command Description

background-routes-enable

Enables background route computation and specifies how often the switch polls for a significant change that activates a new computation of the background routes.

show atm pnni database

To display the contents of the PNNI topology database, use the show atm pnni database EXEC command.

show atm pnni database [internal-node-number [ptse-id] | local-node node-index] [detail]

Syntax Description

internal-node-number

Displays information about a specified node (1 to 255).

ptse-id

Displays information about a specified PTSE (1 to 4294967295) on a node.

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

detail

Displays more detailed information and is used as the last keyword of the command.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

The topology database is the collection of PTSEs that the PNNI node gathered from the network.

To display the mapping of internal-node-number to PNNI node identifier and node name, use the
show atm pnni identifiers command.

Use this command without the detail keyword to display identifying information about each PTSE.

Use the detail keyword to display information about the contents of the PTSEs, including nodal information, internal reachable addresses, exterior reachable addresses, and horizontal links.

For information on specific PTSE types and their use, refer to the ATM Forum PNNI 1.0 specification, af-pnni-0055.000.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni database command.

Switch# show atm pnni database
Node 1 ID 56:160:47.00918100000000603E7B3201.00603E7B3201.00 (name: Switch20)
 
  PTSE ID  Length  Type  Seq no.   Checksum  Lifetime   Description
  1        92      97    228       3191      2232       Nodal info
  2        52      224   29123     31376     3307       Int. Reachable Address
  3        52      256   181       51057     1845       Ext. Reachable Address
  4        188     288   61        29561     3068       Horizontal Link
 
Node 2 ID 56:160:47.0091810000000003DDE74601.0003DDE74601.00 (name: Switch22)
 
  PTSE ID  Length  Type  Seq no.   Checksum  Lifetime   Description
  1        92      97    889       4149      2563       Nodal info
  2        52      224   98986     37349     2504       Int. Reachable Address
  3        72      256   918       49460     3043       Ext. Reachable Address
  4        156     288   63        45295     2668       Horizontal Link
 

The following example is sample output using the detail option with this command.

Switch# show atm pnni database 1 detail
Node 1 ID 56:160:47.00918100000000603E7B3201.00603E7B3201.00 (name: Switch20)
 
  PTSE ID  Length  Type  Seq no.   Checksum  Lifetime   Description
  1        92      97    229       3190      1854       Nodal info
    Time to refresh 269, time to originate 0
 
    Type 97 (Nodal info), Length 48
    ATM address 47.00918100000000603E7B3201.00603E7B3201.00
    priority 0, leader bit NOT SET
    preferred PGL 0:0:00.000000000000000000000000.000000000000.00
 
  2        52      224   29124     31375     2387       Int. Reachable Address
    Time to refresh 1023, time to originate 0
 
    Type 224 (Int. Reachable Address), Length 32, Port 0, vp capable
    Scope (level) 0, Address info length (ail) 16, Address info count 1
    Pfx: 47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201..., length 104
 
  3        52      256   183       51055     2744       Ext. Reachable Address
    Time to refresh 1135, time to originate 0
 
    Type 256 (Ext. Reachable Address), Length 32, Port 0, vp capable
    Scope (level) 0, Address info length (ail) 16, Address info count 1
    Pfx: 47.0091.8100.0000.0003.dde7.4601..., length 104
 
  4        188     288   62        29560     2297       Horizontal Link
    Time to refresh 835, time to originate 0
 
    Type 288 (Horizontal Link), Length 168, vp capable
    Remote Node: 56:160:47.0091810000000003DDE74601.0003DDE74601.00
    Local port 80002000, Remote port 81802000, Aggregation token 0
    Metric:
      Type 128, length 32, Traffic class: 0x8800 ( CBR UBR )
        MCR 155519, ACR 147743, CTD 154, CDV 138, CLR0 10, CLR01 10, AW 5040
      Type 128, length 32, Traffic class: 0x4000 ( VBR-RT )
        MCR 155519, ACR 155519, CTD 707, CDV 691, CLR0 8, CLR01 8, AW 5040
      Type 128, length 32, Traffic class: 0x2000 ( VBR-NRT )
        MCR 155519, ACR 155519, CTD n/a, CDV n/a, CLR0 8, CLR01 8, AW 5040
      Type 128, length 32, Traffic class: 0x1000 ( ABR )
        MCR 155519, ACR 0, CTD n/a, CDV n/a, CLR0 n/a, CLR01 n/a, AW 5040

show atm pnni election

To display information relevant to the PNNI peer group leader election process, use the
show atm pnni election EXEC command.

show atm pnni election [local-node node-index] [peers]

Syntax Description

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

peers

Displays the leadership priority and preferred PGL as advertised by all peers in the peer group.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

Using the show atm pnni election EXEC command without the peer keyword only displays the local information that pertains to the node's PGL election.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni election command.

Switch# show atm pnni election
PGL Status.............: Not PGL
Preferred PGL..........: Switch20
Preferred PGL Priority.: 64
Active PGL.............: Switch20 
Active PGL Priority....: 64
Current FSM State......: PGLE Operating: Not PGL
Last FSM State.........: PGLE Calculating
Last FSM Event.........: Preferred PGL Is Not Self
 
Configured Priority....: 0
Advertised Priority....: 0
Conf. Parent Node Index: NONE
 
Hello Startup Factor...: 5
PGL Init Interval......: 15 secs
Search Peer Interval...: 75 secs
Re-election Interval...: 15 secs
Override Delay.........: 30 secs
 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni election peers command.

Switch# show atm pnni election peers
Node     Leadership   Preferred
  Number   Priority     PGL
  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1        0            Switch20
  2        64           Switch20
  3        0            Switch20
  4        0            Switch20
  5        0            Switch20
  6        0            Switch20
  7        0            Switch20
  8        0            Switch20
  9        0            Switch20

show atm pnni explicit-paths

To display a summary of explicit paths that have been configured, use the
show atm pnni explicit-paths command.

show atm pnni explicit-path [name path-name | identifier path-id} [upto index]
[detail]


Syntax Description

name path-name

Specifies the path name for which explicit path information is to be displayed.

identifier path-id

Specifies the path ID for which explicit path information is to be displayed.

upto index

Specifies the path entry index up to which the routable status is calculated.

detail

Displays full path information with any known errors and warnings for each entry.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

To limit the display to a specific path, use the name option. The path information includes the "routable" status, which is based on an actual UBR explicit path calculation to the last included
node entry.

Use the upto option for troubleshooting explicit paths that are shown as not routable. The routable status is only calculated up to the specified path entry index, which allows you to isolate the first failing path entry.

Use the detail option to list the full paths, along with any known errors or warnings associated with each entry.

Examples

The following example shows how to display a summary of explicit paths.

Switch# show atm pnni explicit-paths
Summary of configured Explicit Paths:
 PathId Status       UpTo  Routable AdminWt Explicit Path Name
 ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 1      enabled      3     yes      10040   dallas_4.path1
 2      enabled      6     yes      15120   chicago_2.path1
 3      enabled      2     yes      10080   chicago_2.path2
 4      enabled      2     yes      20595   new_york.path1
 

Examples

The following example shows how to display the detailed configuration, including any known warnings and error messages, for a non-routable explicit path named new_york.path2.

Switch# show atm pnni explicit-paths name new_york.path2 detail
 PathId Status       UpTo  Routable AdminWt Explicit Path Name
 ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 1      enabled      4     no       0       new_york.path2
  PNNI routing err_code for UBR call = 6 (PNNI_DEST_UNREACHABLE)
 
  Entry Type      Node [Port] specifier
  ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1     next-node dallas_2
  2     next-node dallas_4 port 80000004
                  Warning:Entry index 2 specifies a non-routable port
  3     next-node wash_dc_1
                  Warning:Entry index 3 has no connectivity from prior node
  4     segment   new_york.2.40

Related Commands
Command Description

show atm pnni explicit-paths

Displays a summary of explicit paths that have been configured.

show atm pnni hierarchy

To show the PNNI hierarchy, use the show atm pnni hierarchy privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni hierarchy [network [detail] | local-configured]

Syntax Description

network

Shows the PGLs and higher-level PNNI ancestor LGNs that are active throughout the PNNI routing domain, as visible from this node.

detail

Shows more detailed network hierarchy information.

local-configured

Shows only the locally configured nodes and parent nodes on this system.

Defaults

local-configured

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the configured PNNI hierarchy and its status.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni hierarchy command.

Switch# show atm pnni hierarchy
Locally configured parent nodes:
  Node          Parent
  Index  Level  Index   Local-node Status     Node Name
  ~~~~~  ~~~~~  ~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1      60     2       Enabled/ Running      xxxxxx-1
  2      44     3       Enabled/ Not Running  xxxxxx-1.2.44
  3      28     N/A     Enabled/ Not Running  xxxxxx-1.3.28
 

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni hierarchy network command.

Switch# show atm pnni hierarchy network
Summary of active parent LGNs in the routing domain:
  Node  Level  Parent  Node Name
  ~~~~  ~~~~~  ~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1     60     10      xxxxxx-1
  10    44     12      xxxxx18.2.44
  12    32     0       xxxxx27.3.32
 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni hierarchy network detail command.

Switch# show atm pnni hierarchy network detail
Detailed hierarchy network display:
  Number Of Network LGN Ancestors: 2
 
  Lowest Level (60) information:
  Node No.....: 1    Node Name: xxxxxx-1
  Node's ID...:   60:160:47.0091810000000060705BD9A5.0060705BD900.00
  Node's Addr.:          47.0091810000000060705BD9A5.0060705BD900.01
  Node's PG ID:       60:47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0000.0000
  PGL No......: 9    PGL Name: xxxxx18
  PGL ID......:   60:160:47.00918100000000613E7B2F01.00613E7B2F99.00
 
  Level 44 ancestor information:
  Parent LGN..: 10   LGN Name: xxxxx18.2.44
  LGN's ID....:    44:60:47.009181000000000000000000.00613E7B2F99.00
  LGN's Addr..:          47.00918100000000613E7B2F01.00613E7B2F99.02
  LGN's PG ID.:       44:47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0000.0000
  LGN PGL No..: 11   LGN PGL Name: xxxxx27.2.44
  LGN's PGL ID:    44:68:47.009181000000004000000000.00400B0A3081.00
 
  Level 32 ancestor information:
  Parent LGN..: 12   LGN Name: xxxxx27.3.32
  LGN's ID....:    32:44:47.009181000000000000000000.00400B0A3081.00
  LGN's Addr..:          47.00918100000000400B0A3081.00400B0A3081.03
  LGN's PG ID.:       32:47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0000.0000
  LGN PGL No..:      Unelected or unknown
  LGN's PGL ID:      0:0:00.000000000000000000000000.000000000000.00

Related Commands
Command Description

next-node

Specifies the next adjacent entry in a fully-specified ATM PNNI explicit path.

parent

Specifies the PNNI local node index of the parent node.

show atm pnni identifiers

To display the mapping from the local internal node numbers to the global PNNI node identifiers and node names, use the show atm pnni identifiers privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni identifiers [internal-node-number | local-node node-index]

Syntax Description

internal-node-number

Displays the mapping from the specified internal node number to its PNNI node identifier.

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

Because PNNI node identifiers are long, the PNNI implementation has mapped them into internal node numbers. The internal node numbers are used to display the topology in a compact fashion.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni identifiers command.

Switch# show atm pnni identifiers
Node  Node Id                                             Name
  1     56:160:47.00918100000000603E7B3201.00603E7B3201.00  Switch20
  2     56:160:47.0091810000000003DDE74601.0003DDE74601.00  Switch22

show atm pnni interface

To display specific information about an interface or to list the interfaces running on a PNNI node, use the show atm pnni interface EXEC command.

show atm pnni interface [local-node node-index | hex-port-id | atm card/subcard/port]
[detail]

Syntax Description

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

hex-port-id

Identifier in hexadecimal notation of the port to show.

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number of the PNNI interface.

detail

Displays detailed information and is used as the last keyword of the command.

Command Modes

EXEC
Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use the show atm pnni interface command to display information about the status of the PNNI interfaces and the Hello protocol run over the PNNI interfaces.

For a description of the Hello states and timers, refer to the ATM Forum PNNI 1.0 specification, af-pnni-0055.000.

Examples

The following example is sample output using the detail option of the show atm pnni interface command.

Switch# show atm pnni interface atm 0/0/2 detail
 
Port ATM0/0/2 RCC is up  , Hello state common_out with node SanFran.BldA.T4 
Next hello occurs in 1 seconds, Dead timer fires in 63 seconds
  CBR    : AW 5040 MCR 155519 ACR 147743 CTD 154 CDV 138 CLR0 10 CLR01 10 
  VBR-RT : AW 5040 MCR 155519 ACR 155519 CTD 707 CDV 691 CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  VBR-NRT: AW 5040 MCR 155519 ACR 155519 CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  ABR    : AW 5040 MCR 155519 ACR 0
  UBR    : AW 5040 MCR 155519 
  Aggregation Token: configured 0 , derived 2, remote 2
Tx ULIA seq# 1, Rx ULIA seq# 1, Tx NHL seq# 2, Rx NHL seq# 1
  Remote node ID        72:160:47.009144556677223310111266.00603E7B2001.00
  Remote node address          47.009144556677223310111266.00603E7B2001.01
  Remote port ID         ATM0/0/3 (80003000) (0)
  Common peer group ID      56:47.0091.4455.6677.0000.0000.0000
  Upnode ID              56:72:47.009144556677223300000000.00603E7B2001.00
  Upnode Address               47.009144556677223310111266.00603E7B2001.02
  Upnode number: 10       Upnode Name: SanFran

show atm pnni local-node

To display information about a PNNI logical node running on the switch, use the
show atm pnni local-node privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni local-node [node-index]

Syntax Description

node-index

Displays information about a specific PNNI logical node running on this switch, in the range of 1 to 8.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show atm pnni local-node command displays information about the PNNI node and its status.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni local-node command.

Switch# show atm pnni local-node
PNNI node 1 is enabled and running
  Node name: NewYork.BldB.T3
  System address          47.009144556677114410111255.00603E5BC401.01
  Node ID          72:160:47.009144556677114410111255.00603E5BC401.00
  Peer group ID        72:47.0091.4455.6677.1144.0000.0000
  Level 72, Priority 45 95, No. of interfaces 3, No. of neighbors 1
  Parent Node Index: 2
  Node Allows Transit Calls
  Node Representation: simple
  Hello interval 15 sec, inactivity factor 5, 
  Hello hold-down 10 tenths of sec
  Ack-delay 10 tenths of sec, retransmit interval 5 sec, 
  Resource poll interval 5 sec
  SVCC integrity times: calling 35 sec, called 50 sec, 
  Horizontal Link inactivity time 120 sec, 
  PTSE refresh interval 1800 sec, lifetime factor 200 percent, 
  Min PTSE interval 10 tenths of sec
  Auto summarization: on, Supported PNNI versions: newest 1, oldest 1
  Default administrative weight mode: uniform
  Max admin weight percentage: -1
  Next resource poll in 3 seconds
  Max PTSEs requested per PTSE request packet: 32
  Redistributing static routes: Yes

show atm pnni neighbor

To list PNNI neighboring peers for a switch router, use the show atm pnni neighbor EXEC command.

show atm pnni neighbor [local-node node-index]

Syntax Description

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

Command Modes

EXEC
Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show atm pnni neighbor command displays information about adjacencies. Multiple links can be connected to the same neighboring peer. The output from this command displays all PNNI interfaces to each neighboring peer, including the local port, the remote port, and the Hello state for each interface. Based on the port identifiers, PNNI derives the port string if the remote switch is an ATM switch router.

The switch may not translate the port identifier into a meaningful string (such as ATM 3/0/0) if the remote switch is not an ATM switch router. For this reason, both the port string and the port identifier are displayed. At any time only one interface to each neighboring peer is used for flooding PTSEs. This interface is identified as (Flooding Port) in the command output.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni neighbor command.

Switch# show atm pnni neighbor local-node 1
 
Neighbors For Node (Index 1, Level 72)
 
  Neighbor Name: NewYork.BldB.T1, Node number: 12
  Neighbor Node Id: 72:160:47.009144556677114410111233.00603E7B3A01.00
  Neighboring Peer State: Full
                               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  Link Selection Set To: minimize blocking of future calls
    Port           Remote Port Id    Hello state
    ATM0/1/3       ATM1/1/3          2way_in    (Flooding Port)

show atm pnni precedence

To show the current PNNI prefix priorities for routing, use the show atm pnni precedence privileged EXEC configuration command.

show atm pnni precedence

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni precedence command.

Switch# show atm pnni precedence
                                 Working   Default
  Prefix Poa Type                Priority  Priority
  -----------------------------  --------  --------
  local-internal                    1         1
  static-local-internal-metrics     2         2
  static-local-exterior             3         3
  static-local-exterior-metrics     2         2
  pnni-remote-internal              2         2
  pnni-remote-internal-metrics      2         2
  pnni-remote-exterior              4         4
  pnni-remote-exterior-metrics      2         2

Related Commands
Command Description

precedence

Configures the precedence of different types of reachable addresses.

show atm pnni resource-info

To display information about routing parameters of all PNNI interfaces received from a resource management module, use the show atm pnni resource-info EXEC command.

show atm pnni resource-info [hex-port-id] [atm card/subcard/port] [local-node node-index]

Syntax Description

hex-port-id

Hexadecimal port ID value.

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the specified ATM interface.

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node, in the range of 1 to 8.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally rm-info.

11.2(5)

Modified: changed to show atm pnni resource-info.

Usage Guidelines

This command is used to display information about the MCR, ACR, CTD, CDV, and CLR for a specific port. Only applicable information is displayed.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni resource-info command.

Switch# show atm pnni resource-info
acr pm 50,  acr mt 3, cdv pm 25, ctd pm 50, rm poll interval 5 sec
Interface insignificant change bounds:
ATM0/1/0 , port ID 80100000
  CBR    : MCR 155519 ACR 147743 [73871,155519] CTD 154 [77,231]
           CDV 138 [104,172] CLR0 10 CLR01 10 
  VBR-RT : MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CTD 707 [354,1060]
           CDV 691 [519,863] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  VBR-NRT: MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  UBR    : MCR 155519 
ATM0/1/3 , port ID 80103000
  CBR    : MCR 155519 ACR 147743 [73871,155519] CTD 154 [77,231]
           CDV 138 [104,172] CLR0 10 CLR01 10 
  VBR-RT : MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CTD 707 [354,1060]
           CDV 691 [519,863] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  VBR-NRT: MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  UBR    : MCR 155519 
ATM1/0/0 , port ID 80800000
  CBR    : MCR 155519 ACR 147743 [73871,155519] CTD 154 [77,231]
           CDV 138 [104,172] CLR0 10 CLR01 10 
  VBR-RT : MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CTD 707 [354,1060]
           CDV 691 [519,863] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  VBR-NRT: MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  UBR    : MCR 155519 
ATM1/0/3 , port ID 80803000
  CBR    : MCR 155519 ACR 147743 [73871,155519] CTD 154 [77,231]
           CDV 138 [104,172] CLR0 10 CLR01 10 
  VBR-RT : MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CTD 707 [354,1060]
           CDV 691 [519,863] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  VBR-NRT: MCR 155519 ACR 155519 [77759,155519] CLR0 8 CLR01 8 
  UBR    : MCR 155519 

show atm pnni scope

To display the mapping from organizational scope values—used at UNI interfaces—to PNNI scope (in terms of PNNI routing level indicators), use the show atm pnni scope privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni scope

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

This command groups ranges of organization scope values that map to the same PNNI level.
The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni scope privileged EXEC command.

Switch# show atm pnni scope 
UNI scope   PNNI Level
---------   ----------
(1  - 10)      56
(11 - 12)      48
(13 - 14)      32
(15 - 15)      0 
 
Scope mode: automatic

Related Commands
Command Description

scope map

Specifies the mapping from a range of organizational scope values (used at UNI interfaces) to a PNNI scope value (such as PNNI routing-level indicators).

scope mode

Specifies the configuration mode of the mapping from organizational scope values (used at UNI interfaces) to PNNI scope (such as PNNI routing-level indicators).

show atm pnni statistics

To display PNNI statistics, use the show atm pnni statistics EXEC command.

show atm pnni statistics call

Syntax Description

call

Displays the PNNI call statistics.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays statistics related to path selection, for example, number of crankbacks, number of calls set up, number of calls serviced by the background tree, on-demand calculation, and PTSE exchanges, such as number of incoming PTSEs per minute or number of PTSEs retransmitted.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni statistics call command.

Switch# show atm pnni statistics call
pnni routing call statistics since 00:04:58
 
                   total     cbr       rtvbr     nrtvbr    abr       ubr
source route reqs  137       0         0         0         0         137     
successful         110       0         0         0         0         110     
unsuccessful       27        0         0         0         0         27      
crankback reqs     8         0         0         0         0         8       
successful         8         0         0         0         0         8       
unsuccessful       0         0         0         0         0         0       
intraswitch routes 34        0         0         0         0         34      
on-demand attempts 0         0         0         0         0         0       
successful         0         0         0         0         0         0       
unsuccessful       0         0         0         0         0         0       
background lookups 76        0         0         0         0         76      
successful         76        0         0         0         0         76      
unsuccessful       0         0         0         0         0         0       
next port requests 81        0         0         0         0         81      
successful         66        0         0         0         0         66      
unsuccessful       15        0         0         0         0         15      
 
                   total     average
usecs in queue     74890     546     
usecs in dijkstra  0         0       
usecs in routing   38991     284 

Related Commands
Command Description

stopbits

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show atm pnni summary

To display summary information advertised by PNNI nodes, use the show atm pnni summary privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni summary [local-node node-index]

Syntax Description

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8. Use this option to restrict the display to a single node.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni summary command.

Switch# show atm pnni summary
 
Codes: Node - Node index advertising this summary
       Type - Summary type (INT - internal, EXT - exterior)
       Sup  - Suppressed flag (Y - Yes, N - No)
       Auto - Auto Summary flag (Y - Yes, N - No)
       Adv  - Advertised flag (Y - Yes, N - No)
       C.M  - Creation Mode (A - Auto, C - Configured).
 
 Node Type Sup Auto Adv  Summary Prefix
 ~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~ ~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  1   Int   N   Y    Y   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3e7b.3101/104
  1   Int   N   N    N   aa.bbcc/24 
  1   Int   Y   N    N   bb.ccdd/24 
  1   Ext   N   N    N   cc.ddee/24 
  1   Ext   Y   N    N   dd.eeff/24 
  2   Int   N   N    N   11.2233.4455.6677.88/64 
  3   Ext   Y   N    N   44.4444.444/36 

show atm pnni svcc-rcc

To display information about the SVCC RCCs on PNNI local nodes, use the show atm pnni svcc-rcc privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni svcc-rcc [local-node node-index | remote-node internal-node-num] [detail]

Syntax Description

node-index

Index number of the PNNI local node to which the command applies, in the range of 1 to 8.

internal-node-num

Internal node number of the PNNI remote node.

detail

Displays detailed SVCC RCC information; must be the last keyword.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays information about the SVCC RCCs on one or more PNNI local nodes.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni svcc-rcc command.

Switch# show atm pnni svcc-rcc
PNNI VCC-CSS(s) for local-node 2 (level=64):
  Rem-Node RCC Hello St Exit Port       VPI  VCI   HrzLns Rem-Node name
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  12       UP  2way_in  ATM0/1/1        0    33    1      T2.2.64
PNNI VCC-CSS(s) for local-node 3 (level=56):
  Rem-Node RCC Hello St Exit Port       VPI  VCI   HrzLns Rem-Node name
  ~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  11       UP  2way_in  ATM0/0/3        0    33    1      T5.3.56

Related Commands
Command Description

debug atm pnni

Enables PNNI debugging output.

show atm pnni interface

Displays specific information about an interface or lists the interfaces running on a PNNI node.

show atm pnni topology

To display the topology connectivity information from the internal topology database, use the
show atm pnni topology EXEC command.

show atm pnni topology [node node-name] [detail]

Syntax Description

node

Displays the topology information about a specific node identified by the node-name.

node-name

Identifies the node by a specific name.

detail

Displays more detailed information and is used as the last keyword of the command.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The topology as seen from the PNNI database can be displayed using the show atm pnni topology command. This command shows all accessible PNNI nodes in the network (through PTSEs) and any links to neighboring nodes.

PNNI nodes are represented internally by an 8-bit number. This command shows the mapping between the internal node number and the full 22-byte node ID.

A link status of "up" indicates the link is advertised by the node on both ends of a link. A link status of "2down" indicates the remote node (neighbor) did not advertise the link. Links that are down are not used for path selection by the current node.

Examples

The following example is partial output from the show atm pnni topology command.

Switch# show atm pnni topology
Node 1 (name: xxxxxx-1, type: xxxxxx, ios-version: xx.x)
Node ID..: 60:160:47.0091810000000060705BD9A5.0060705BD900.00
Node AESA:        47.0091810000000060705BD9A5.0060705BD900.01
Link Service Classes Advertised: CBR VBR-RT VBR-NRT ABR UBR
Leadership Priority: 60, Claims PGL: Yes, Transit Calls: Allowed
Ancestor: No, Nodal Representation: Simple
 
   status  link-type  local port     remote port    neighbor
   ~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~
   up      hrz        ATM0/0/2       ATM0/0/2       Switch
   up      hrz        ATM0/0/2.4     ATM0/0/2.4     Switch
   up      hrz        ATM0/0/0       ATM0/0/0       xxxxx18
   up      hrz        ATM0/1/3       ATM0/0/1       xxxxx18
   up      hrz        ATM0/0/1       ATM0/0/1       Switch
 
Node 2 (name: xxxxxx-1.2.36, type: xxxxxx, ios-version: 11.3)
Node ID..:  36:60:47.009181000000000000000000.0060705BD900.00
Node AESA:        47.0091810000000060705BD9A5.0060705BD900.02
Link Service Classes Advertised: CBR VBR-RT VBR-NRT ABR UBR
Leadership Priority: 0, Claims PGL: No, Transit Calls: Allowed
Ancestor: Yes, Nodal Representation: Simple
 
   status  link-type  local port     remote port    neighbor
   ~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~
   up      hrz        2D24009        2B70009        xxxxx27.2.36
   up      hrz        2D24000        2B70000        xxxxx27.2.36

show atm pnni traffic

To display information about traffic received on PNNI interfaces, use the show atm pnni traffic privileged EXEC command.

show atm pnni traffic

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm pnni traffic command.

Traffic statistics for local-node 1 (Level 60)
 
  Interface ID    PNNI bytes rcvd   bits/sec   Since     Rem Node(No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~   ~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  ATM0/0/0        7368              398        00:02:28  11 xxxxx18
  ATM0/0/1        7228              390        00:02:28  9 Switch
  ATM0/0/2        1300              70         00:02:28  9 Switch
  ATM0/0/2.4      1300              70         00:02:28  9 Switch
  ATM0/1/0        0                 0          00:02:33
  ATM0/1/3        1300              70         00:02:28  11 xxxxx18
 
Traffic statistics for local-node 2 (Level 36)
 
  Interface ID    PNNI bytes rcvd   bits/sec   Since     Rem Node(No./Name)
  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~   ~~~~~~~~  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  FFFFFFFF        4460              275        00:02:09  10 xxxxx27.2.36

show atm qos-defaults

To provide default values for QoS and display the table used, use the show atm qos-defaults EXEC command.

show atm qos-defaults

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally show atm qos.

11.2(5)

Modified: changed to show atm qos-defaults.

Examples

The following sample output from the show atm qos-defaults command displays the default QoS table.

Switch# show atm qos-defaults
Default QoS objective table:
	Max cell transfer delay (in microseconds): any cbr, any vbr-rt
	Peak-to-peak cell delay variation (in microseconds): any cbr, any vbr-rt
	Max cell loss ratio for CLP0 cells: any cbr, any vbr-rt, any vbr-nrt
Max cell loss ratio for CLP0+1 cells: any cbr, any vbr-rt, any vbr-nrt

Table 18-11 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-11: show atm qos-defaults Field Descriptions
Field Description

Max cell transfer delay

Is displayed in microseconds and applies to one of the following (any indicates the objective parameter is undefined):

  • cbr

  • vbr-rt

Peak-to-peak cell delay variation

Is displayed in microseconds and applies to one of the following (any indicates the objective parameter is undefined):

  • cbr

  • vbr-rt

Max cell loss ratio

Is displayed as a negative power of ten and applies to one of the following (any indicates the objective parameter is undefined):

  • cbr

  • vbr-rt

  • vbr-nrt

Related Commands
Command Description

atm qos default

Changes individual QoS objectives assigned to SVC setup messages entering the switch through UNI interfaces.

show atm resource

To display global resource manager configuration and status, use the show atm resource
EXEC command.

Catalyst 8540 MSR

show atm resource [module_id number]

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

show atm resource

Syntax Description

module_id number

Identification number of the module for which you want to display configuration data and status. (Catalyst 8540 MSR only).

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The output from this command normalizes the maximum cell and queue limit values to match what is installed in the hardware. Any values specified explicitly via configuration are preserved and can be displayed by viewing the configuration.

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example shows the results of using the show atm resource command with the switch processor feature card installed.

Switch# show atm resource
        Resource configuration:
            Over-subscription-factor 8  Sustained-cell-rate-margin-factor 1%
            Abr-mode:   EFCI 
            Service Category to Threshold Group mapping:
             cbr 1 vbr-rt 2 vbr-nrt 3 abr 4 ubr 5
           Threshold Groups:
            Module Group Max     Max Q  Min Q  Q thresholds  Cell  Name
              ID         cells   limit  limit  Mark Discard  count
                         instal  instal instal
            -----------------------------------------------------------
            1      1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           2       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           3       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           4       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           5       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           6       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           7       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================
           8       1     131071  63     63     25 %  87 %      0     cbr-default-tg
                   2     131071  127    127    25 %  87 %      0     vbrrt-default-tg
                   3     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     vbrnrt-default-tg
                   4     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     abr-default-tg
                   5     131071  511    31     25 %  87 %      0     ubr-default-tg
                   6     131071  1023   1023   25 %  87 %      0     well-known-vc-tg
           ============================================================

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example shows the results of using the show atm resource command with an FC-PCQ installed.

Switch# show atm resource
Resource configuration:
    Over-subscription-factor 8  Sustained-cell-rate-margin-factor 1%
    Abr-mode:   relative-rate
    Atm service-category-limit (in cells):
         64512 cbr 64512 vbr-rt 64512 vbr-nrt 64512 abr-ubr
Resource state:
    Cells per service-category:
         0 cbr 0 vbr-rt 0 vbr-nrt 0 abr-ubr
 

Related Commands
Command Description

atm abr-mode (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Used to select efci marking, relative-rate marking, or both.

atm pacing

Enables or changes the artificial limitation on interface output rate.

atm service-category-limit (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Sets the limits on the number of cells simultaneously allowed in the switch memory by type of output queue.

atm sustained-cell-rate-margin-factor

Changes the Sustained SCRMF, which dictates the weight given to PCR in computing the bandwidth used by VBR connections.

show atm rmon

To show the status of the ATM RMON MIB, use the show atm rmon EXEC command.

show atm rmon {host number | matrix number | stats number | status}

Syntax Description

host

Displays the ATM RMON host table port select group number information.

matrix

Displays the ATM RMON matrix table information.

stats

Displays the ATM RMON status table information.

status

Displays the ATM RMON resource status information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example shows ATM host table information for the specified port select group using the show atm rmon host EXEC command.

atmrmon-switch# show atm rmon host 1
PortSelGrp: 1   Collection: Enabled     Drops: 0
47.007900000000000000000000.00A03E000001.00
  CBR/VBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR in: calls: 0/123852  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00000C39C23F.00
  CBR/VBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR in: calls: 1/14  cells: 0 connTime: 3 days 21:18:29
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.00
  CBR/VBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/123852  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.01
  CBR/VBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR in: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
         out: calls: 1/14  cells: 0 connTime: 3 days 21:18:30
 

Table 18-12 describes some of the fields in the output from the show atm rmon command.


Table 18-12: show atm rmon Field Descriptions
Field Description

47.007900000000000000000000.00A03E000001.00

Address of the host.

CBR/VBR in: calls: 0/0

Total successful CBR/VBR calls, including calls currently connected.

cells: 0

Total active cells (in: A to everybody; out: everybody to A).

connTime: 0

Total connection time aggregated for multiple connections.

The following example shows ATM matrix table information for the specified port select group using the show atm rmon matrix EXEC command.

atmrmon-switch# show atm rmon matrix 1
PortSelGrp: 1   Collection: Enabled     Drops: 0
47.007900000000000000000000.00A03E000001.00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.00
  CBR/VBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00000C39C23F.00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.01
  CBR/VBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.00
47.007900000000000000000000.00A03E000001.00
  CBR/VBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR   calls: 0/123856  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00603E329221.01
47.00918100000000615C71A501.00000C39C23F.00
  CBR/VBR   calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR   calls: 1/14  cells: 0 connTime: 3 days 21:18:40
 

The show atm rmon stats command summarizes the statistics for the entire port select group, including non-monitored traffic. The following example shows ATM stats table information for
the specified port select group using the show atm rmon stats EXEC command.

atmrmon-switch# show atm rmon stats 1
PortSelGrp: 1   Collection: Enabled     Drops: 0
  CBR/VBR: calls: 0/0  cells: 0 connTime: 0 days 00:00:00
  ABR/UBR: calls: 1/123862  cells: 0 connTime: 3 days 21:18:19
 

The following example shows ATM status table information for the specified port select group,
and identifies which ATM interfaces were configured using the
atm rmon collect or the
snmp enable command.

atmrmon-switch# show atm rmon status
PortSelGrp: 1 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  4/no-max  Matrix:  4/no-max 
        ATM0/0/0        ATM0/0/2 
PortSelGrp: 2 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  0/no-max  Matrix:  0/no-max 
        ATM0/0/3 
PortSelGrp: 4 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  0/1  Matrix:  0/5 
        ATM0/0/1 
PortSelGrp: 5 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  0/no-max  Matrix:  0/no-max 
        ATM0/1/2 
PortSelGrp: 6 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  0/no-max  Matrix:  0/no-max 
        ATM0/1/3 
PortSelGrp: 7 Status: Enabled  Hosts:  0/no-max  Matrix:  0/no-max 
        ATM0 

As the following example shows, when using the status option, the configuration is maintained even when data collection is disabled.

atmrmon-switch# show atm rmon status
PortSelGrp: 1 Status: Disabled  Hosts: 0/10000    Matrix:  0/20000 
        ATM0/0/0        ATM0/0/2 
PortSelGrp: 2 Status: Disabled  Hosts: 0/10000    Matrix: 0/20000 
        ATM0/0/3 

Related Commands
Command Description

atm rmon collect

Adds a port to an ATM-RMON MIB port select group.

atm rmon enable

Enables ATM-RMON MIB data collection.

atm rmon portselgrp

Configures statics, host, and matrix collection parameters for ATM-RMON MIB.

show atm route

To display all local or network-wide reachable address prefixes in the switch router's ATM routing table, use the show atm route EXEC command.

show atm route [address-prefix [longer_prefix] | local]

Syntax Description

address-prefix

Displays all routing table entries for the specified prefix.

longer_prefix

Displays all routing tables entries for longer prefixes that match the specified address prefix.

local

Displays information about reachable addresses attached to this switch router only. This includes static routes configured on this switch router and routes learned using ILMI address registration.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the ATM address prefixes in the ATM routing table. Prefixes are tagged with either E or I. The E represents external prefixes that were configured using the atm route command. The I represents internal prefixes registered through ILMI or generated internally by the system for other purposes (for example; soft-PVP support). The prefix is displayed in the format prefix/length, where length indicates the length, in bits:

    1234.24/16 

The node represents the switch router that generated the route. Node 1 represents this switch router, while other numbers represent switch routers learned from the network. The port number, the protocol that generated the advertisement, the time stamp, and the port status (or summary information) are also displayed.

The link is down in the following cases:

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm route command.

Switch# show atm route
 
Codes: P - installing Protocol (S - Static, P - PNNI, R - Routing control),
       T - Type (I - Internal prefix, E - Exterior prefix, SE -
                 Summary Exterior prefix, SI - Summary Internal prefix)
                    ZE - Suppress Summary Exterior, ZI - Suppress Summary Internal)
 
P   T Node/Port        St Lev Prefix
~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
P   E 2   0            UP 0   default/0 
R  SI 1   0            UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201/104
R   I 1   ATM0/0/0     UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0000.0c40.81d2/152
R   I 1   ATM0/0/0     UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0000.0c40.81d3/152
R   I 1   ATM0/0/0     UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0000.0c40.81d4/152
R   I 1   ATM0/0/0     UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0000.0c40.81d5/152
R   I 1   ATM0     	 	 	 	 UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0060.3e7b.3201/152
R   I 1   ATM0     	 	 	 	 UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0060.3e7b.3202/152
R   I 1   ATM0     	 	 	 	 UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0060.3e7b.3203/152
R   I 1   ATM0     	 	 	 	 	UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.0060.3e7b.3204/152
R   I 1   ATM0     	 	 	 	 UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3E7B.3201.4000.0c/128
S   E 1   ATM0/0/1     UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0003.dde7.4601/104
P   I 2   0            UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0003.dde7.4601/104
P   I 3   0            UP 0   47.0091.8100.0000.0060.3e7b.3801/104

show atm routing-mode

To display the routing mode in which the switch is running, use the show atm routing-mode privileged EXEC command.

show atm routing-mode

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The routing mode of the switch is dynamic (PNNI) or static (IISP).

Examples

This following example is sample output from the show atm routing-mode command.

Switch# show atm routing-mode
Routing Mode: Dynamic (PNNI)

Related Commands
Command Description

atm routing-mode

Restricts the mode of ATM routing on an ATM switch router.

show atm signalling cug

To display all configured CUGs, use the show atm signalling cug EXEC command.

show atm signalling cug [interface atm card/subcard/port] [access | alias alias-name |
interlock-code ic]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

The card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

alias-name

The name of the CUG alias for the 24-byte interlock code.

ic

The interlock code number.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(8.0.1)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm signalling cug command.

Switch# show atm signalling cug
Interface:          ATM3/0/0
Cug Alias Name:
Cug Interlock Code: 00.000000000000000000000000.000000000000.00.01001111
Non preferential Cug
Permit Network to User Calls
Permit User to Network Calls

Related Commands
Command Description

atm signalling cug access

Restricts access to and from a closed user group.

atm signalling cug alias

Creates a CUG alias.

atm signalling cug assign

Assigns a CUG to an interface.

show atm signalling diagnostics

To display the configured filter entries and the collection call records for the ATM signalling diagnostics feature, use the show atm signalling diagnostics EXEC command.

show atm signalling diagnostics {filter | record | status filter-index}

Syntax Description

filter

Displays the information in the filter table.

record

Displays the call failure records.

status

Displays global diagnostics status.

filter-index

Displays all of the records filtered for each entry in the filter index specified. The filter-index can range from 1 to 50.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(8.0.1)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm signalling diagnostics filter command.

Switch# show atm signalling diagnostics filter
F I L T E R   I N D E X    1
--------------------------------
Scope: internal, Cast Type: p2mp
Connection Kind: soft-vc
Service Category:  CBR (Constant Bit Rate)  UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Clear Cause: 0, Initial TimerValue: 600
Max Records: 20,   NumMatches: 0,   Timer expiry: 600
Incoming Port: ATM0/0/1, Outgoing Port: ATM0/1/1
Calling Nsap Address:47.111122223333444455556666.777788889999.00
Calling Address Mask:FF.FFFFFF000000000000000000.000000000000.00
Called Nsap Address :47.111122223333444455556666.777788889999.01
Called Address Mask :FF.FFFFFF000000000000000000.000000000000.00
Status : active
 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm signalling diagnostics record 1 command.

Switch# show atm signalling diagnostics record 1
D I S P L A Y I N D E X    1
--------------------------------
Scope: internal,  Cast Type: p2p, Conn Indicator: Setup Failure
Connection Kind:   switched-vc
Service Category:  UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Clear Cause: 0x29,  Diagnostics: NULL
Incoming Port: ATM1/0/3,  Outgoing Port:ATM0/1/3
Calling-Address: 47.009181000000006011000000.470803040506.00
Calling-SubAddr: NULL
Called-Address : 47.009181000000006083C42C01.750203040506.00
Called-SubAddr : NULL
Crankback Type : No Crankback
DTL's :
NodeId:56:160:47.009181000000006011000000.006083AB9001.00 Port: 0/1/3:2
NodeId:56:160:47.00918100000000603E7B4101.00603E7B4101.00 Port: 0/0/0:2
NodeId:56:160:47.009181000000006083C42C01.006083C42C01.00 Port: 0

show atm signalling statistics

To show the ATM signalling statistics, use the show atm signalling statistics EXEC command.

show atm signalling statistics [interface atm card/subcard/port] [ie]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

ie

Displays the information element statistics.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

If no interface is specified, statistics for all interfaces are displayed.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm signalling statistics EXEC command with no interface specified.

Switch# show atm signalling statistics
Global Statistics:
Calls Throttled: 0
Max Crankback: 3
Max Connections Pending: 255
Max Connections Pending Hi Water Mark: 0
 
ATM 0:0   UP Time 00:00:32  # of int resets: 0
----------------------------------------------------------------
Terminating connections: 0       Soft VCs: 0
Active Transit PTP SVC: 0        Active Transit MTP SVC: 0     
Port requests:  0                Source route requests: 0
Conn-Pending: 0                  Conn-Pending High Water Mark: 0
Calls Throttled: 0               Max-Conn-Pending:  40  
 
          Messages:   Incoming  Outgoing
          ---------   --------  --------
PTP Setup Messages:        0         0
MTP Setup Messages:        0         0
  Release Messages:        0         0
  Restart Messages:        0         0
 
           Message:   Received Transmitted Tx-Reject Rx-Reject
Add Party Messages:          0           0         0         0
 
     Failure Cause:   Routing     CAC   Access-list    Addr-Reg  Misc-Failure
    Location Local:         0       0             0           0             0
   Location Remote:         0       0             0           0             0
 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm signalling statistics EXEC command for interface ATM 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm signalling statistics interface atm 0/0/0
ATM 0/0/0:0   UP Time 00:01:32  # of int resets: 0
----------------------------------------------------------------
Terminating connections: 0       Soft VCs: 0
Active Transit PTP SVC: 0        Active Transit MTP SVC: 0     
Port requests:  0                Source route requests: 0
Conn-Pending: 0                  Conn-Pending High Water Mark: 0
Calls Throttled: 0               Max-Conn-Pending:  40  
 
          Messages:   Incoming  Outgoing
          ---------   --------  --------
PTP Setup Messages:        0         0
MTP Setup Messages:        0         0
  Release Messages:        0         0
  Restart Messages:        0         0
 
           Message:   Received Transmitted Tx-Reject Rx-Reject
Add Party Messages:          0           0         0         0
 
     Failure Cause:   Routing     CAC   Access-list    Addr-Reg  Misc-Failure
    Location Local:         0       0             0           0             0
   Location Remote:         0       0             0           0             0

Related Commands
Command Description

clear atm signalling statistics

Clears existing ATM signalling statistics.

show atm snoop

To display the current port snooping configuration and actual register values for the highest
ATM interface, use the show atm snoop EXEC command.

show atm snoop

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the snoop test port name, snoop option (enabled or disabled), monitored port name (if enabled), and snoop direction (receive or transmit if enabled).

This command applies only to card 4, subcard 1, and the highest port allowed for the card. See the atm signalling vpci command for port information.

Examples

The following example displays the snoop configuration and actual register values for the highest interface.

Switch# show atm snoop
Snoop Test Port Name:  ATM3/1/3 (interface status=SNOOPING)
Snoop option:          (configured=enabled) (actual=enabled)
Monitored Port Name:   (configured=ATM3/0/0) (actual=ATM3/0/0)
Snoop direction:       (configured=receive) (actual=receive)
 

The following example shows that there is no card in the snoop test port card 4, subcard 1 position.

Switch# show atm snoop
 
Snoop Test Port Name:  ATM3/1/3 (port is bad or missing)
Snoop option:          (configured=disabled)
 

The following example shows that the snoop test port has been inserted and configured but is shut down.

Switch# show atm snoop
 
Snoop Test Port Name:  ATM3/1/3 (interface status=DOWN)(shutdown)
Snoop option:          (configured=enabled)
Monitored Port Name:   (configured=ATM3/1/0)
Snoop direction:       (configured=receive)

Related Commands
Command Description

atm signalling vpci

Specifies the value of VPCI to be carried in the signalling messages within a VP tunnel.

show atm snoop-vc

To display the current port snooping configuration and actual register values per-VC, use the
show atm snoop-vc EXEC command.

show atm snoop-vc [interface atm card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(8.0.1)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the snoop test port name, snoop option (enabled or disabled), monitored port name (if enabled), and snoop direction (receive or transmit if enabled).

Examples

The following example displays all VC snoop connections on the switch.

Switch# show atm snoop-vc
       Snooping                            Snooped                   
Interface    VPI   VCI   Type    X-Interface  X-VPI X-VCI Dir    Status
ATM0/0/2     0     5     PVC     ATM0/1/1     0     5     Rx     DOWN    
ATM0/0/2     0     16    PVC     ATM0/1/1     0     16    Rx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     5     PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     5     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     16    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     16    Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     18    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     18    Tx     UP      
ATM0/1/2     0     100   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     100   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     201   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     201   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     202   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     202   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     300   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     300   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     301   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     301   Tx     DOWN    
 

The following example displays all VC snoop connections on ATM interface 0/1/2.

Switch# show atm snoop-vc interface atm 0/1/2
      Snooping                            Snooped                   
Interface    VPI   VCI   Type    X-Interface  X-VPI X-VCI Dir    Status
ATM0/1/2     0     5     PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     5     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     16    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     16    Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     18    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     18    Tx     UP      
ATM0/1/2     0     100   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     100   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     201   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     201   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     202   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     202   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     300   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     300   Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0     301   PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     301   Tx     DOWN    

Examples

The following example displays VC snoop connection VPI 0, VCI 543 on ATM interface 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm snoop-vc interface atm 0/0/0 0 543
 
Interface: ATM0/0/0, Type: oc3suni 
VPI = 0  VCI = 543
Status: UP
Time-since-last-status-change: 00:00:19
Connection-type: PVC 
Cast-type: snooping-leaf
Packet-discard-option: enabled
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Wrr weight: 32
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface: ATM0, Type: ATM Swi/Proc 
Cross-connect-VPI = 0 
Cross-connect-VCI = 42
Cross-connect-UPC: pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration: disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state:  Not-applicable
Threshold Group: 6, Cells queued: 0
Rx cells: 0, Tx cells: 4
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Rx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 424
Rx scr-clp01: 424
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: 50
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Tx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 424
Tx scr-clp01: 424
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: 50

Related Commands
Command Description

atm snoop-vc

Sets the current port snooping configuration and actual register values per-VC.

show atm snoop-vp

To display the current port snooping configuration and actual register values per-VP, use the
show atm snoop-vp EXEC command.

show atm snoop-vp [interface atm card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(8.0.1)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the snoop test port name, snoop option (enabled or disabled), monitored port name (if enabled), and snoop direction (receive or transmit if enabled).

Examples

The following example displays all VP snoop connections on the switch.

Switch# show atm snoop-vp
       Snooping                            Snooped                   
Interface    VPI  Type    X-Interface  X-VPI Dir    Status
ATM0/0/2     0    PVC     ATM0/1/1     0     Rx     DOWN    
ATM0/0/2     0    PVC     ATM0/1/1     0     Rx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     UP      
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    
ATM0/1/2     0    PVC     ATM0/0/1     0     Tx     DOWN    

Related Commands
Command Description

atm snoop-vp

Sets the current port snooping configuration and actual register values per-VP.

show atm status

To display current information about ATM interfaces and the number of installed connections, use the show atm status EXEC command.

show atm status

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following is sample output from the show atm status command.

Switch# show atm status
NUMBER OF INSTALLED CONNECTIONS: (P2P=Point to Point, P2MP=Point to MultiPoint)
 
Type       PVCs  SoftPVCs      SVCs      PVPs  SoftPVPs      SVPs      Total
P2P          11         0         0         1         0         0         12
P2MP          0         0         0         0         0         0          0
                                    TOTAL INSTALLED CONNECTIONS =         12
 
PER-INTERFACE STATUS SUMMARY AT 14:56:19 UTC Mon Mar 25 1997:
   Interface      IF         Admin  Auto-Cfg    ILMI Addr     SSCOP    Hello
     Name       Status      Status    Status    Reg State     State    State
------------- -------- ------------ -------- ------------ --------- --------
ATM0            	 	 	 	 UP           up      n/a   Restarting      Idle      n/a
ATM3/0/0            UP           up     done  UpAndNormal    Active  2way_in
ATM3/0/0.25       DOWN     shutdown  waiting          n/a      Idle      n/a
ATM3/0/0.26         UP           up  waiting  WaitDevType      Idle      n/a
ATM3/0/1          DOWN         down  waiting          n/a      Idle      n/a
ATM3/0/2            UP           up     done  UpAndNormal    Active  2way_in
ATM3/0/3          DOWN         down  waiting          n/a      Idle      n/a

show atm traffic

To display the ATM layer traffic information for all of the ATM interfaces, use the show atm traffic EXEC command.

show atm traffic

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays input and output cell counts and a 5-minute transfer rate for all
ATM interfaces.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm traffic command.

Switch# show atm traffic
Interface ATM0
Rx cells: 0
Tx cells: 0
5 minute input rate: 0 bits/sec, 0 cells/sec
5 minute output rate: 0 bits/sec, 0 cells/sec
 
Interface ATM3/0/0
Rx cells: 0
Tx cells: 0
5 minute input rate: 0 bits/sec, 0 cells/sec
5 minute output rate: 0 bits/sec, 0 cells/sec

Related Commands
Command Description

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show atm vc

To display the ATM layer connection information about the virtual connection, use the show atm vc EXEC command.

show atm vc
show atm vc interface
{atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#] [vpi vci] [detail]
show atm vc [cast-type cast-type] [conn-type conn-type] [interface {atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#]]
show atm vc traffic [interface {atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#] [vpi vci]]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the interface.

.vpt#

Virtual path tunnel identifier to display.

vpi vci

Virtual path identifier and virtual channel identifier to display.

detail

Displays the Rx cell drops and queued-cells for all VCs on a given interface.

cast-type

Specifies the cast type as multipoint-to-point (mp2p), point-to-multipoint (p2mp), or point-to-point (p2p).

conn-type

Specifies the connection type as pvc, soft-vc, svc, or tvc.

traffic

Displays the virtual channel cell traffic.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example shows a display for the vc interface.

Switch# show atm vc
Interface    VPI   VCI   Type    X-Interface  X-VPI X-VCI  Encap Status
ATM0/1/0     0     5      PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     52    QSAAL  UP
ATM0/1/0     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     32    ILMI   UP
ATM0/1/0     0     18     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     73    PNNI   UP
ATM0/1/1     0     5      PVC     ATM0    	 	 	 	 	 0     53    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM0/1/1     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     33    ILMI   DOWN
ATM0/1/2     0     5      PVC     ATM0    	 	 	 	 	 0     54    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM0/1/2     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     34    ILMI   DOWN
ATM0/1/3     0     5      PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     55    QSAAL  UP
ATM0/1/3     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     35    ILMI   UP
ATM1/0/0     0     5      PVC     ATM0    	 	 	 	 	 0     56    QSAAL  UP
ATM1/0/0     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     36    ILMI   UP
ATM1/0/1     0     5      PVC     ATM0    	 	 	 	 		 0     57    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM1/0/1     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     37    ILMI   DOWN
ATM1/0/2     0     5      PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     58    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM1/0/2     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     38    ILMI   DOWN
ATM1/0/3     0     5      PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     59    QSAAL  UP
ATM1/0/3     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     39    ILMI   UP
ATM1/0/3     0     18     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     72    PNNI   UP
ATM1/1/0     0     5      PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     60    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM1/1/0     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     40    ILMI   DOWN
ATM1/1/1     0     5      PVC     ATM0    	 	 	 	 	 0     61    QSAAL  DOWN
ATM1/1/1     0     16     PVC     ATM0     	 	 	 	 0     41    ILMI   DOWN
 

Table 18-13 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-13: show atm vc Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the specified ATM interface.

VPI

Displays the number of the virtual path identifier.

VCI

Displays the number of the virtual channel identifier.

Type

Displays the type of interface for the specified ATM interface.

X-Interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the cross-connected value for the ATM interface.

X-VPI

Displays the number of the cross-connected value of the virtual path identifier.

X-VCI

Displays the number of the cross-connected value of the virtual channel identifier.

Encap

Displays the type of connection on the interface.

Status

Displays the current state of the specified ATM interface.

Examples

The following example displays the output for interface ATM 1/0/0 with and without the detail keyword which shows the Rx-cel-drops and the Rx-queued-cells:

Swtich# show atm vc traffic interface atm 1/0/0
Interface         VPI  VCI   Type      rx-cell-cnts     tx-cell-cnts
ATM-P1/0/0        0    32    PVC               1                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    33    PVC               0                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    34    PVC               0                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    35    PVC               0                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    37    PVC               0                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    39    PVC               0                0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    48    PVC               0                0
Switch# show atm vc traffic interface atm 1/0/0 detail
Interface         VPI  VCI   Type      rx-cell    tx-cell rx-cell-drop rx-cell-qued
ATM-P1/0/0        0    32    PVC             1          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    33    PVC             0          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    34    PVC             0          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    35    PVC             0          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    37    PVC             0          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    39    PVC             0          0           0          0
ATM-P1/0/0        0    48    PVC             0          0           0          0

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example shows the interface information for ATM 1/0/0, with VPI 0, VCI 5, and packet discard enabled, using an FC-PCQ.

Switch# show atm vc interface atm 1/0/0 1 100
 
Interface: ATM1/0/0, Type: oc3suni
VPI = 0  VCI = 5
Status: UP
Time-since-last-status-change: 1d18h
Connection-type: PVC
Cast-type: point-to-point
Packet-discard-option: enabled
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface: ATM0, Type: ATM Swi/Proc
Cross-connect-VPI = 0
Cross-connect-VCI = 58
Cross-connect-UPC: pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration: disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state:  Not-applicable
Encapsulation: AALQSAAL
Rx cells: 32520, Tx cells: 32520
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Rx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 424
Rx scr-clp01: 424
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: none
Rx       mbs: 50
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Tx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 424
Tx scr-clp01: 424
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: 50
Crc Errors:0, Sar Timeouts:0, OverSizedSDUs:0
BufSzOvfl:  Small:0, Medium:0, Big:0, VeryBig:0, Large:0

Examples

The following example shows the interface information for ATM 1/0/0, with VPI 1, VCI 100 and packet discard disabled, using the switch processor feature card.

Switch# show atm vc interface atm 1/0/0 1 100
 
Interface: ATM1/0/0, Type: oc12suni 
VPI = 1 VCI = 100
Status: UP
Time-since-last-status-change: 02:55:48
Connection-type: PVC 
Cast-type: point-to-point
Packet-discard-option: disabled
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Wrr weight: 32
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface: ATM0/1/1, Type: oc3suni 
Cross-connect-VPI = 1 
Cross-connect-VCI = 100
Cross-connect-UPC: pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration: disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state:  Not-applicable
Threshold Group: 5, Cells queued: 0
Rx cells: 0, Tx cells: 0
Tx Clp0:0,  Tx Clp1: 0
Rx Clp0:0,  Rx Clp1: 0
Rx Upc Violations:0, Rx cell drops:0
Rx Clp0 q full drops:0, Rx Clp1 qthresh drops:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Rx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Rx scr-clp01: none
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: none
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Tx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Tx scr-clp01: none
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: none
 

Examples

The following example shows the interface information for ATM 1/0/0, with VPI 0, VCI 5, and packet discard enabled, using the FC-PFQ.

Switch# show atm vc interface atm 1/0/0 0 5  
 
Interface: ATM1/0/0, Type: oc12suni 
VPI = 0  VCI = 5
Status: UP
Time-since-last-status-change: 03:02:32
Connection-type: PVC 
Cast-type: point-to-point
Packet-discard-option: enabled
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Wrr weight: 32
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface: ATM0, Type: ATM Swi/Proc 
Cross-connect-VPI = 0 
Cross-connect-VCI = 45
Cross-connect-UPC: pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration: disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state:  Not-applicable
Encapsulation: AALQSAAL
Threshold Group: 6, Cells queued: 0
Rx cells: 2302, Tx cells: 2301
Tx Clp0:2301,  Tx Clp1: 0
Rx Clp0:2302,  Rx Clp1: 0
Rx Upc Violations:0, Rx cell drops:0
Rx pkts:0, Rx pkt drops:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Rx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 424
Rx scr-clp01: 424
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: 50
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 3
Tx service-category: VBR-RT (Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 424
Tx scr-clp01: 424
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: 50
Crc Errors:0, Sar Timeouts:0, OverSizedSDUs:0
BufSzOvfl:  Small:0, Medium:0, Big:0, VeryBig:0, Large:0
 

Examples

The following example shows the last explicit path status for a soft VC. Note that the first listed explicit path, new_york.path2, shows an unreachable result, but the second explicit path, new_york.path1, has succeeded.

Switch# show atm vc interface atm0/1/3 0 40
VPI = 0 VCI = 40
Status:UP
Time-since-last-status-change:00:00:03
Connection-type:SoftVC 
Cast-type:point-to-point
 Soft vc location:Source
 Remote ATM address:47.0091.8100.0000.0060.705b.d900.4000.0c81.9000.00
 Remote VPI:0 
 Remote VCI:40
 Soft vc call state:Active
 Number of soft vc re-try attempts:0 
 First-retry-interval:5000 milliseconds
 Maximum-retry-interval:60000 milliseconds
 Aggregate admin weight:15120
 TIME STAMPS:
 Current Slot:4
  Outgoing Release   February 26 17:02:45.940
  Incoming Rel comp  February 26 17:02:45.944
  Outgoing Setup     February 26 17:02:45.948
  Incoming Connect   February 26 17:02:46.000
  Outgoing Setup     February 23 11:54:17.587
  Incoming Release   February 23 11:54:17.591
  Outgoing Setup     February 23 11:54:37.591
  Incoming Release   February 23 11:54:37.611
  Outgoing Setup     February 23 11:55:17.611
  Incoming Connect   February 23 11:55:17.655
 
 Explicit-path 1:result=6 PNNI_DEST_UNREACHABLE  (new_york.path2)
 Explicit-path 2:result=1 PNNI_SUCCESS  (new_york.path1)
 Only-explicit
Packet-discard-option:disabled
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC):pass
Number of OAM-configured connections:0
OAM-configuration:disabled
OAM-states: Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface:ATM0/0/3.4, Type:oc3suni 
Cross-connect-VPI = 4
Cross-connect-VCI = 35
Cross-connect-UPC:pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration:disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state: Not-applicable
Rx cells:0, Tx cells:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index:1
Rx service-category:UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01:7113539
Rx scr-clp01:none
Rx mcr-clp01:none
Rx      cdvt:1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs:none
Tx connection-traffic-table-index:1
Tx service-category:UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01:7113539
Tx scr-clp01:none
Tx mcr-clp01:none
Tx      cdvt:none
Tx       mbs:none
 
 

Table 18-14 describes the fields shown in the displays.


Table 18-14: show atm vc interface ATM Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

VPI/VCI

Displays the number of the virtual path identifier and the virtual channel identifier.

Status

Displays the type of interface for the specified ATM interface.

Time-since-last-status-change

Displays the time elapsed since the last status change.

Connection-type

Displays the type of connection for the specified ATM interface.

Cast-type

Displays the type of cast for the specified ATM interface.

Packet-discard-option

Displays the state of the packet-discard option; enabled or disabled.

Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC)

Displays the state of the UPC.

Wrr weight

Weighted round-robin weight.

Number of OAM-configured connections

Displays the number of connections configured by OAM.

OAM-configuration

Displays the state of the OAM configuration; enabled or disabled.

OAM-states

Displays the status of the OAM state; applicable or not applicable.

Cross-connect-interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the cross-connected ATM.

Cross-connect-VPI

Displays the number of the cross-connected virtual path identifier.

Cross-connect-VCI

Displays the number of the cross-connected virtual channel identifier.

Cross-connect-UPC

Displays the state of the cross-connected UPC; pass or not pass.

Cross-connect OAM-configuration

Displays the state of the cross-connected OAM configuration; enabled or disabled.

Cross-connect OAM-state

Displays the status of the cross-connected OAM state; applicable or not applicable.

Encapsulation

Encapsulation type.

Threshold Group/Cells queued

Displays the threshold group number and number of cells queued.

Rx cells/Tx cells

Displays the number of cells transmitted and received.

Tx Clp0/Tx Clp1

Displays the number of CLP=0 and CLP=1 cells transmitted.

Rx Clp0/Rx Clp1

Displays the number of CLP=0 and CLP=1 cells received.

Rx Upc Violations

Displays the number of UPC violations detected in the receive cell stream.

Rx cell drops

Displays the number of cells received and then dropped.

Rx pkts

Displays the number of packets received.

Rx pkt drops

Displays the number of packets dropped.

RxClp0q full drops

Displays the number of CLP=0 cells received and then dropped for exceeding the input queue size.

Rx Clp1 qthresh drops

Displays the number of CLP=1 cells received and then dropped for exceeding the discard threshold of the input queue.

Rx connection-traffic-table-index

Displays the receive connection-traffic-table-index.

Rx service-category

Displays the receive service category.

Rx pcr-clp01

Displays the receive peak cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx scr-clp01

Displays the receive sustained cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx mcr-clp01

Displays the receive minimum cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx cdvt

Displays the receive cell delay variation tolerance.

Rx mbs

Displays the receive minimum burst size.

Tx connection-traffic-table-index

Displays the transmit connection-traffic-table-index.

Tx service-category

Displays the transmit service category.

Tx pcr-clp01

Displays the transmit peak cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Tx scr-clp01

Displays the transmit sustained cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Tx mcr-clp01

Displays the transmit minimum cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Tx cdvt

Displays the transmit cell delay variation tolerance.

Tx mbs

Displays the transmit minimum burst size.

Crc error

Displays the number of cyclic redundancy check errors.

Sar Timeouts

Displays the number of segmentation and reassembly timeouts.

OverSizedSDUs

Displays the number of oversized service data units.

BufSzOvfl

Displays the number of buffer size overflows.

Examples

The following example shows how to enter the command for a display of the cast type, point-to-multipoint, and connection type soft-vc on ATM interface 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm vc cast-type p2mp conn-type soft-vc interface ATM 0/0/0
 

The following example shows how to enter the command for a display of the connection type SVC and cast-type point-to-point on ATM interface 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm vc conn-type svc cast-type p2p interface ATM 0/0/0
 

The following example shows the transmit and receive cell count on ATM interface 1/0/0, with VPI 1 and VPI 100.

Switch# show atm vc traffic interface atm 1/0/0 1 100
Interface    VPI     VCI      Type      rx-cell-cnts     tx-cell-cnts
ATM1/0/0     1       100       PVC                0                0

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pvc

Used to create a PVC.

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show atm status

Displays current information about ATM interfaces and the number of installed connections.

show atm vc signalling

Displays the ATM VC signalling activity.

show atm vc signalling

To show the ATM VC signalling activity, use the show atm vc signalling EXEC command.

show atm vc signalling [interface atm card/subcard/port] [cast-type p2p | p2mp] [detail]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

cast-type

Displays the payload type protocol and the message type protocol information for a point-to-point (p2p) or point-to-multipoint (p2mp) connection.

detail

Displays detailed information about a connection, including type of connection, calling party, current and previous state, and how the call was initiated.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm vc signalling EXEC command.

Switch# show atm vc signalling
 
Interface  VPI   VCI   CallRef  X-Interface VPI    VCI     CallRef  Type 
*ATM0/0/0  0     32       1       ATM1/0/0   0     32       1       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     33       2       ATM1/0/0   0     33       2       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     34       3       ATM1/0/0   0     34       3       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     35       4       ATM1/0/0   0     35       4       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     36       5       ATM1/0/0   0     36       5       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     37       6       ATM1/0/0   0     37       6       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     38       7       ATM1/0/0   0     38       7       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     39       8       ATM1/0/0   0     39       8       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     40       9       ATM1/0/0   0     40       9       MTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     41       10      ATM1/0/0   0     41       10      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     42       11      ATM1/0/0   0     42       11      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     43       12      ATM1/0/0   0     43       12      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     44       13      ATM1/0/0   0     44       13      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     45       14      ATM1/0/0   0     45       14      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     46       15      ATM1/0/0   0     46       15      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     47       16      ATM1/0/0   0     47       16      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     48       17      ATM1/0/0   0     48       17      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     49       18      ATM1/0/0   0     49       18      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     50       19      ATM1/0/0   0     50       19      PTP
 

The following example is sample output from the show atm vc signalling EXEC command using the p2p option.

Switch# show atm vc signalling cast-type p2p
Interface  VPI   VCI   CallRef  X-Interface VPI    VCI     CallRef  Type 
 ATM0  	 	 	 	 0     67       5        ATM0/1/1  0     32       1       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     32       1        ATM1/0/0  0     32       1       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     33       2        ATM1/0/0  0     33       2       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     34       3        ATM1/0/0  0     34       3       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     35       4        ATM1/0/0  0     35       4       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     36       5        ATM1/0/0  0     36       5       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     37       6        ATM1/0/0  0     37       6       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     38       7        ATM1/0/0  0     38       7       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     39       8        ATM1/0/0  0     39       8       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     40       9        ATM1/0/0  0     40       9       PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     41       10       ATM1/0/0  0     41       10      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     42       11       ATM1/0/0  0     42       11      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     43       12       ATM1/0/0  0     43       12      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     44       13       ATM1/0/0  0     44       13      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     45       14       ATM1/0/0  0     45       14      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     46       15       ATM1/0/0  0     46       15      PTP
*ATM0/0/0  0     47       16       ATM1/0/0  0     47       16      PTP
 

The following sample shows the output using the detail and cast-type options with the show atm vc signalling command.

Switch# show atm vc signalling detail cast-type p2mp
(0/0/0:0  0,36 - 0005) p2p
    From: 47.222200000000000000000 
    remote, Rcvd Connect Ack -> Active(N10),
 
(1/0/0:0  0,36 - 0005) p2p
      To: 47.111100000000000000000 
      local , Req Connect Ack -> Active(N10),
 
 

Table 18-15 describes the fields from the show atm vc signalling detail command.


Table 18-15: show atm vc signalling detail Field Descriptions
Field Description

0/0/0

The interface number.

0,36

The VCI/VCI number.

0005

The call reference number.

p2p

The type of connection.

From

The origin of the calling party.

remote/local

The call was initiated either remotely or locally.

Rcvd Connect Ack

The previous state of the call.

Active

The current state of the call.

show atm vp

To display the ATM layer connection information about the virtual path, use the show atm vp
EXEC command.

show atm vp

show atm vp interface {atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#] [vpi vci]

show atm vp cast-type cast-type [conn-type conn-type] [interface {atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#]]

show atm vp traffic [interface {atm | atm-p} card/subcard/port[.vpt#] [vpi vci]]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the interface.

.vpt#

Virtual path tunnel identifier.

vpi vci

Virtual path identifier and virtual channel identifier to display.

cast-type

Specifies the cast type as point-to-multipoint (p2mp) or point-to-point (p2p).

conn-type

Specifies the connection type as pvc, soft-vc, or svc.

traffic

Displays the virtual channel cell traffic.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm vp command.

Switch# show atm vp
Interface    VPI    Type  X-Interface     X-VPI     Status
ATM3/1/1     1       SVP     ATM3/1/2     200       UP             
ATM3/1/1     2       SVP     ATM3/1/2     201       UP             
ATM3/1/1     3       SVP     ATM3/1/2     202       UP             
ATM3/1/2     200     SoftVP  ATM3/1/1     1         UP             
ATM3/1/2     201     SoftVP  ATM3/1/1     2         UP             
ATM3/1/2     202     SoftVP  ATM3/1/1     3         UP             
ATM3/1/2     255     SoftVP  NOT CONNECTED  
 

The following is sample output from the show atm vp command for ATM 3/1/1.

Switch# show atm vp interface atm 3/1/1
Interface    VPI    Type  X-Interface     X-VPI     Status
ATM3/1/1     1       SVP     ATM3/1/2     200       UP             
ATM3/1/1     2       SVP     ATM3/1/2     201       UP             
ATM3/1/1     3       SVP     ATM3/1/2     202       UP             
 

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show atm vp command for ATM 0/1/0 and VP 18 with an FC-PCQ installed.

Switch# show atm vp interface atm 0/1/0 18
 
Interface: ATM0/1/0, Type: oc3suni
VPI = 18
Status: UP
Time-since-last-status-change: 16:13:58
Connection-type: PVP
Cast-type: point-to-point
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Number of OAM-configured connections: 52
OAM-configuration: Seg-loopback-on Ais-on
OAM-states:  OAM-Up
OAM-Loopback-Tx-Interval: 5
Cross-connect-interface: ATM0/1/2, Type: oc3suni
Cross-connect-VPI = 18
Cross-connect-UPC: pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration: Seg-loopback-on Ais-on
Cross-connect OAM-state:  OAM-Up
OAM-Loopback-Tx-Interval: 5
Rx cells: 197554, Tx cells: 151430
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Rx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Rx scr-clp01: none
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: none
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Tx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Tx scr-clp01: none
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: none
 

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show atm vp command for ATM 0/0/1 and VP 51 with the switch processor feature card installed.

Switch# show atm vp interface atm 0/0/1 51
 
Interface: ATM0/0/1, Type: oc3suni
VPI = 51
Status: TUNNEL
Time-since-last-status-change: 3d02h
Connection-type: PVP
Cast-type: point-to-point
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Wrr weight: 32
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Threshold Group: 5, Cells queued: 0
Rx cells: 0, Tx cells: 0
Tx Clp0:0,  Tx Clp1: 0
Rx Clp0:0,  Rx Clp1: 0
Rx Upc Violations:0, Rx cell drops:0
Rx Clp0 q full drops:0, Rx Clp1 qthresh drops:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Rx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Rx scr-clp01: none
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: none
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 1
Tx service-category: UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 7113539
Tx scr-clp01: none
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: none
 
 

Table 18-16 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-16: show atm vp interface atm Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Displays the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

VPI/VCI

Displays the number of the virtual path identifier and the virtual channel identifier.

Status

Displays the type of interface for the specified ATM interface.

Time-since-last-status-change

Displays the time elapsed since the last status change.

Connection-type

Displays the type of connection for the specified ATM interface.

Cast-type

Displays the type of cast for the specified ATM interface.

Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC)

Displays the state of the UPC.

Number of OAM-configured connections

Displays the amount of connections configured by OAM.

OAM-configuration

Displays the state of the OAM configuration; enabled or disabled.

OAM-states

Displays the status of the OAM state; applicable or not applicable.

OAM Loopback-Tx-Interval

Displays the OAM loopback transmit interval.

Cross-connect-interface

Displays the cross-connect interface number.

Cross-connect-VPI

Displays the cross-connect VPI number.

Cross-connect-UPC

Displays the cross-connect UPC status.

Cross-connect OAM-configuration

Displays the configuration of the OAM in the cross-connect half-leg.

Cross-connect OAM-state

Displays the state of the OAM cross-connect half-leg.

OAM-Loopback-Tx-Interval

Displays the OAM loopback transmit interval.

Rx cells/Tx cells

Displays the number of cells transmitted and received.

Rx connection-traffic-table-index

Displays the receive connection-traffic-table-index.

Rx service-category

Displays the receive service category.

Rx pcr-clp01

Displays the receive peak cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx scr-clp01

Displays the receive sustained cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx mcr-clp01

Displays the receive minimum cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Rx cdvt

Displays the receive cell delay variation tolerance.

Rx mbs

Displays the receive maximum burst size.

Tx connection-traffic-table-index

Displays the transmit connection-traffic-table-index.

Tx service-category

Displays the transmit service category.

Tx pcr-clp01

Displays the transmit peak cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Tx scr-clp01

Displays the transmit sustained cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps).

Tx mcr-clp01

Displays the transmit minimum cell rate for clp01 cells (kbps)

Tx cdvt

Displays the transmit cell delay variation tolerance.

Tx mbs

Displays the transmit maximum burst size.

The following example shows how to display the cast type, point-to-multipoint, and connection type soft-VC information on ATM interface 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm vp cast-type p2mp conn-type soft-vc interface atm 0/0/0
 

The following example shows how display the connection type SVC and cast-type point-to-point information on ATM interface 0/0/0.

Switch# show atm vp conn-type svc cast-type p2p interface atm 0/0/0

Related Commands
Command Description

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show atm status

Displays current information about ATM interfaces and the number of installed connections.

show bootflash:

To display information about the bootflash: file system, use the show bootflash: EXEC command.

show bootflash: [all | chips | filesys]

Syntax Description

all

Displays all flash information.

chips

Displays flash chip information.

filesys

Displays file system status information.

Defaults

Displays information about files in the file system.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally show boot.

12.0(3c)W5(9)

Modified: Changed to show bootflash:

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show boot command displaying chip information.

Switch# show bootflash: chips
******** RSP Internal Flash Bank -- Intel Chips ********
Flash SIMM Reg: 3424
  Flash SIMM PRESENT
  2 Banks
  Bank Size = 4M
  HW Rev = 4
 
Flash Status Registers: Bank 0
  Intelligent ID Code  : 89898989 A2A2A2A2
  Status Reg: 80808080
 
Flash Status Registers: Bank 1
  Intelligent ID Code  : 89898989 A2A2A2A2
  Status Reg: 80808080
 

Related Commands
Command Description

boot

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

bert (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Checks the bit errors on a line for a particular interval.

boot system

Specifies the system image that the switch loads at startup.

show version

Displays the system hardware configuration, software version, and names and sources of configuration files and boot images.

show buffers

Use the show buffers EXEC command to display statistics for the buffer pools on the network server.

show buffers [address hex-addr | all | assigned | free | input-interface interface-type card/subcard/port | old | pool pool-name [dump | header | packet]] | [failures]

Syntax Description

hex-addr

Address, in hexadecimal notation, of the buffer to display.

all

Displays all buffers.

assigned

Displays the buffers in use.

free

Displays the buffers available for use.

interface-type

Specifies an input interface as atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, or null.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the interface.

old

Displays buffers older than one minute.

pool-name

Specifies the name of a buffer pool to use.

dump

Shows the buffer header and all data in the display.

header

Shows the buffer header only in the display.

packet

Shows the buffer header and packet data in the display.

failures

Displays buffer allocation failures.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show buffers command with no arguments, showing all buffer pool information.

Switch# show buffers
Buffer elements:
     500 in free list (500 max allowed)
     19874 hits, 0 misses, 0 created
 
Public buffer pools:
Small buffers, 104 bytes (total 120, permanent 120):
     120 in free list (20 min, 250 max allowed)
     18937 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created
     0 failures (0 no memory)
Middle buffers, 600 bytes (total 100, permanent 100):
     100 in free list (10 min, 200 max allowed)
     58957 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created
     0 failures (0 no memory)
Big buffers, 1524 bytes (total 20, permanent 20):
     20 in free list (5 min, 200 max allowed)
     1123 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created
     0 failures (0 no memory)
VeryBig buffers, 4520 bytes (total 10, permanent 10):
     10 in free list (0 min, 300 max allowed)
     0 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created
     0 failures (0 no memory)
Large buffers, 5024 bytes (total 0, permanent 0):
     0 in free list (0 min, 20 max allowed)
0 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created 0 failures (0 no memory) Huge buffers, 18024 bytes (total 0, permanent 0): 0 in free list (0 min, 13 max allowed) 0 hits, 0 misses, 0 trims, 0 created 0 failures (0 no memory) Interface buffer pools: AAL5_Small buffers, 512 bytes (total 512, permanent 512): 0 in free list (0 min, 512 max allowed) 512 hits, 0 misses 512 max cache size, 512 in cache AAL5_Medium buffers, 4096 bytes (total 128, permanent 128): 0 in free list (0 min, 128 max allowed) 128 hits, 0 misses 128 max cache size, 128 in cache AAL5_Large buffers, 9216 bytes (total 64, permanent 64): 0 in free list (0 min, 64 max allowed) 64 hits, 0 misses 64 max cache size, 64 in cache

Table 18-17 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-17: show buffers Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Buffer elements

Buffer elements are small structures used as placeholders for buffers in internal operating system queues. Buffer elements are used when a buffer might need to be on more than one queue.

Free list

Total number of the currently unallocated buffer elements.

Max allowed

Maximum number of buffers that are available for allocation.

Hits

Count of successful attempts to allocate a buffer when needed.

Misses

Count of buffer allocation attempts that resulted in growing the buffer pool to allocate a buffer.

Created

Count of new buffers created to satisfy buffer allocation attempts when the available buffers in the pool have already been allocated.

Small buffers

Buffers that are 104 bytes long.

Middle buffers

Buffers that are 600 bytes long.

Big buffers

Buffers that are 1524 bytes long.

VeryBig buffers

Buffers that are 4520 bytes long.

Large buffers

Buffers that are 5024 bytes long.

Huge buffers

Buffers that are 18024 bytes long.

Total

Total number of this type of buffer.

Permanent

Number of these buffers that are permanent.

Free list

Number of available or unallocated buffers in that pool.

Min

Minimum number of free or unallocated buffers in the buffer pool.

Max allowed

Maximum number of free or unallocated buffers in the buffer pool.

Hits

Count of successful attempts to allocate a buffer when needed.

Misses

Count of buffer allocation attempts that resulted in growing the buffer pool in order to allocate a buffer.

Trims

Count of buffers released to the system because they were not being used. This field is displayed only for dynamic buffer pools, not interface buffer pools, which are static.

Created

Count of new buffers created in response to misses. This field is displayed only for dynamic buffer pools, not interface buffer pools, which are static.

Total

Total number of this type of buffer.

Permanent

Number of these buffers that are permanent.

Free list

Number of available or unallocated buffers in that pool.

Min

Minimum number of free or unallocated buffers in the buffer pool.

Max allowed

Maximum number of free or unallocated buffers in the buffer pool.

Hits

Count of successful attempts to allocate a buffer when needed.

Fall backs

Count of buffer allocation attempts that resulted in falling back to the smallest public buffer pool that is at least as big as the interface buffer pool.

Max Cache Size

Maximum number of buffers from interface pool that can be in the buffer pool's cache.
Each interface buffer pool has its own cache. These are not additional permanent buffers; they come from the interface's buffer pools. Some interfaces place all buffers from the interface pool into the cache. In this case, it is normal for the free list to display 0.

Failures

Total number of allocation requests that failed because no buffer was available for allocation; the datagram was lost. Such failures normally occur at interrupt level.

No memory

Number of failures that occurred because no memory was available to create a new buffer.

show calendar

To display the calendar hardware setting, use the show calendar EXEC command.

show calendar

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

1.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

You can compare the time and date shown with this command with the time and date listed using the show clock command to verify that the calendar and system clock are synchronized. The time displayed is relative to the configured time zone.

Examples

In the following example, the hardware calendar indicates the time stamp of 12:13:44 p.m. on Friday, April 4, 1997.

Switch# show calendar
12:13:44 PST Fri April 4 1997

Related Commands
Command Description

show clock

Displays the system clock.

show capability (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

To display the capabilities of the primary or secondary route processor and the software version that is running, use the show capability EXEC command.

show capability {primary | secondary}

Syntax Description

primary

Displays the capabilities of the primary route processor.

secondary

Displays the capabilities of the secondary route processor.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show capability display includes hardware and functional versions of the various components.

Examples

The following example shows capabilities of the primary route processor for the ATM switch router.

Switch# show capability primary
  Dram Size is :64 MB
  Pmem Size is :4 MB
  Nvram Size is :512 KB
  BootFlash Size is :8 MB
  ACPM hw version 3.1
  ACPM functional version 3.8
  Netclk Module present flag :1
  NCLK hw version 1.0
  NCLK func version 1.2
  Printing the parameters for Switch card: 0
  SWC0 HW version 2.2
  SWC0 Functional version 0.40
  SWC0 Table memory size: 8 MB
  SWC0 Feat Card Present Flag: 1
  SWC0 Feat Card HW version 1.0
  SWC0 Feat Card Functional version 2.0
  Printing the parameters for Switch card: 1
  SWC1 HW version 0.0
  SWC1 Functional version 0.0
  SWC1 Table memory size: 0 MB
  SWC1 Feat Card Present Flag: 0
  SWC1 Feat Card HW version 0.0
  SWC1 Feat Card Functional version 0.0
  Printing the parameters for Switch card: 2
  SWC2 HW version 2.2
  SWC2 Functional version 0.40
  SWC2 Table memory size: 8 MB
  SWC2 Feat Card Present Flag: 1
  SWC2 Feat Card HW version 1.0
  SWC2 Feat Card Functional version 2.0
Number of Drivers in IOS: 3
  Driver 0 type: 2560
  Driver 0 Functional Version 0.27
  Driver 1 type: 2562
  Driver 1 Functional Version 0.1
  Driver 2 type: 2564
  Driver 2 Functional Version 0.1
 

show cdp

To display global CDP information, including timer and hold-time information, use the show cdp EXEC command.

show cdp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show cdp command. Global CDP timer and hold-time parameters are set to the defaults of 60 and 180 seconds, respectively.

Switch# show cdp
Global CDP information:
        Sending CDP packets every 60 seconds
        Sending a holdtime value of 180 seconds

Related Commands
Command Description

cdp holdtime

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

cdp timer

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

show cdp entry

Displays information about a neighbor device listed in the CDP table.

show cdp neighbors

Displays information about neighbors.

show cdp entry

To display information about a neighbor device listed in the CDP table, use the show cdp entry EXEC command.

show cdp entry entry-name [protocol | version]

Syntax Description

entry-name

Name of the neighbor about which you want information.

protocol

Limits the display to information about the protocols enabled on a device.

version

Limits the display to information about the version of software running on the device.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show cdp entry protocol command. Only information about the protocols enabled on device.cisco.com is displayed.

Switch# show cdp entry device.cisco.com protocol
Protocol information for device.cisco.com:
  IP address: 198.92.68.18
  CLNS address: 490001.1111.1111.1111.00
  DECnet address: 10.1
 

The following example is sample output from the show cdp entry version command. Only information about the version of software running on device.cisco.com is displayed.

Switch# show cdp entry device.cisco.com version 
Version information for device.cisco.com:
  GS Software (GS3), IOS Version xx.x(10302) [jhunt 161]
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Mon 07-Nov-97 14:34

Related Commands
Command Description

show cdp neighbors

Displays information about neighbors.

show cdp interface

To display information about the interfaces on which CDP is enabled, use the show cdp interface EXEC command.

show cdp interface [interface-type card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

interface-type

Type of interface, specified as atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, or null.

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show cdp interface command. Status information and information about CDP timer and hold-time settings is displayed for all interfaces on which CDP is enabled.

Switch# show cdp interface
Ethernet 0 is up, line protocol is up, encapsulation is ARPA Sending CDP packets every 60 seconds Holdtime is 180 seconds

The following example is sample output from the show cdp interface command with an interface specified. Status information and information about CDP timer and hold-time settings is displayed for the Ethernet 0 interface only.

Switch# show cdp interface ethernet 0
Ethernet 0 is up, line protocol is up, encapsulation is ARPA Sending CDP packets every 60 seconds Holdtime is 180 seconds

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show cdp interface command. Status information and information about CDP timer and hold-time settings is displayed for all interfaces on which CDP is enabled.

Switch# show cdp interface
Aux0 is up, line protocol is up, encapsulation is SMDS Sending CDP packets every 60 seconds Holdtime is 180 seconds Ethernet 0 is up, line protocol is up, encapsulation is ARPA Sending CDP packets every 60 seconds Holdtime is 180 seconds

show cdp neighbors

To display information about neighbors, use the show cdp neighbors EXEC command.

show cdp neighbors [interface-type card/subcard/port] [detail]

Syntax Description

interface-type

Specifies the type of the interface connected to the neighbors in question.

card/subcard/port

Identifies the card, subcard, and port number of the interface connected to the neighbors in question.

detail

Displays detailed information about a neighbor (or neighbors), including network address, enabled protocols, hold time, and software version.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following is sample output from the show cdp neighbors command. Device ID, interface type and number, hold-time settings, capabilities, platform, and port ID information about the switch router's neighbors are displayed.

Switch# show cdp neighbors
Capability Codes: R - Switch, T - Trans Bridge, B - Source Route Bridge S - Switch, H - Host, I - IGMP Device ID Local Intrfce Holdtme Capability Platform Port ID device.cisco.com Eth 0 151 R T AGS Eth 0 device.cisco.com Ser 0 165 R T AGS Ser 3

The following is sample output from the show cdp neighbors detail command, with information about the ATM neighbors, including network address, enabled protocols, and software version.

Switch# show cdp neighbors detail 
Device ID: device.cisco.com Entry address(es): IP address: 198.92.68.18 CLNS address: 490001.1111.1111.1111.00 DECnet address: 10.1 Platform: AGS, Capabilities: Switch Trans-Bridge Interface: Ethernet 0, Port ID (outgoing port): Ethernet 0 Holdtime: 143 sec Version: GS Software (GS3), Experimental Version xx.x(10302) [asmith 161] Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by Cisco Systems, Inc. Compiled Mon 07-Nov-97 14:34

Related Commands
Command Description

show cdp entry

Displays information about a neighbor device listed in the CDP table.

show cdp traffic

To display traffic information from the CDP table, use the show cdp traffic EXEC command.

show cdp traffic

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show cdp traffic command.

Switch# show cdp traffic
CDP counters:
        Packets output: 94, Input: 75
        Hdr syntax: 0, Chksum error: 0, Encaps failed: 0
        No memory: 0, Invalid packet: 0, Fragmented: 0
 

In this example, traffic information is displayed, including the numbers of packets sent, the number of packets received, header syntax, checksum errors, failed encapsulations, memory problems, and invalid and fragmented packets. Header syntax indicates the number of packets CDP receives that have an invalid header format.

show ces address

To show all the configured CES-IWF ATM addresses, use the show ces address EXEC command.

show ces address

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ces address command.

Switch# show ces address
CES-IWF ATM Address(es):
47.0091.8100.0000.0061.705a.cd01.4000.0c80.0030.10  CBR0/0/0:0  vpi 0 vci 16
47.0091.8100.0000.0061.705a.cd01.4000.0c80.0034.10  CBR0/0/1:1  vpi 0 vci 1040
47.0091.8100.0000.0061.705a.cd01.4000.0c80.0034.20  CBR0/0/1:2  vpi 0 vci 1056
47.0091.8100.0000.0061.705a.cd01.4000.0c80.0038.10  CBR0/0/2:0  vpi 0 vci 2064
 

show ces circuit

To show detailed circuit information, use the show ces circuit EXEC command.

show ces circuit [interface cbr card/subcard/port [circuits]]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number of the CBR interface.

circuits

Number of circuits to display, from 0 to 31.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output about CBR interface 1/0/0 from the show ces circuit command.

Switch# show ces circuit interface cbr 1/0/0
Interface  Circuit  Circuit-Type     X-interface   X-vpi   X-vci Status
 CBR0/0/1    1       Active SoftVC     ATM1/0/1      0        33  UP
 CBR0/0/1    2       Active SoftVC     ATM1/0/1      0        34  UP
 

The following example is sample output about CBR interface 0/0/1 on circuit 1 using the show ces circuit command.

Switch# show ces circuit interface cbr 0/0/1 1
Circuit:Name CBR0/0/1:1, Circuit-state ADMIN_UP / Interface CBR0/0/1,
Circuit_id 1, Port-Type T1, Port-State UP
Port Clocking network-derived, aal1 Clocking Method CESIWF_AAL1_CLOCK_SYNC
Channel in use on this port: 1-24
Channels used by this circuit: 1-12
Cell-Rate: 2043, Bit-Rate 768000
cas OFF, cell_header 0x4100 (vci = 1040)
Configured CDV 2000 usecs, Measured CDV unavailable
De-jitter: UnderFlow unavailable, OverFlow unavaliable
ErrTolerance 8, idleCircuitdetect OFF, onHookIdleCode 0x0
state: VcActive, maxQueueDepth       42, startDequeueDepth       25
Partial Fill:       47, Structured Data Transfer 288
Active SoftVC
Src:atm addr 47.0091.8100.0000.0061.705a.cd01.4000.0c80.0034.10 vpi 0, vci 1040
Dst:atm addr 47.0091.8100.0000.0060.5c71.2001.4000.0c80.1034.10

show ces interface cbr

To show detailed CES port information, use the show ces interface cbr privileged EXEC command.

show ces interface cbr card/subcard/port

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number of the CBR interface.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ces interface cbr command.

Switch# show ces interface cbr0/0/0
Interface:      CBR0/0/0        Port-type:T1-DCU
IF Status:      UP              Admin Status: UP
Channels in use on this port: 1-24
LineType: ESF        LineCoding: B8ZS  LoopConfig: NoLoop
SignalMode: NoSignalling   XmtClockSrc: network-derived
DataFormat: UnStructured   AAL1 Clocking Mode: Adaptive     LineLength: 0_110
 
LineState:  LossOfSignal
Errors in the Current Interval:
  PCVs        0 LCVs        0   ESs         0   SESs        0   SEFSs        0
  UASs        0 CSSs        0   LESs        0   BESs        0   DMs          0
Errors in the last 24Hrs:
  PCVs     1028 LCVs   190733   ESs         0   SESs        2   SEFSs        0
  UASs        0 CSSs        0   LESs        0   BESs        0   DMs          6
Input  Counters: 12160995 cells, 571566765 bytes
Output Counters: 83926483 cells, 3944544701 bytes

show ces status

To display the status of the ports on the CES interface, use the show ces status EXEC command.

show ces status

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ces status command.

Switch# show ces status 
Interface      IF      Admin        Port  Channels in
     Name       Status   Status        Type      use
------------- -------- --------- ----------- -----------
     CBR0/0/0       UP        UP          T1        1-24
     CBR0/0/1       UP        UP          T1        1-24
     CBR0/0/2       UP        UP          T1        1-24
     CBR0/0/3       UP        UP          T1

show clock

To display the system clock, use the show clock EXEC command.

show clock [detail]

Syntax Description

detail

Indicates the clock source (NTP, VINES, and so on) and the current summertime setting (if any).

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The system clock keeps an authoritative flag that indicates whether or not the time is believed to be accurate. If system clock has been set by a timing source, the flag is set. If the time is not authoritative, it is used only for display purposes. Until the clock is authoritative and the authoritative flag is set, the flag prevents the switch from causing peers to synchronize to itself when the switch time is invalid.

The symbol that precedes the show clock display indicates the following:

Examples

The following sample output shows that the current clock is authoritative and that the time source
is NTP.

Switch# show clock detail
15:29:03.158 PST Fri Ap 4 1997
Time source is NTP

Related Commands
Command Description

clock set

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

show calendar

Displays the calendar hardware setting.

show compress

To display compression statistics, use the show compress EXEC command.

show compress

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show compress command.

Switch# show compress
Serial0
uncompressed bytes xmt/rcv 10710562/11376835
1  min avg ratio xmt/rcv 2.773/2.474
5  min avg ratio xmt/rcv 4.084/3.793
10 min avg ratio xmt/rcv 4.125/3.873
no bufs xmt 0 no bufs rcv 0
resets 0
 

Table 18-18 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-18: show compress Field Descriptions
Field Description

Serial0

Name and number of the interface.

uncompressed bytes xmt/rcv

Total number of uncompressed bytes sent and received.

1 min avg ratio xmt/rcv

5 min avg ratio xmt/rcv

10 min avg ratio xmt/rcv

Static compression ratio for bytes sent and received, averaged over a period of 1 minute, 5 minutes, and 10 minutes.

no bufs xmt

Number of times buffers were not available to compress data being sent.

no bufs rcv

Number of times buffers were not available to uncompress data being received.

resets

Number of resets.

show controllers

To display information about a physical port device, use the show controllers EXEC command.

show controllers [atm0 | ethernet0 | {atm | ethernet} card/subcard/port |
{atm card/subcard/imagroup} | e1 card/subcard/port [brief | tabular] |
t3
card/subcard/port[:t1-line] [brief | tabular]]

Syntax Description

atm0

Specifies an ATM interface on the route processor.

ethernet0

Specifies an Ethernet interface on the route processor.

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

ethernet

Specifies an Ethernet interface.

e1

Specifies a channelized E1 interface.

t3

Specifies a channelized DS3 (CDS3) interface.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the interface.

:t1-line

Identifies the T1 line number, which is a number between 1 and 24. If you do not specify this option, all configured T1 lines display.

card/subcard/imagroup

Specifies the card, subcard, and IMA group number (0 to 3) for the IMA interface.

brief

Displays a subset of information.

tabular

Displays statistical information in a tabular format.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The output from this command shows what transmit clock is configured for an interface.

The show controllers t3 command also displays the port adapter and LSIPC states. If the LSIPC is in a down state, this command shows the number of keepalive attempts that have been made. This command also displays the firmware and hardware version for the Frame Relay port adapter.

Examples

The following example shows output used for debugging for OC-3 counters from the show controllers atm command on ATM 0/1/0.

Switch# show controllers atm 0/1/0
IF Name: ATM0/1/0    Chip Base Address: A8908000
Port type: OC3    Port rate: 155 Mbps    Port medium: SM Fiber
Port status:SECTION LOS    Loopback:None    Flags:8300
TX Led: Traffic Pattern    RX Led: Traffic Pattern  TX clock source:  free-running
Framing mode:  sts-3c
Cell payload scrambling on
Sts-stream scrambling on
OC3 counters:
 
  Key: txcell - # cells transmitted
       rxcell - # cells received
       b1     - # section BIP-8 errors
       b2     - # line BIP-8 errors
       b3     - # path BIP-8 errors
       ocd    - # out-of-cell delineation errors - not implemented
       g1     - # path FEBE errors
       z2     - # line FEBE errors
       chcs   - # correctable HEC errors
uhcs   - # uncorrectable HEC errors
 
txcell:3745, rxcell:98171428
b1:0, b2:0, b3:0, ocd:0
g1:0, z2:0, chcs:0, uhcs:0
 
OC3 errored secs:
b1:0, b2:0, b3:0, ocd:0
g1:0, z2:0, chcs:0, uhcs:0
 
OC3 error-free secs:
b1:1249, b2:1249, b3:1249, ocd:0
g1:1249, z2:1249, chcs:1249, uhcs:1249
 
Clock reg:80
 
  mr 0x30, mcfgr 0x70, misr 0xE0, mcmr 0xEF, 
  mctlr 0x48, cscsr 0x50, crcsr 0x48, rsop_cier 0x00, 
  rsop_sisr 0x47, rsop_bip80r 0x00, rsop_bip81r 0x00, tsop_ctlr 0x80, 
  tsop_diagr 0x80, rlop_csr 0x02, rlop_ieisr 0x0E, rlop_bip8_240r 0x00, 
  rlop_bip8_241r 0x00, rlop_bip8_242r 0x00, rlop_febe0r 0x00, rlop_febe1r 0x00, 
  rlop_febe2r 0x00, tlop_ctlr 0x80, tlop_diagr 0x80, rpop_scr 0x1C, 
  rpop_isr 0x9F, rpop_ier 0xFD, rpop_pslr 0xFF, rpop_pbip80r 0x00, 
  rpop_pbip81r 0x00, rpop_pfebe0r 0x00, rpop_pfebe1r 0x00, tpop_cdr 0x00, 
  tpop_pcr 0x00, tpop_ap0r 0x00, tpop_ap1r 0x90, tpop_pslr 0x13, 
  tpop_psr 0x00, racp_csr 0x84, racp_iesr 0x15, racp_mhpr 0x00, 
  racp_mhmr 0x00, racp_checr 0x00, racp_uhecr 0x00, racp_rcc0r 0x00, 
  racp_rcc1r 0x00, racp_rcc2r 0x00, racp_cfgr 0xFC, tacp_csr 0x04, 
  tacp_iuchpr 0x00, tacp_iucpopr 0x6A, tacp_fctlr 0x00, tacp_tcc0r 0x00, 
  tacp_tcc1r 0x00, tacp_tcc2r 0x00, tacp_cfgr 0x08, 
 

Table 18-19 describes some key fields in the output.


Table 18-19: show controllers Field Descriptions
Field Description

B1

Selection errors. Calculated over all bits of previous frame after scrambling. Always even parity.

B2

Line errors. Calculated over SPE and line overhead bytes of the previous frame before scrambling.

B3

Path BIP-8 errors. Calculated over SPE of the STE-3c of the previous frame before scrambling.

G1,Z2

Number of FEBE detected by the receive path. Error numbers are inserted into the appropriate bit positions of the outgoing G1,Z2 bytes.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show controllers atm0 command.

Switch# show controllers atm0
printing the copy stats here...
TxCopiedPkts :0
TxNonCopiedPkts :0
RxCopiedPkts :0
RxNonCopiedPkts :0
Island0: 60ABA4E4 first Ctl address : 607C7890
first blk address A8051000(288)- A80FFE00(7FF)  :total 577(1399)
 
 

The following example is sample output used for debugging for the T1 interface from the show controllers atm command on ATM 0/1/0.

Switch# show controllers atm 0/1/0
IF Name: ATM0/1/0, framer Base Address: A8909000
Port type: T1    Port rate: 1.5 Mbps    Port medium: UTP
Port status:Good Signal    Loopback:None    Flags:8008
TX Led: Traffic Pattern    RX Led: Traffic Pattern   CD Led: Green
TX clock source:  free-running
T1 Framing Mode:  ESF PLCP format
FERF on AIS is on
FERF on RED is on
FERF on OOF is on
FERF on LOS is on
LBO: between 0-110
 
Counters:
 
  Key: txcell   - # cells transmitted
       rxcell   - # cells received
       lcv      - # line code violations
       ferr     - # framing bit error event counter
       bee     - # bit error event, CRC-6 in ESF, Framing bit error in SF
       b1       - # PLCP BIP errors
       fe       - # PLCP framing pattern octet errors
       plcp_febe- # PLCP FEBE errors
       hcs      - # uncorrectable HEC errors
       uicell   - # unassigned/idle cells dropped
 
txcell:21460, rxcell:20736
lcv:0, ferr:0, bee:0
febe:0, b1:0, fe:0, plcp_febe:7, hcs:0, uicell:338177354
 
PDH errored secs:
lcv:0, ferr:0, bee:0
febe:0, b1:0, fe:0, plcp_febe:1, hcs:0
 
PDH error-free secs:
lcv:101438, ferr:101438, bee:101438
febe:0, b1:101438, fe:101438, plcp_febe:101437, hcs:101438
 
 Misc reg: 10
 
  cfgr 0x08, ier 0x00, isr 0x00, ctlr 0x00, 
  imrr 0x21, dlcr 0x78, rboc_cier 0x38, rboc_isr 0x3F, 
  t3frmr_cfgr 0x80, t3frmr_ier 0x00, t3frmr_isr 0x00, t3frmr_statr 0x02, 
  rfdl_cfgr 0x84, rfdl_esr 0x80, rfdl_statr 0x87, rfdl_datar 0x87, 
  pmon_pmr 0x38, pmon_iesr 0x38, pmon_lcvec0r 0xFF, pmon_lcvec1r 0xFF, 
  pmon_fbeec0r 0xFF, pmon_fbeec1r 0xFF, pmon_sezdc0r 0x9A, pmon_sezdc1r 0xF5, 
  pmon_peec0r 0x00, pmon_peec1r 0x00, pmon_ppeec0r 0x00, pmon_ppeec1r 0x00, 
  pmon_febeec0r 0x00, pmon_febeec1r 0x00, t3tran_cfgr 0x00, t3tran_diagr 0x00, 
  xfdl_cfgr 0x00, xfdl_isr 0x02, xfdl_txdatar 0x00, xboc_coder 0x7F, 
  splr_cfgr 0x84, splr_ier 0x80, splr_isr 0x80, splr_statr 0x00, 
  splt_cfgr 0x84, splt_ctlr 0x80, splt_diagr 0x00, splt_f1r 0x00, 
  cppm_locmr 0x0C, cppm_copmr 0x70, cppm_b1ec0r 0x00, cppm_b1ec1r 0x00, 
  cppm_feec0r 0x00, cppm_feec1r 0x00, cppm_febec0r 0x00, cppm_febec1r 0x00, 
  cppm_hcsec0r 0x00, cppm_hcsec1r 0x00, cppm_iucc0r 0x04, cppm_iucc1r 0x0D, 
  cppm_rcc0r 0x01, cppm_rcc1r 0x00, cppm_tcc0r 0x01, cppm_tcc1r 0x00, 
  rxcp_ctlr 0x28, rxcp_frcr 0x00, rxcp_iesr 0x00, rxcp_iucph1r 0x00, 
  rxcp_iucph2r 0x00, rxcp_iucph3r 0x00, rxcp_iucph4r 0x01, rxcp_iucmh1r 0xFF, 
  rxcp_iucmh2r 0xFF, rxcp_iucmh3r 0xFF, rxcp_iucmh4r 0xFF, rxcp_upcph1r 0x00, 
  rxcp_upcph2r 0x00, rxcp_upcph3r 0x00, rxcp_upcph4r 0x00, rxcp_upcmh1r 0xFF, 
  rxcp_upcmh2r 0xFF, rxcp_upcmh3r 0xFF, rxcp_upcmh4r 0xFF, rxcp_hcscsr 0xFC, 
  rxcp_lctctr 0xB4, txcp_ctlr 0xA0, txcp_iesr 0x08, txcp_iucph1r 0x00, 
  txcp_iucph2r 0x00, txcp_iucph3r 0x00, txcp_iucph4r 0x01, txcp_iucph5r 0x52, 
  txcp_iucpr 0x00, e3frmr_foptr 0x00, e3frmr_moptr 0x00, e3frmr_fier 0x00, 
  e3frmr_fiisr 0x01, e3frmr_meier 0x00, e3frmr_meiir 0x00, e3frmr_mesr 0x00, 
  e3tran_foptr 0x00, e3tran_sdoptr 0x01, e3tran_bip8emr 0x00, e3tran_maoptr 0x00, 
ttb_ctlr 0x04, ttb_ttisr 0x00, ttb_iar 0x00, ttb_idr 0x00, 
  ttb_eptlr 0x00, ttb_ptlcsr 0x00, sffpcsr 0x20, pcr 0x20, 
 
IF Name: ATM0/1/0, framer Base Address: A8909000
 
 Dump of framer registers 16 per line 
00-0F : 30 00 00 00  00 00 00 0C  00 00 00 00  02 02 00 00 
10-1F : 22 02 22 22  50 50 50 50  20 2F 2F 23  7C 78 FF FF 
20-2F : 11 00 01 01  01 01 01 01  01 01 38 3F  50 40 40 40 
30-3F : FC FF FF FF  00 02 00 00  84 80 87 87  40 00 08 44 
40-4F : D0 D4 D0 D0  30 30 00 00  00 03 00 00  00 00 00 00 
50-5F : 00 00 FF 00  C4 C0 7F 7F  1C 1C C0 C0  18 18 18 18 
60-6F : 18 18 18 18  18 18 18 00  00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 
70-7F : 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 
 

Examples

The following example is sample output used for debugging for the IMA interface from the show controllers command on ATM interface 0/0/ima1.

Switch# show controllers atm 0/0/ima1
ATM0/0/ima1 is up
        PAM State is UP
        Firmware Version: 1.6
        FPGA Version : 1.2
        Boot version : 1.2
        mmcport      = 0        hwgrp number = 0
 rxgsr        - Receive Group status register
 txgsr        - Transmit Group status register
 lsbdcbcell   - # of cells in the delay comp buffer LSB
 msbdcbcell   - Number of cells in the delay comp buffer MSB
 txlnks       - Links in the Group in TX direction
 rxlnks       - Links in the Group in RX direction
 scci_reg     - SCCI register
 imaid_reg    - IMA ID register
 gsc_reg      - GSC register
 txtiming_reg - tx timing ref register
 txtest_reg   - tx test link register1
 txtestp_reg  - tx test pattern register
 rxtestp_reg  - rx test pattern register
rxgsr =0x3, txsgr =0x5, dcbcelllsb =0x33, dcbcellmsb =0x5,
txlnks =0x7, rxlnks =0x0, scci_reg =0x7, imaid_reg =0x1,
gsc_reg=0xA2, txtiming_reg=0x20, txtst_reg=0x20, txtstp_reg=0x0,rxtstp_reg=0x40,
 
linkinfo_reg=0xFClinkinfo_reg=0xFClinkinfo_reg=0xFClinkinfo_reg=0x0
linkinfo_reg=0x0linkinfo_reg=0x0linkinfo_reg=0x0linkinfo_reg=0x0
 

Related Commands
Command Description

show switch fabric (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Shows the details of the switch fabric for an ATM switch router.

show ima interface

Displays the IMA interface, IMA group, and ATM layer hardware configuration.

show debugging

To display information about the types of CDP debugging that are enabled for your switch router, use the show debugging EXEC command.

show debugging

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show debugging command, which shows all three types of CDP debugging enabled.

Switch# show debugging
CDP:
  CDP packet info debugging is on
  CDP events debugging is on
  CDP neighbor info debugging is on
 
CDP-PA: Packet received from neon.cisco.com on interface Ethernet0
CDP-EV: Encapsulation on interface Serial0 failed
CDP-AD: Aging entry for neon.cisco.com, on interface Ethernet0

show diag

Catalyst 8540 MSR

To display power-on diagnostics status for the Catalyst 8540 MSR, use the show diag EXEC command.

show diag [power-on]

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

To display environmental statistics and power-on diagnostics status for the Catalyst 8510 MSR and the LightStream 1010, use the show diag EXEC command.

show diag [environment | power-on | all]

Syntax Description

environment

Displays environmental status.

power-on

Displays the status of power-on diagnostics.

all

Displays the status of all command options.

Defaults

Catalyst 8540 MSR: None

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010: None

Command Modes

EXEC for all models

Usage Guidelines

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The power-on diagnostic test results for the Catalyst 8540 MSR are displayed using the show diag command.

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The power-on or hardware reset diagnostics provide full sets of test suites for the Catalyst 8510 MSR and the LightStream 1010. The test results are stored in the switch memory and an interface is provided using the show diag command. If an error is detected during the test, the status LED turns red.

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show diag power-on EXEC command on a switch router primary route processor.

Switch# show diag power-on
 
Cat8540 Power-on Diagnostics Status (.=Pass,F=Fail,U=Unknown,N=Not Applicable)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Last Power-on Date: 97/09/15   Time: 18:17:50
 
   BOOTFLASH:  .   PCMCIA-Slot0: N   PCMCIA-Slot1: N
   CPU-IDPROM: .   NVRAM-Config: .
   ETHSRAM:    .   DRAM:         .   SARSRAM:       .
 
   PS0:        .   PS2:          N   PS (12V):     .
   FAN:        .   Temperature:  .   Bkp-IDPROM:   .
 
 
   Ethernet-port Access:   .         Ethernet-port CAM-Access: .
   Ethernet-port Loopback: .         Ethernet-port Loadgen:    .
 
Power-on Diagnostics Passed.

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show diag environment EXEC command.

Switch# show diag environment
Temperature:                        OK
Fan:                                OK
Voltage:                            OK
Power Supply#0 type: Power One,  status:    Failure
Power Supply#1 type: Astec,  status:    OK
 
 

The following example is sample output from the show diag power-on EXEC command on a switch router with an FC-PCQ installed.

Switch# show diag power-on
XXXXXX Power-on Diagnostics Status (.=Pass,F=Fail,U=Unknown,N=Not Applicable)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Last Power-on Date: 97/04/14   Time: 16:03:22
   BOOTFLASH:  .   PCMCIA-Slot0: .   PCMCIA-Slot1: N
   CPU-IDPROM: .   FCard-IDPROM: .   NVRAM-Config: .
   SRAM:       .   DRAM:         .
   PS1:        .   PS2:          N   PS (12V):     .
   FAN:        .   Temperature:  .   Bkp-IDPROM:    .
 
   MMC-Switch Access: .              Accordian Access: .
   LUT: .   ITT: .   OPT: .   OTT: .   STK: .   LNK: .   ATTR: .   Queue: .
   Cell-Memory:  .
 
   Feature-Card Access: .
   ICC: .   OCC: .   OQP: .   OQE: .   CC:  .   RT:  .
   TM0: .   TM1: .   TMC: .   IT:  .   LT:  .   RR:  .   ABR: .
 
Access/Interrupt/Loopback/CPU-MCast/Port-MCast/FC-MCast/FC-TMCC Test Status:
Ports                      0         1         2         3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAM 0/0 (T1CE)          .......   .......   .......   .......
PAM 0/1 (155MM)         .......   .......   .......   .......
PAM 1/0 (155MM)         .......   .......   .......   .......
PAM 1/1 (155MM)         .......   .......   .......   .......
PAM 3/0 (155UTP)        .......   .......   .......   .......
PAM 3/1 (DS3Q)          .......   .......   .......   .......Ethernet-port Access:   .         Ethernet-port CAM-Access: .
   Ethernet-port Loopback: .         Ethernet-port Loadgen:    .

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show diag power-on EXEC command on a switch router with the switch processor feature card installed.

Switch# show diag power-on 
XXXXXX Power-on Diagnostics Status (.=Pass,F=Fail,U=Unknown,N=Not Applicable)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Last Power-on Diags  Date: 97/11/05   Time: 11:03:41   By: V 3.2
 
   BOOTFLASH:  .   PCMCIA-Slot0: N   PCMCIA-Slot1: N
   CPU-IDPROM: .   FCard-IDPROM: .   NVRAM-Config: .
   SRAM:       .   DRAM:         .
 
   PS1:        N   PS2:          N   PS (12V):     .
   FAN:        .   Temperature:  .   Bkp-IDPROM:   .
 
   MMC-Switch Access: .              Accordian Access: .
   LUT: .   ITT: .   OPT: .   OTT: .   STK: .   LNK: .   ATTR: .   Queue: .
   Cell-Memory:  .
 
switch processor feature card
    Access: .
     RST: .    REG: .    IVC: .    IFILL: .    OVC: .    OFILL: .
 
    TEST:
     CELL: .   SNAKE: .   RATE: .   MCAST: .   SCHED: .
     TGRP: .   UPC  : .   ABR : .   RSTQ : .
 
Access/Interrupt/Loopback/CPU-MCast/Port-MCast/FC-MCast/FC-TMCC Test Status:
Ports                      0         1         2         3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAM 0/0 (155UTP)        .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   
PAM 1/0 (155MM)         .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   
PAM 1/1 (622)           .....NN      N         N         N
PAM 3/0 (622MM)         .....NN      N         N         N
PAM 3/1 (DS3Q)          .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   .....NN   
 
   Ethernet-port Access:   .         Ethernet-port CAM-Access: .
   Ethernet-port Loopback: .         Ethernet-port Loadgen:    .
 
Power-on Diagnostics Passed.

The following example is sample output from the show diag all EXEC command on an ATM switch router.

Switch# show diag all
XXXXXX Power-on Diagnostics Status (.=Pass,F=Fail,U=Unknown,N=Not Applicable)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
environment
-----------
Temperature:                        OK
Fan:                                OK
Voltage:                            OK
Power Supply#0 type: Power One,  status:    Failure
Power Supply#1 type: Astec,  status:    OK

Related Commands
Command Description

show hardware

Displays the revision number of the hardware.

show environment

To display temperature and voltage information on the console, use the show environment
EXEC command.

show environment

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show environment command.

Switch# show environment 
Temperature:	OK
Fan:	OK
Voltage: 	OK
Power Supply #0 type: 0 Status:	OK
 

show facility-alarm status (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

To display the current major and minor alarm status, if any, and to display the configuration of
the alarm thresholds, use the show facility-alarm status EXEC command.

show facility-alarm status

Defaults

Displays all alarms and configuration settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Examples

The following example displays the facility alarm status and configuration while no alarm condition exists.

Switch# show facility-alarm status
Thresholds:
 Core minor 38 major 50
Switch#
 
 

The following example displays the facility alarm status and configuration while an alarm condition exists.

Switch# show facility-alarm status
Thresholds:
 Core minor 45 major 53
SOURCE:Chassis TYPE:Power entry module 0 failure SEVERITY:Minor ACO:Normal

Related Commands
Command Description

clear facility-alarm (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Clears alarm conditions and resets the alarm contacts.

facility-alarm (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Configures the temperatures so that the ATM switch router declares a major or minor alarm condition.

show file

To display the configuration stored in a specified file, use the show file EXEC command.

show file descriptors | information [[device:]filename] | systems

Syntax Description

descriptors

Displays open file descriptors information.

information

Displays file information.

device:

Device containing the configuration file. The colon (:) is required. Valid devices are as follows:

  • bootflash: is the internal Flash memory.

  • sec-bootflash: is the secondary internal Flash memory on the redundant route processor. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

  • nvram: is the NVRAM on the route processor card.

  • sec-nvram: is the NVRAM on the redundant route processor card. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

  • slot0: is the first PC slot on the route processor card and is the initial default device.

  • sec-slot0: is the first PC slot on the redundant route processor card. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

  • slot1: is the second PC slot on the route processor card.

  • sec-slot1: is the second PC slot on the redundant route processor card. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

If you omit the device: argument, the system uses the default device specified by the
cd command.

filename

Name of the file. The file can be of any type. The maximum filename length is
63 characters.

systems

Displays file systems information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

When showing the configuration, the switch informs you whether the displayed configuration is a complete configuration or a distilled version. A distilled configuration is one that does not contain access lists.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show file command.

Switch# show file slot0:switch-config
Using 534 out of 129016 bytes
!
version xx.x
!
hostname Cyclops
!
enable-password xxxx
service pad
!
boot system dross-system 131.108.13.111
boot system dross-system 131.108.1.111
!
exception dump 131.108.13.111
!
no ip ipname-lookup
!
decnet routing 13.1
decnet node-type area
decnet max-address 1023
!
interface Ethernet 0
ip address 131.108.1.1 255.255.255.0
ip helper-address 131.120.1.0
ip accounting
ip gdp
decnet cost 3
!
ip domain-name CISCO.COM
ip name-server 255.255.255.255
!
end

Related Commands
Command Description

boot

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

cd

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. Refer to Appendix D.

show flash

To display the layout and contents of Flash memory, use one of the following show flash
EXEC commands.

show flash [all | chips | filesys]

Syntax Description

all

Displays the same information as the dir command when used with the /all and /long keywords. This information includes that displayed by the filesys and chips keywords.

chips

Displays information per partition and per chip, including which bank the chip is in, plus its code, size, and name.

filesys

Displays the Device Info Block, the Status Info, and the Usage Info.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show flash command displays the type of Flash memory present, any files that might currently exist in PC slot0: Flash memory, and the amounts of Flash memory used and remaining.

When you specify a PC slot as the device, the switch router displays the layout and contents of the Flash memory card inserted in the specified slot of the route processor card. When you omit the device: argument, the switch router displays the default device specified by the cd command. Use the pwd command to show the current default device.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show flash command.

Switch# show flash
-#- ED --type-- --crc--- -seek-- nlen -length- -----date/time------ name
1   .D FFFFFFFF 9099E94C 233F8C  22   2047753  Feb 29 1997 06:30:03 xxxxxx-i-m_Z
2   .. 1        E9D05582 458C54  29   2247751  Apr 04 1997 16:07:33 pnni/ls101Z
 
3306412 bytes available (4295764 bytes used)
 
 

As the display shows, the Flash memory can store and display multiple, independent software images for booting itself or for TFTP server software for other products. This feature is useful for storing default system software. These images can be stored in compressed format (but cannot be compressed by the switch).

To eliminate any files from Flash memory (invalidated or otherwise) and free up all available memory space, the entire Flash memory must be erased; individual files cannot be erased from Flash memory.

Table 18-20 describes the show flash display fields.


Table 18-20: show flash Field Descriptions
Field Description

Name

Filename and status of a system image file. The invalidated status appears when a file has been rewritten (recopied) into Flash memory. The first (now invalidated) copy of the file is still present within Flash memory, but it is unusable because of the newest version.

crc

Address of the file in Flash memory.

Length

Size of the system image file (in bytes).

Bytes available/used

Amount of Flash memory used/available amount of Flash memory.

Examples

The following example is sample output for the show flash all command that has Flash memory partitioned.

Switch# show flash all
-#- ED --type-- --crc--- -seek-- nlen -length- -----date/time------ name
1   .D FFFFFFFF 9099E94C 233F8C  22   2047753  Feb 29 1997 06:30:03 xxxxxx-i-m_Z
2   .. 1        E9D05582 458C54  29   2247751  Apr 04 1997 16:07:33 Switch/ls101Z
 
3306412 bytes available (4295764 bytes used)
 
-------- F I L E   S Y S T E M   S T A T U S --------
  Device Number = 2
DEVICE INFO BLOCK:
  Magic Number          = 6887635   File System Vers = 10000    (1.0)
  Length                = 800000    Sector Size      = 40000
  Programming Algorithm = 5         Erased State     = FFFFFFFF
  File System Offset    = 40000     Length = 740000
  MONLIB Offset         = 100       Length = A570
  Bad Sector Map Offset = 3FFFC     Length = 4
  Squeeze Log Offset    = 780000    Length = 40000
  Squeeze Buffer Offset = 7C0000    Length = 40000
  Num Spare Sectors     = 0
    Spares:
STATUS INFO:
  Writable
  NO File Open for Write
  Complete Stats
  No Unrecovered Errors
  Squeeze in progress
USAGE INFO:
  Bytes Used     = 418C54  Bytes Available = 3273AC
  Bad Sectors    = 0       Spared Sectors  = 0
  OK Files       = 1       Bytes = 224C48
  Deleted Files  = 1       Bytes = 1F3F0C
  Files w/Errors = 0       Bytes = 0
 
******** RSP Internal Flash Bank -- Intel Chips ********
Flash SIMM Reg: 401
  Flash SIMM PRESENT
  2 Banks
  Bank Size = 4M
  HW Rev = 1
 
Flash Status Registers: Bank 0
  Intelligent ID Code  : 89898989 A2A2A2A2
  Status Reg: 80808080
 
Flash Status Registers: Bank 1
  Intelligent ID Code  : 89898989 A2A2A2A2
  Status Reg: 80808080
 
slot0, slot1, bootflash, nvram, tftp, rcp
 

Table 18-21 describes the show flash all display fields.


Table 18-21: show flash all Fields for Partitioned Flash Memory
Field Description

Bank-Size

Size of bank in bytes

Chip

Chip number

Bank

Bank number

Code

Code number

Size

Size of chip

Name

Name of chip

Related Commands

None

show frame-relay connection-traffic-table-row

To display the Frame Relay traffic table, use the show frame-relay connection-traffic-table-row EXEC command.

show frame-relay connection-traffic table row [from-row | row row]

Syntax Description

from-row

Shows the table from a specific row.

row row

Shows the row that you specify.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(1a)W5(5b)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The row index must be an integer between 1 and 2147483647. An asterisk is appended to row indexes created by SNMP but not made active. Since these rows are not active, they cannotbe used by connections. If neither the row nor from-row keywords are used, the entire table is displayed.

Examples

The following example shows information for a Frame Relay connection traffic table row.

Switch# show frame-relay connection-traffic-table-row
Row            cir      bc     be      pir      fr-atm      ATM Row
                                            Service-category
100          64000   32768   32768   64000     vbr-nrt         100
Swich# 
 

Related Commands
Command Description

frame-relay connection-traffic-table-row

Creates a table entry in the Frame Relay connection-traffic table.

show frame-relay interface resource

To display the current resource allocation on a Frame Relay interface, use the
show frame-relay interface resource EXEC command.

show frame-relay interface resource serial card/subcard/port:dlci

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Interface card number, backplane slot number, port number, and logical serial port of the interface.

:dlci

Data-link connection identifier.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show frame-relay interface resource command display differs depending on whether the interface type is Frame Relay or Frame FUNI.

Examples

The following example displays detailed information about a Frame Relay port adapter.

Switch# show frame-relay interface resource serial 1/1/1:12
Encapsulation: FRAME-RELAY
Resource Management configuration:
    Input queues (PAM to switch fabric):
       Discard threshold: 87% vbr-nrt, 87% abr, 87% ubr
       Marking threshold: 75% vbr-nrt, 75% abr, 75% ubr
    Output queues (PAM to line):
       Discard threshold: 87% vbr-nrt, 87% abr, 87% ubr
       Marking threshold: 75% vbr-nrt, 75% abr, 75% ubr
    Overflow servicing for VBR: enabled
    Overbooking: 200%
Resource Management state:
  Available bit rates (in bps):
     3968000 vbr-nrt RX, 3968000 vbr-nrt TX
     3968000 abr RX,     3968000 abr TX
     3968000 ubr RX,     3968000 ubr TX
  Allocated bit rates (in bps):
     0 vbr-nrt RX, 0 vbr-nrt TX
     0 abr RX,     0 abr TX
     0 ubr RX,     0 ubr TX
Switch# 

Related Commands
Command Description

frame-relay input-queue

Configures discard marking thresholds on a Frame Relay interface in the input direction.

frame-relay output-queue

Configures discard marking thresholds on a Frame Relay interface in the output direction.

show frame-relay lmi

To display LMI specific status for an interface, use the show frame-relay lmi EXEC command.

show frame-relay lmi [interface serial card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the serial interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(1a)W5(5b)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Enter the show frame-relay lmi command without arguments to obtain statistics about all
Frame Relay interfaces.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show frame-relay lmi command when the interface
is an NNI:

    Switch# show frame-relay lmi
    LMI Statistics for interface Serial3/0/0:1 (Frame Relay NNI) LMI TYPE = CISCO
      Invalid Unnumbered info 0             Invalid Prot Disc 0
      Invalid dummy Call Ref 0              Invalid Msg Type 0
      Invalid Status Message 0              Invalid Lock Shift 0
      Invalid Information ID 0              Invalid Report IE Len 0
      Invalid Report Request 0              Invalid Keep IE Len 0
      Num Status Enq. Rcvd 11               Num Status msgs Sent 11
      Num Update Status Rcvd 0              Num St Enq. Timeouts 0
      Num Status Enq. Sent 10               Num Status msgs Rcvd 10
      Num Update Status Sent 0              Num Status Timeouts 0
    

Table 18-22 describes the field descriptions for the show frame-relay lmi command.


Table 18-22: show frame-relay lmi Field Descriptions 
Field Description

LMI Statistics

Signalling or LMI specification: CISCO, ANSI, or ITU-T.

Invalid Unnumbered info

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid unnumbered information field.

Invalid Prot Disc

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid protocol discriminator.

Invalid dummy Call Ref

Number of received LMI messages with invalid dummy call references.

Invalid Msg Type

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid message type.

Invalid Status Message

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid status message.

Invalid Lock Shift

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid lock shift type.

Invalid Information ID

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid information identifier.

Invalid Report IE Len

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid report IE length.

Invalid Report Request

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid report request.

Invalid Keep IE Len

Number of received LMI messages with an invalid keep IE length.

Num Status Enq. Sent

Number of LMI status inquiry messages sent.

Num Status Msgs Rcvd

Number of LMI status messages received.

Num Update Status Rcvd

Number of LMI asynchronous update status messages received.

Num Status Timeouts

Number of times the status message was not received within the keepalive time value.

Num Status Enq. Rcvd

Number of LMI status enquiry messages received.

Num Status Msgs Sent

Number of LMI status messages sent.

Num Status Enq. Timeouts

Number of times the status enquiry message was not received within the T392 DCE timer value.

Num Update Status Sent

Number of LMI asynchronous update status messages sent.

Related Commands
Command Description

frame-relay pvc

Creates a Frame Relay-to-ATM network interworking or service interworking PVC or Frame-Relay- to-Frame Relay cross-connected PVC.

show functional-image-info

To display information about the in-system programmable device images (FPGA and PLD images)
for a given module in the system, use the show functional-image-info EXEC command.

show functional-image-info {slot | subslot}

Syntax Description

slot

Physical slot number of the designated module. The range is 0 to 12.

subslot

Physical subslot number of the designated module. The range is 0 or 1.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example displays information about the motherboard in slot 8 of an ATM switch router.

Switch# show functional-image-info 8
Functional Version of the FPGA Image: 3.8
 #Jtag-Distribution-Format-B
 #HardwareRequired: 100(3.1,4.0,5.0)
 #FunctionalVersion: 3.8
 #Sections: 1
 #Section1Format: MOTOROLA_EXORMAX
  Copyright (c) 1996-98 by cisco Systems, Inc.
  All rights reserved.
  generated by:       holliday
  on:                 Fri Jul  3 14:43:15 PDT 1998
  using:              /cougar/bin/jtag_script Version 1.08
  config file:        cpu.jcf
  Chain description:
  Part type Bits Config file
  10k50     10   /cougar/custom/cpu/cidrFpga2/max/cidr_fpga.ttf
  xc4062    3    /cougar/custom/cpu/cubiFpga2/xil/cubi.bit
  xc4062    3    /cougar/custom/cpu/cubiFpga2/xil/cubi.bit
  generic   2
  XC4005    3    /cougar/custom/common/jtcfg/xil/jtcfg_r.bit
  Number devices             = 5
  Number of instruction bits = 21
  FPGA config file information:
  Bitgen date/time  Sum   File
  98/07/03 14:39:17 26503 /cougar/custom/cpu/cidrFpga2/max/cidr_fpga.ttf
  98/06/25 09:44:49 63850 /cougar/custom/cpu/cubiFpga2/xil/cubi.bit
  98/06/25 09:44:49 63850 /cougar/custom/cpu/cubiFpga2/xil/cubi.bit
  98/06/11 16:56:44 49904 /cougar/custom/common/jtcfg/xil/jtcfg_r.bit

Related Commands
Command Description

reprogram

Upgrades nonvolatile microcode or programmable logic on a selected card from a Flash file.

show hardware

To display the revision number of the hardware, use the show hardware EXEC command.

Catalyst 8540 MSR

show hardware [detail]

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

show hardware

Syntax Description

detail

Shows detailed hardware information. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show hardware command for anATM switch router.

Switch# show hardware
 
C8540 named Switch, Date: 10:54:26 UTC Thu Nov 19 1998
 
Slot Ctrlr-Type    Part No.  Rev  Ser No  Mfg Date   RMA No. Hw Vrs  Tst EEP
---- ------------  ---------- -- -------- --------- -------- ------- --- ---
 0/* OCM Board     73-2852-05 03 mic02360 Jan 00 00            1.0          
 0/0 quad622 Gene  73-2852-05 03 mic02360 Jan 00 00            1.0
 2/* Super Cam                02 07285959 Jan 00 00            3.0          
 2/0 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 06 02202232 Jan 15 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
 2/1 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 00 03115169 Feb 23 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
 4/* Route Proc    73-2644-05 02 mic02360 Jan 00 00            5.1
 5/* Switch Card   73-3315-07 02 MIC02390 Jan 00 00            7.1          
 7/* Switch Card   73-3315-07 02 MIC02360 Jan 00 00            7.1
 8/* Route Proc    73-2644-05 00 mic02360 Jan 00 00            5.1          
11/* Super Cam     73-2739-03 11 MIC02380 Jan 00 00            3.0
11/0 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 00 03114868 Feb 24 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
 
DS1201 Backplane EEPROM:
Model  Ver.  Serial  MAC-Address  MAC-Size  RMA  RMA-Number   MFG-Date
------ ---- -------- ------------ --------  ---  ----------  -----------
C8540  2   6312897 00107BC6F300   1024      0        0      Aug 21 1998
cubi version : D
 

Examples

The following is sample output from the show hardware detail command for an ATM switch router.

Switch# show hardware detail
 
C8540 named Switch, Date: 10:54:45 UTC Thu Nov 19 1998
 
Slot Ctrlr-Type    Part No.  Rev  Ser No  Mfg Date   RMA No. Hw Vrs  Tst EEP
---- ------------  ---------- -- -------- --------- -------- ------- --- ---
 0/* OCM Board     73-2852-05 03 mic02360 Jan 00 00            1.0          
 0/0 quad622 Gene  73-2852-05 03 mic02360 Jan 00 00            1.0
 2/* Super Cam                02 07285959 Jan 00 00            3.0          
 2/0 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 06 02202232 Jan 15 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
 2/1 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 00 03115169 Feb 23 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
11/* Super Cam     73-2739-03 11 MIC02380 Jan 00 00            3.0
11/0 155MM PAM     73-1496-03 00 03114868 Feb 24 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
 
slot:  0/*  Controller-Type : OCM Board                       
Part Number: 73-2852-05                          Revision: 03      
Serial Number: mic0236002b                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 1.0
 
slot:  0/0  Controller-Type : quad622 Generic                 
Part Number: 73-2852-05                          Revision: 03      
Serial Number: mic0236002b                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 1.0
 
slot:  2/*  Controller-Type : Super Cam                       
Part Number:                                     Revision: 02      
Serial Number: 07285959                          Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 3.0
 
slot:  4/*  Controller-Type : Route Proc                      
Part Number: 73-2644-05                          Revision: 02      
Serial Number: mic0236005c                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 5.1
 
slot:  5/*  Controller-Type : Switch Card                     
Part Number: 73-3315-07                          Revision: 02      
Serial Number: MIC023900RD                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 7.1
 
slot:  7/*  Controller-Type : Switch Card                     
Part Number: 73-3315-07                          Revision: 02      
Serial Number: MIC0236003C                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 7.1
 
slot:  8/*  Controller-Type : Route Proc                      
Part Number: 73-2644-05                          Revision: 00      
Serial Number: mic0236005g                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 5.1
 
slot: 11/*  Controller-Type : Super Cam                       
Part Number: 73-2739-03                          Revision: 11      
Serial Number: MIC0238007E                       Mfg Date: Jan 00 00   
RMA Number:   H/W Version: 3.0
 
DS1201 Backplane EEPROM:
Model  Ver.  Serial  MAC-Address  MAC-Size  RMA  RMA-Number   MFG-Date
------ ---- -------- ------------ --------  ---  ----------  -----------
C8540  2   6312897 00107BC6F300   1024      0        0      Aug 21 1998
cubi version : D

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show hardware command for an ATM switch router.

Switch# show hardware
 
LS1010 named Switch, Date: 12:27:09 UTC Tue Sep 30 1997
Feature Card's FPGA Download Version: 0
 
Slot Ctrlr-Type    Part No.  Rev  Ser No  Mfg Date   RMA No. Hw Vrs  Tst EEP
---- ------------  ---------- -- -------- --------- -------- ------- --- ---
0/0  155UTP PAM    73-1572-02 01 02749041 Jan 17 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
0/1  155MM PAM     73-1496-03 06 02180424 Jan 16 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
1/0  155MM PAM     73-1496-03 06 02180444 Jan 17 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
1/1  155MM PAM     73-1496-03 06 02202228 Jan 11 96 00-00-00   3.0     0   2
3/0  CE-T1 PAM     73-2176-02 A0 03669320 Feb 15 97 00-00-00   1.0     0   2
3/1  QUAD DS3 PAM  73-2197-02 A0 03816513 Jan 30 97 00-00-00   2.0     0   2
2/0  ATM Swi/Proc  73-1402-06 C2 05426230 Sep 23 97 00-00-00   4.0     0   2
2/1  FC-PFQ        73-2281-04 01 04845638 Sep 17 97 00-00-00   4.0     0   2
 
DS1201 Backplane EEPROM:
Model  Ver.  Serial  MAC-Address  MAC-Size  RMA  RMA-Number   MFG-Date
------ ---- -------- ------------ --------  ---  ----------  -----------
UNKNOWN  255   -1 FFFFFFFFFFFF   65535      255 	16777215 	 \QVv8\Qx\Q\QV\Qu ^V\Q 255 65535
 

show history

To list the commands you have entered in the current EXEC session, use the show history
EXEC command.

show history

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The command history feature provides a record of EXEC commands you have entered.

Table 18-23 lists the keys and functions you can use to recall commands from the command history buffer.


Table 18-23: History Keys
Key Function

Ctrl-P or Up arrow

Recalls commands in the history buffer in a backward sequence, beginning with the most recent command. Repeat the key sequence to recall successively older commands.

Ctrl-N or Down arrow

Returns to more recent commands in the history buffer after recalling commands with Ctrl-P or the Up arrow. Repeat the key sequence to recall successively more recent commands.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show history command, which lists the commands the user has entered in EXEC mode for this session.

Switch# show history
  help
  where
  show hosts
  show history

Related Commands

None

show hosts

To display the default domain name, the style of the name lookup service, a list of name server hosts, and the cached list of host names and addresses, use the show hosts EXEC command.

show hosts hostname

Syntax Description

hostname

Specifies the host name of the server to display.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show hosts command.

Switch# show hosts
 
Default domain is CISCO.COM
Name/address lookup uses domain service
Name servers are 255.255.255.255
Host	              Flag        	Age	   Type	       Address(es)
SLAG.CISCO.COM	    (temp, OK)  	1     	IP         	131.108.4.10
CHAR.CISCO.COM    	(temp, OK)  	8     	IP	         192.31.7.50
CHAOS.CISCO.COM	   (temp, OK)  	8     	IP         	131.108.1.115
DIRT.CISCO.COM	    (temp, EX)  	8     	IP         	131.108.1.111
DUSTBIN.CISCO.COM	 (temp, EX)  	0     	IP         	131.108.1.27
DREGS.CISCO.COM	   (temp, EX)  	24    	IP         	131.108.1.30
 

Table 18-24 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-24: show hosts Field Descriptions
Field Description

Flag

A temporary entry is entered by a name server; the switch removes the entry after 72 hours of inactivity. An entry marked perm is entered by a configuration command and is not timed out. Entries marked OK are considered valid. Entries with question marks (??) are suspect and subject to revalidation. Entries marked EX are expired.

Age

Indicates the number of hours since the switch last referred to the cache entry.

Type

Identifies the type of address, for example, IP, CLNS, or X.121. If you have used the ip hp-host global configuration command, the show hosts command displays these host names as type HP-IP.

Address(es)

Shows the address of the host. One host may have up to eight addresses.

Related Commands
Command Description

clear host

Deletes entries from the host-name-and-address cache.

show ima interface

To display the IMA interface, IMA group, and ATM layer hardware configuration, use the
show ima interface EXEC command.

show ima interface [{atm | atm-p} {card/subcard/port | card/subcard/imagroup} [detailed]]

Syntax Description

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies an ATM-P interface.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the ATM or ATM-P interface.

card/subcard/imagroup

Specifies the card, subcard, and IMA group number (0 to 3) for the ATM interface.

detailed

Displays more detailed information; must be the last keyword of the command.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(4a)W5(11a)

New command. Originally show ima interface (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

12.0(8)W5(17b)

Modified: (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010) removed

Usage Guidelines

The show ima interface command has two specific display types, the IMA group information display and the IMA port adapter hardware information display.

The IMA group ATM layer information display is shown using the ima keyword and IMA group number instead of the port number in the hardware interface description.


Note   If no ATM keyword is entered, the show ima interface command displays all IMA interfaces that are present in the system.


Note   This command is only supported on systems equipped with FC-PFQ.

Examples

The following example shows how to use the show ima interface command with no interface variables to display the ATM layer information for all IMA groups in tabular mode.

Switch# show ima interface
ATM0/0/ima1 is up
        Group Index    = 1
        State: NearEnd = operational, FarEnd = operational
        FailureStatus  = noFailure
IMA Group Current Configuration:
        MinNumTxLinks = 2    MinNumRxLinks = 2
        DiffDelayMax  = 25   FrameLength   = 128
        NeTxClkMode   = common(ctc)  CTC_Reference_Link = ATM0/0/0
        TestLink      = 0    TestPattern   = 0
        TestProcStatus     = operating  GTSM change timestamp = 990618150733
IMA Link Information:
Link           Physical Status        NearEnd Rx Status       Test Status
-----          ---------------        -----------------      ---------------
ATM0/0/0       up                     active                 operating
ATM0/0/1       up                     active                 operating
ATM0/0/2       up                     active                 operating
 
 

The following example shows how to use the show ima interface command to display the ATM layer information for a specific IMA group in tabular mode.

Switch# show ima interface atm 0/0/ima1
ATM0/0/ima1 is up
        Group Index    = 1
        State: NearEnd = operational, FarEnd = operational
        FailureStatus  = noFailure
IMA Group Current Configuration:
        MinNumTxLinks = 2    MinNumRxLinks = 2
        DiffDelayMax  = 25   FrameLength   = 128
        NeTxClkMode   = common(ctc)  CTC_Reference_Link = ATM0/0/0
        TestLink      = 0    TestPattern   = 0
        TestProcStatus     = operating  GTSM change timestamp = 990618150733
IMA Link Information:
Link           Physical Status        NearEnd Rx Status       Test Status
-----          ---------------        -----------------      ---------------
ATM0/0/0       up                     active                 operating
ATM0/0/1       up                     active                 operating
ATM0/0/2       up                     active                 operating
 
 

Examples

The following example shows how to use the show ima interface command to display the ATM layer information for the IMA group in detailed mode.

Switch# show ima interface atm 0/0/ima1 detailed
ATM0/0/ima1 is up
        Group Index    = 1
        State: NearEnd = operational, FarEnd = operational
        FailureStatus  = noFailure
IMA Group Current Configuration:
        MinNumTxLinks = 2    MinNumRxLinks = 2
        DiffDelayMax  = 25   FrameLength   = 128
        NeTxClkMode   = common(ctc)  CTC_Reference_Link = ATM0/0/0
        TestLink      = 0    TestPattern   = 0
        TestProcStatus     = operating  GTSM change timestamp = 990618150733
Detailed group Information:
        Symmetry        = symmetricOperation
        FeTxClkMode     = common(ctc)
        RxFrameLength   = 128
        TxTimingRefLink = 0     RxTimingRefLink = 2
        TxImaId         = 1     RxImaId         = 1
        NumTxCfgLinks   = 3     NumRxCfgLinks   = 3
        NumTxActLinks   = 3     NumRxActLinks   = 3
        LeastDelayLink  = 2     DiffDelayMaxObs = 0
Group counters:
        NeNumFailures   = 1     FeNumFailures   = 1
        UnAvailSecs     = 2     RunningSecs     = 345032
IMA Detailed Link Information:
ATM0/0/0 is up
        RowStatus = active
        IfIndex   = 5           GroupIndex = 1
        State:
                NeTx = active   NeRx = active
                FeTx = active   FeRx = active
        FailureStatus:
                NeRx = noFailure        FeRx = noFailure
        TxLid            = 0    RxLid           = 2
        RxTestPattern    = 64   TestProcStatus   = operating
        RelativeDelay    = 0 
IMA Link counters :
        ImaViolations    = 1
        NeSevErroredSecs = 1    FeSevErroredSecs = 1
        NeUnavailSecs    = 0    FeUnAvailSecs    = 0
        NeTxUnusableSecs = 2    NeRxUnUsableSecs = 1
        FeTxUnusableSecs = 2    FeRxUnusableSecs = 2
        NeTxNumFailures  = 0    NeRxNumFailures  = 0
        FeTxNumFailures  = 0    FeRxNumFailures  = 0
ATM0/0/1 is up
        RowStatus = active
        IfIndex   = 6           GroupIndex = 1
        State:
                NeTx = active   NeRx = active
                FeTx = active   FeRx = active
        FailureStatus:
                NeRx = noFailure        FeRx = noFailure
        TxLid            = 1    RxLid           = 3
        RxTestPattern    = 64   TestProcStatus   = operating
        RelativeDelay    = 2
IMA Link counters :
        ImaViolations    = 1
        NeSevErroredSecs = 0    FeSevErroredSecs = 1
        NeUnavailSecs    = 0    FeUnAvailSecs    = 0
        NeTxUnusableSecs = 1    NeRxUnUsableSecs = 1
        FeTxUnusableSecs = 1    FeRxUnusableSecs = 1
        NeTxNumFailures  = 0    NeRxNumFailures  = 0
        FeTxNumFailures  = 0    FeRxNumFailures  = 0
ATM0/0/2 is up
        RowStatus = active
        IfIndex   = 7           GroupIndex = 1
        State:
                NeTx = active   NeRx = active
                FeTx = active   FeRx = active
        FailureStatus:
                NeRx = noFailure        FeRx = noFailure
        TxLid            = 2    RxLid           = 4
        RxTestPattern    = 64   TestProcStatus   = operating
        RelativeDelay    = 0
IMA Link counters :
        ImaViolations    = 1
        NeSevErroredSecs = 1    FeSevErroredSecs = 1
        NeUnavailSecs    = 0    FeUnAvailSecs    = 0
        NeTxUnusableSecs = 2    NeRxUnUsableSecs = 2
        FeTxUnusableSecs = 1    FeRxUnusableSecs = 1
        NeTxNumFailures  = 0    NeRxNumFailures  = 0
        FeTxNumFailures  = 0    FeRxNumFailures  = 0

Examples

The following example shows how to use the show ima interface command to display the specific ATM interface hardware configuration in detailed mode.

Switch# show ima interface atm 0/0/0 detailed
ATM0/0/0 is up
        RowStatus = active
        IfIndex   = 5           GroupIndex = 1
        State:
                NeTx = active   NeRx = active
                FeTx = active   FeRx = active
        FailureStatus:
                NeRx = noFailure        FeRx = noFailure
        TxLid            = 0    RxLid           = 2
        RxTestPattern    = 64   TestProcStatus   = operating
        RelativeDelay    = 0
IMA Link counters :
        ImaViolations    = 1
        NeSevErroredSecs = 1    FeSevErroredSecs = 1
        NeUnavailSecs    = 0    FeUnAvailSecs    = 0
        NeTxUnusableSecs = 2    NeRxUnUsableSecs = 1
        FeTxUnusableSecs = 2    FeRxUnusableSecs = 2
        NeTxNumFailures  = 0    NeRxNumFailures  = 0
        FeTxNumFailures  = 0    FeRxNumFailures  = 0

Examples

The following example shows how to use the show ima interface command to display the specific ATM interface hardware configuration.

Switch# show ima interface atm 0/0/0
ATM0/0/0 is up
        RowStatus = active
        IfIndex   = 5           GroupIndex = 1
        State:
                NeTx = active   NeRx = active
                FeTx = active   FeRx = active
        FailureStatus:
                NeRx = noFailure        FeRx = noFailure
        TxLid            = 0    RxLid           = 2
        RxTestPattern    = 64   TestProcStatus   = operating
        RelativeDelay    = 0
IMA Link counters :
        ImaViolations    = 1
        NeSevErroredSecs = 1    FeSevErroredSecs = 1
        NeUnavailSecs    = 0    FeUnAvailSecs    = 0
        NeTxUnusableSecs = 2    NeRxUnUsableSecs = 1
        FeTxUnusableSecs = 2    FeRxUnusableSecs = 2
        NeTxNumFailures  = 0    NeRxNumFailures  = 0
        FeTxNumFailures  = 0    FeRxNumFailures  = 0
 
 

Table 18-25 describes some key fields in the show ima interface command displays.


Table 18-25: show ima interface Field Descriptions
Field Description

MinNumTxLinks

Minimum number of transmit links configured for the IMA group to function.

MinNumRxLinks

Minimum number of receive links configured for the IMA group to function.

DiffDelayMax

Maximum differential delay configured for the IMA group.

FrameLength

Frame length configured for the IMA group.

NeTxClkMode

Near-end transmit clock mode configured for the IMA group.

TestProcStatus

Test procedure status configured for the IMA group.

Related Commands
Command Description

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show interfaces

Displays the interface configuration, status, and statistics.

show interfaces

To display the interface configuration, status, and statistics, use the show interfaces command.

show interfaces {type [card/subcard/port[:cgn] |card/subcard/imagroup]}

Syntax Description

type

Specifies one of the interface types listed in Table 18-25.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the ATM, ATM-P, CBR, or Ethernet interface.

:cgn

Specifies the channel-group number (identifier).

card/subcard/imagroup

Specifies the card, subcard, and IMA group number of the ATM interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command. Originally show interface.

Usage Guidelines

Table 18-26 shows the interface types for the show interfaces EXEC command.


Table 18-26: Interface Types for the show interfaces Command
Type Description

accounting

Shows the ATM accounting interface information.

atm

Specifies the ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies the ATM pseudo interface.

cbr

Specifies the CBR interface.

ethernet

Specifies the main Ethernet interface (0).

serial

Specifies a serial interface, such as a channelized Frame Relay interface.

At Cisco, implementation of Frame Relay supports the following three LMI types:
Cisco, ANSI Annex D, and ITU-T Q.933 Annex A. The LMI type is set per interface and is
shown in the output of the show interfaces command. The default LMI type is Cisco.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show interfaces command. In this example, CRC is the number of correctable and uncorrectable input HCS errors.

Input and output packets are the number of terminated cells received or transmitted over the interface for physical ports. For the route processor port, the number represents AAL5 packets plus the terminating OAM cells received or transmitted.

Switch# show interfaces
Main-ATM0 is up, line protocol is up
  Hardware is ATMS2000 switch fabric
  Internet address is 1.2.2.2 255.0.0.0
  MTU 4470 bytes, BW 10000000 Kbit, DLY 0 usec, rely 255/255, load 1/255
  NSAP address: 47.00918100000000000CA7CE01.0003BBE42A06.00
  Encapsulation ATM, loopback not set, keepalive not set
  Encapsulation(s):
  2048 maximum active VCs, 0 VCs per VP, 0 current VCCs
  VC idle disconnect time: 300 seconds
  Signalling vc = 32, vpi = 0, vci = 5
  UNI Version = 3.0, Link Side = user
  Last input 0:00:02, output 0:00:02, output hang never
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
  Input queue: 0/75/0 (size/max/drops); Total output drops: 0
  Output queue: 0/64/0 (size/threshold/drops)
     Conversations  0/0 (active/max active)
     Reserved Conversations 0/0 (allocated/max allocated)
  5 minute input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
     8977 packets input, 566317 bytes, 0 no buffer
     Received 0 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants
     0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored, 0 abort
     8981 packets output, 475993 bytes, 0 underruns
5 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 interface resets, 0 restarts
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
Ethernet0 is up, line protocol is up
  Hardware is SonicT, address is 0002.bbe4.2a00 (bia 0002.bbe4.2a00)
  Internet address is 172.20.40.43 255.255.255.0
  MTU 1500 bytes, BW 10000 Kbit, DLY 1000 usec, rely 255/255, load 1/255
  Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set, keepalive set (10 sec)
  ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 4:00:00
  Last input 0:00:03, output 0:00:04, output hang never
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
  Output queue 0/40, 0 drops; input queue 0/75, 0 drops
  5 minute input rate 2000 bits/sec, 2 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
     70468 packets input, 29650832 bytes, 0 no buffer
     Received 70458 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants
     0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored, 0 abort
     0 input packets with dribble condition detected
     1140 packets output, 359630 bytes, 0 underruns
     0 output errors, 0 collisions, 1 interface resets, 0 restarts
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out

Table 18-27 lists the keyword field descriptions for the show interfaces command.


Table 18-27: show interfaces serial Field Descriptions 
Field Description

MTU

Number of maximum transmission units.

BW

Number of bandwidth (kbps).

Dly

Number of station delay parameter (used by IGRP).

relay

Number of reliability coefficient.

load

Number of load (IGRP).

last input

Amount of time since last input in the following format: hh:mm:ss.

last output

Amount of time since last output in the following format: hh:mm:ss.

output hang

Time of last reset for output failure.

output queue

Size of output queue or default size of queue.

drops

Number of all output drops.

packets input

Number of all packets received since last reset.

bytes

Number of all bytes received since last reset.

no buffers

Number of all drops because of no buffers.

broadcasts, runts, giants

Not applicable if this is an ATM interface.

input errors

Number of damaged packets received.

crc

Number of packets received with correctable and uncorrectable input HCS errors.

frame

Number of packets with framing and alignment errors.

overrun, ignored, abort

Not applicable if this is an ATM interface.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show interfaces serial command for a serial interface with Cisco LMI enabled.

Switch# show interfaces serial 0/1/0:5
Serial0/1/0:5 is up, line protocol is up 
    Hardware is FRPAM-SERIAL
    MTU 4096 bytes, BW 1536 Kbit, DLY 0 usec, rely 229/255, load 14/255
    Encapsulation FRAME-RELAY, loopback not set, keepalive set (10 sec)
    LMI enq sent  0, LMI stat recvd 0, LMI upd recvd 0
    LMI enq recvd 8010, LMI stat sent  8010, LMI upd sent  0, DCE LMI up
    LMI DLCI 1023  LMI type is CISCO  frame relay DCE
    Last input never, output never, output hang never
    Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
    Input queue: 0/75/0 (size/max/drops); Total output drops: 0
    Queueing strategy: weighted fair
    Output queue: 0/64/0 (size/threshold/drops) 
       Conversations  0/1 (active/max active)
       Reserved Conversations 0/0 (allocated/max allocated)
    5 minute input rate 67000 bits/sec, 786 packets/sec
    5 minute output rate 85000 bits/sec, 786 packets/sec
       32556459 packets input, 421648869 bytes, 0 no buffer
       Received 0 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
       690040 input errors, 425237 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored, 0 abort
       32130599 packets output, 466708295 bytes, 36921560 underruns
       3094283652 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 interface resets
       0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
       28 carrier transitions
   Timeslots(s) Used: 1-24 on T1 5 
   Frames Received with:
    DE set: 0, FECN set :4294879164, BECN set: 0
   Frames Tagged :
    DE: 0, FECN: 615698146 BECN: 0
   Frames Discarded Due to Alignment Error: 0
   Frames Discarded Due to Illegal Length: 0
   Frames Received with unknown DLCI: 0
   Frames with illegal Header : 0 
   Transmit Frames with FECN set :0,  BECN Set :0 
   Transmit Frames Tagged FECN : 3463814532 BECN : 3469839556 
   Transmit Frames Discarded due to No buffers : 0

Examples

The following is sample output from the show interfaces atm command for an IMA group interface.

Switch# show interfaces atm 0/0/ima1
ATM0/0/ima1 is up, line protocol is up
  Hardware is imapam_t1_ima
  MTU 4470 bytes, sub MTU 4470, BW 1500 Kbit, DLY 0 usec, rely 255/255, load 1/2
55
  Encapsulation ATM, loopback not set, keepalive not supported
  Last input 00:00:01, output 00:00:01, output hang never
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
  Input queue: 0/75/0 (size/max/drops); Total output drops: 0
  Queueing strategy: weighted fair
  Output queue: 0/1000/64/0 (size/max total/threshold/drops)
     Conversations  0/0/256 (active/max active/max total)
     Reserved Conversations 0/0 (allocated/max allocated)
  5 minute input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
     16253 packets input, 861409 bytes, 0 no buffer
     Received 0 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
     0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored, 0 abort
     16168 packets output, 856904 bytes, 0 underruns
     0 output errors, 0 collisions, 1 interface resets
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out

Related Commands
Command Description

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show ima interface

Displays the IMA interface, IMA group, and ATM layer hardware configuration.

show ip access-lists

To display the contents of all current IP access lists, use the show ip access-list EXEC command.

show ip access-list [access-list-number | access-list-name]

Syntax Description

access-list-number

Number of the IP access list to display. This is a decimal number from 1 to 199.

access-list-name

Name of the IP access list to display.

Defaults

Displays all standard and extended IP access lists.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

The show ip access-list command provides output identical to the show access-lists command, except that it is IP-specific and allows you to specify a particular access list.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip access-list command.

Switch# show ip access-list
 
Extended IP access list 101
					 	 	 deny udp any any eq ntp
					 	 	 permit tcp any any
					 	 	 permit udp any any eq tftp
					 	 	 permit icmp any any
					 	 	 permit udp any any eq domain

show ip accounting

To display the active accounting or checkpointed database or to display access-list violations,
use the show ip accounting EXEC command.

show ip accounting [access-violations | checkpoint | output-packets]

Syntax Description

access-violations

Shows the access violation in the accounting database.

checkpoint

Displays the checkpointed database.

output-packets

Displays information pertaining to packets that passed access control and were successfully routed.

Defaults

If neither the output-packets nor access-violations keywords are specified, show ip accounting displays information pertaining to packets that passed access control and were successfully routed.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

If you do not specify any keywords, the show ip accounting command displays information about the active accounting database.

To display IP access violations, use the access-violations keyword with the command. If you do not specify the keyword, the command defaults to displaying the number of packets that have passed access lists and were routed.

To use the show ip accounting command, you must first enable ip accounting mode on a per-interface basis.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip accounting command.

Switch# show ip accounting
 
   Source           Destination              Packets               Bytes     
 131.108.19.40    192.67.67.20                     7                 306
 131.108.13.55    192.67.67.20                    67                2749
 131.108.2.50     192.12.33.51                    17                1111
 131.108.2.50     130.93.2.1                       5                 319
 131.108.2.50     130.93.1.2                     463               30991
 131.108.19.40    130.93.2.1                       4                 262
 131.108.19.40    130.93.1.2                      28                2552
 131.108.20.2     128.18.6.100                    39                2184
 131.108.13.55    130.93.1.2                      35                3020
 131.108.19.40    192.12.33.51                  1986               95091
 131.108.2.50     192.67.67.20                   233               14908
 131.108.13.28    192.67.67.53                   390               24817
 131.108.13.55    192.12.33.51                214669             9806659
 131.108.13.111   128.18.6.23                  27739             1126607
 131.108.13.44    192.12.33.51                 35412             1523980
 192.31.7.21      130.93.1.2                      11                 824
 131.108.13.28    192.12.33.2                     21                1762
 131.108.2.166    192.31.7.130                   797              141054
 131.108.3.11     192.67.67.53                     4                 246
 192.31.7.21      192.12.33.51                 15696              695635
 192.31.7.24      192.67.67.20                    21                 916
 131.108.13.111   128.18.10.1                     16                1137

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip accounting access-violations command.
The output pertains to packets that failed access lists and were not switched.

Switch# show ip accounting access-violations
 
	Source 	Destination	Packets	Bytes	ACL	  
	131.108.19.40 	192.67.67.20 	7 	306 	77
	131.108.13.55    	192.67.67.20 	67 	2749	185
	131.108.2.50 	192.12.33.51	17	1111	140
131.108.2.50 130.93.2.1 5 319 140
131.108.19.40 130.93.2.1 4 262 77 Accounting data age is 41

Table 18-28 describes the fields shown in the displays.


Table 18-28: show ip accounting (and access-violations) Field Descriptions
Field Description

Source

Source address of the packet.

Destination

Destination address of the packet.

Packets

Number of packets transmitted from the source address to the destination address.

With the access-violations keyword, the number of packets transmitted from the source address to the destination address that violated an access control list.

Bytes

Sum of the total number of bytes (IP header and data) of all IP packets transmitted from the source address to the destination address.

With the access-violations keyword, the total number of bytes transmitted from the source address to the destination address that violated an access-control list.

ACL

Number of the access list of the last packet transmitted from the source to the destination that failed an access list filter.

Related Commands
Command Description

clear ip accounting

Used to delete the cache table entries; however, this command or some of its parameters might not function as expected.

alias

This command or some of its parameters might not function as expected.

alias

This command or some of its parameters might not function as expected.

alias

This command or some of its parameters might not function as expected.

alias

This command or some of its parameters might not function as expected.

show ip aliases

To display the switch's IP addresses mapped to TCP ports (aliases) and SLIP addresses, which are treated similarly to aliases, use the show ip aliases EXEC command.

show ip aliases

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

To distinguish a SLIP address from a normal alias address, the command output uses the form
SLIP TTY1 for the port number, where 1 is the auxiliary port.

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show ip aliases command. The display lists the IP address and corresponding port number.

Switch# show ip aliases
IP Address    Port
131.108.29.245 

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show ip aliases command. The output lists the
IP address and corresponding port number.

Switch# show ip aliases
IP Address    Port
131.108.29.245  SLIP TTY1 

Related Commands
Command Description

show line

Displays terminal line parameters.

show ip arp

To display the ARP cache, where SLIP addresses appear as permanent ARP table entries, use the
show ip arp EXEC command.

show ip arp [interface-type card/subcard/port | hostname | mac-addr]

Syntax Description

interface-type

Specifies an interface type as atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, or null.

card/subcard/port

Identifies the interface specified in interface-type.

hostname

Specifies the IP address or host name of the ARP entry.

mac-addr

Specifies the 48-bit hardware address of the ARP entry.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

ARP establishes correspondences between network addresses (an IP address, for example) and LAN hardware addresses (Ethernet addresses). A record of each correspondence is kept in a cache for a predetermined amount of time and then discarded.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip arp command.

Switch# show ip arp
Protocol  Address          Age (min)     Hardware Addr  Type   Interface
Internet  171.69.193.21          112     VCD#0000        ARPA   Ethernet0
Internet  172.20.40.43             -     0002.bbe4.2a00  ARPA   Ethernet0
 
 

Table 18-29 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-29: show ip arp Field Displays
Field Description

Protocol

Protocol for the network address in the Address field.

Address

The network address that corresponds to the Hardware Addr.

Age (min)

Age, in minutes, of the cache entry.

Hardware Addr

LAN hardware address of a MAC address that corresponds to the network address.

Type

Type of encapsulation:

ARPA—Ethernet

SNAP—RFC 1042

SAP—IEEE 802.3

Interface

Interface to which this address mapping is assigned.

show ip interface

To display the usability status of interfaces configured for IP, use the show ip interface EXEC command.

show ip interface [interface-type | card/subcard/port] [brief]

Syntax Description

interface-type

Specifies an interface type as atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, null, serial, or tunnel.

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the specified interface type.

brief

Displays a brief summary of IP status and configuration for all interfaces.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modifcation

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

A switch automatically enters a directly connected route in the routing table if the interface is usable. A usable interface is one through which the switch can send and receive packets. If the switch determines that an interface is not usable, it removes the directly connected routing entry from the routing table. Removing the entry allows the switch to use dynamic routing protocols to determine backup routes to the network (if any).

If the interface can provide two-way communication, the line protocol is marked "up." If the interface hardware is usable, the interface is marked "up."

If you specify an optional interface type, you will see only information on that specific interface.

If you specify no optional arguments, you will see information on all the interfaces.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip interface command.

Switch# show ip interface
 
Ethernet0 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 192.195.78.24, subnet mask is 255.255.255.240
  Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
  Address determined by non-volatile memory
  MTU is 1500 bytes
  Helper address is not set
  Secondary address 131.192.115.2, subnet mask 255.255.255.0
  Directed broadcast forwarding is enabled
  Multicast groups joined: 224.0.0.1 224.0.0.2
  Outgoing access list is not set
  Inbound  access list is not set
  Proxy ARP is enabled
  Security level is default
  Split horizon is enabled
  ICMP redirects are always sent
  ICMP unreachables are always sent
  ICMP mask replies are never sent
  IP fast switching is enabled
  IP fast switching on the same interface is disabled
  IP SSE switching is disabled
RouterDiscovery is disabled
  IP output packet accounting is disabled
  IP access violation accounting is disabled
  TCP/IP header compression is disabled
  Probe proxy name replies are disabled
 
 

Table 18-30 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-30: show ip interface Field Descriptions
Field Description

Ethernet 0 is up

If the interface hardware is usable, the interface is marked "up." For an interface to be usable, both the interface hardware and line protocol must be up.

line protocol is up

If the interface can provide two-way communication, the line protocol is marked "up." For an interface to be usable, both the interface hardware and line protocol must be up.

Broadcast address

Shows the broadcast address.

Address determined by ...

Indicates how the IP address of the interface was determined.

MTU

Shows the MTU value set on the interface.

Helper address

Shows a helper address if one has been set.

Secondary address

Shows a secondary address if one has been set.

Directed broadcast forwarding

Indicates whether directed broadcast forwarding is enabled.

Multicast groups joined

Lists the multicast groups in which this interface is a member.

Outgoing access list

Indicates whether the interface has an outgoing access list set.

Inbound access list

Indicates whether the interface has an incoming access list set.

Proxy ARP

Indicates whether Proxy ARP is enabled for the interface.

Security level

Specifies the IPSO security level set for this interface.

ICMP redirects

Specifies whether redirects are sent on this interface.

ICMP unreachables

Specifies whether unreachable messages are sent on this interface.

ICMP mask replies

Specifies whether mask replies are sent on this interface.

IP fast switching

Specifies whether fast switching is enabled for this interface.

IP SSE switching

Specifies whether IP SSE switching is enabled.

Router Discovery

Specifies whether the discovery process has been enabled for this interface.

IP output packet accounting

Specifies whether IP accounting is enabled for this interface and the threshold (maximum number of entries).

TCP/IP header compression

Indicates whether compression is enabled or disabled.

Probe proxy name

Indicates whether HP Probe proxy name replies are generated.

show ip masks

To display the masks used for network addresses and the number of subnets using each mask,
use the show ip masks EXEC command.

show ip masks ip-address

Syntax Description

ip-address

Network address for which a mask is required.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The show ip masks command is useful for debugging when variable-length subnet masks are used.
It shows the number of masks associated with the network and the number of routes for each mask.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip masks command.

Switch# show ip masks 131.108.0.0
 
Mask            Reference count
255.255.255.255 2
255.255.255.0   3
255.255.0.0     1
 

show ip redirects

To display the address of a default gateway and the address of hosts for which a redirect has been received, use the show ip redirects EXEC command.

show ip redirects [ip-address]

Syntax Description

ip-address

IP address of network to display.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip redirects command.

Switch# show ip redirects
 
Default gateway is 160.89.80.29
 
Host               Gateway           Last Use    Total Uses  Interface
131.108.1.111      160.89.80.240         0:00             9  Ethernet0
128.95.1.4         160.89.80.240         0:00             4  Ethernet0

Related Commands
Command Description

ip route

Used to establish static routes.

show ip route summary

To display summary information about entries in the routing table, use the show ip route summary EXEC command.

show ip route summary

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip route summary command.

Switch# show ip route summary
 
Route Source    Networks    Subnets     Overhead    Memory (bytes)
connected       0           3           126         360
static          1           2           126         360
igrp 109        747         12          31878       91080
internal        3                                   360
Total           751         17          32130       92160
 

Table 18-31 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-31: show ip route summary Field Descriptions
Field Description

Route Source

Routing protocol name, or connected, static, or internal. If internal, those routes that are in the primary routing table merely as markers to hold subnet routes. These routes are not owned by any routing protocol. There should be one of these internal routes for each subnetted network in the routing table.

Networks

The number of Class A, B, or C networks that are present in the routing table for each route source.

Subnets

The number of subnets that are present in the routing table for each route source, including host routes.

Overhead

Any additional memory involved in allocating the routes for the particular route source other than the memory specified under "Memory."

Memory

The number of bytes allocated to maintain all the routes for the particular route source.

Related Commands
Command Description

show ip interface

Displays the usability status of interfaces configured for IP.

show ip sockets

To display current information about open IP sockets, use the show ip sockets EXEC command.

show ip sockets

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip sockets EXEC command.

Switch# show ip sockets
Proto    Remote      Port      Local       Port  In Out Stat TTY OutputIF
 17 0.0.0.0             0 --any--            67   0   0    1   0
 17 0.0.0.0           123 172.20.40.93      123   0   0    1   0
 17 0.0.0.0             0 172.20.40.93      161   0   0    1   0

show ip tcp header-compression

To display statistics about TCP header compression, use the show ip tcp header-compression EXEC command.

show ip tcp header-compression [type]

Syntax Description

type

Displays the buffers assigned to an input interface. You must specify an atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, null, serial, or tunnel interface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip tcp header-compression command.

Switch# show ip tcp header-compression
 
TCP/IP header compression statistics:
  Interface Aux 1: (passive, compressing)
    Rcvd:	    4060 total, 2891 compressed, 0 errors
             	0 dropped, 1 buffer copies, 0 buffer failures
    Sent:	    4284 total, 3224 compressed,
	             105295 bytes saved, 661973 bytes sent
             	1.15 efficiency improvement factor
    Connect:	 16 slots, 1543 long searches, 2 misses, 99% hit ratio
             	Five minute miss rate 0 misses/sec, 0 max misses/sec
 
 

Table 18-32 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-32: show ip tcp header-compression Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Rcvd:

 total

Total number of TCP packets received.

 compressed

Total number of TCP packets compressed.

 errors

Unknown packets.

 dropped

Number of packets dropped due to invalid compression.

 buffer copies

Number of packets that had to be copied into bigger buffers for decompression.

 buffer failures

Number of packets dropped due to a lack of buffers.

Sent:

 total

Total number of TCP packets sent.

 compressed

Total number of TCP packets compressed.

 bytes saved

Number of bytes reduced.

 bytes sent

Number of bytes sent.

 efficiency improvement  factor

Improvement in line efficiency because of TCP header compression.

Connect:

 number of slots

Size of the cache.

 long searches

Number of times the software had to look to find a match.

 misses

Number of times a match could not be made. If your output shows a large miss rate, the number of allowable simultaneous compression connections may be too small.

 hit ratio

Percentage of times the software found a match and was able to compress the header.

 Five minute miss rate

Calculates the miss-rate over the previous 5 minutes for a longer-term (and more accurate) look at miss rate trends.

max misses/sec

Maximum value of the previous field.

Related Commands
Command Description

ip tcp synwait-time

Sets a period of time that the switch waits while attempting to establish a TCP connection before it times out.

show ip traffic

To display statistics about IP traffic, use the show ip traffic EXEC command.

show ip traffic

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ip traffic command.

Switch# show ip traffic
 
IP statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 98 total, 98 local destination
        		0 format errors, 0 checksum errors, 0 bad hop count
        		0 unknown protocol, 0 not a gateway
        		0 security failures, 0 bad options
  		Frags:	0 reassembled, 0 timeouts, 0 too big
        		0 fragmented, 0 couldn't fragment
  	Bcast:	38 received, 52 sent
  	Sent: 44 generated, 0 forwarded
        		0 encapsulation failed, 0 no route
	ICMP statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 0 checksum errors, 0 redirects, 0 unreachable, 0 echo
        		0 echo reply, 0 mask requests, 0 mask replies, 0 quench
        		0 parameter, 0 timestamp, 0 info request, 0 other
  	Sent: 	0 redirects, 3 unreachable, 0 echo, 0 echo reply
        		0 mask requests, 0 mask replies, 0 quench, 0 timestamp
        		0 info reply, 0 time exceeded, 0 parameter problem
	UDP statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 56 total, 0 checksum errors, 55 no port
  	Sent:	 18 total, 0 forwarded broadcasts
	TCP statistics:
	  Rcvd:	 0 total, 0 checksum errors, 0 no port
  	Sent:	 0 total
	EGP statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 0 total, 0 format errors, 0 checksum errors, 0 no listener
	  Sent: 	0 total
	IGRP statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 73 total, 0 checksum errors
	  Sent:	 26 total
	HELLO statistics:
  	Rcvd:	 0 total, 0 checksum errors
  	Sent: 	0 total
	ARP statistics:
  	Rcvd: 	20 requests, 17 replies, 0 reverse, 0 other
  	Sent: 	0 requests, 9 replies (0 proxy), 0 reverse
	Probe statistics:
  	Rcvd: 	6 address requests, 0 address replies
	0 proxy name requests, 0 other
  	Sent:	 0 address requests, 4 address replies (0 proxy)
        		0 proxy name replies
 
 

Table 18-33 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-33: show ip traffic Field Descriptions
Field Description

format errors

A gross error in the packet format, such as an impossible Internet header length.

bad hop count

Occurs when a packet is discarded because its TTL field was decremented to zero.

encapsulation failed

Usually indicates that the switch had no ARP request entry and therefore did not send a datagram.

no route

Counted when the switch discards a datagram that it did not know how to route.

proxy name reply

Counted when the switch sends an ARP or Probe Reply on behalf of another host. The display shows the number of probe proxy requests received and the number of responses sent.

show ipc

Use the show ipc command to display IPC information.

show ipc {nodes | ports [open] | queue | status} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

nodes

Show participating nodes

ports

Show local IPC ports.

open

Optional keyword used to display open ports only.

queue

Show the IPC retransmission queue.

status

Show status of local IPC server.

begin

Optional keyword orders the output display to begin with the line matching the expression variable.

exclude

Optional keyword orders the output display to exclude lines matching the expression variable.

include

Optional keyword orders the output display to include lines matching the expression variable.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(10)W5(18)

Introduced into this manual. Originally part of the Catalyst 6000 IOS command set.

Usage Guidelines

TBD..

Examples

The following example shows how to display participating nodes:

Switch# show ipc nodes
There are 3 nodes in this IPC realm.
   ID     Type                 Name                       Last  Last
                                                          Sent  Heard
   10000 Local      IPC Master                               0      0
       0 ATM-VC     Primary                                  0      0
   20000 ATM-VC     Secondary                                39     5483
 

Examples

The following example shows how to display local IPC ports:

Switch# show ipc ports
There are 15 ports defined.
 
Port ID        Type       Name
   10000.1     unicast    IPC Master:Zone
   10000.2     unicast    IPC Master:Echo
   10000.3     unicast    IPC Master:Control
   10000.4     unicast    Primary:ehsa msgs
   20000.3     unicast    Secondary:Control
   20000.8     unicast    Slave : TTY Client Port
   20000.9     unicast    Secondary RFS Server Port
   20000.A     unicast    Secondary Old RFS Server Port
   20000.4     unicast    Secondary Services Port
   20000.5     unicast    Cougar EHSA Secondary IPC Port
   20000.6     unicast    Secondary:Netclkd Port
   20000.7     unicast    Secondary:ehsa msgs
   10000.5     unicast    Cougar EHSA Primary IPC Port
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     port_index = 1  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     port_index = 2  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     port_index = 3  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
 
   10000.6     unicast    Primary:Netclkd Port
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
 
   10000.7     unicast    Master : TTY Server Port
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x20000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
 

The following example shows how to display open IPC ports:

Switch# show ipc ports open
There are 3 ports defined.
 
Port ID        Type       Name
   20000.4     unicast    Secondary Services Port
     port_index = 0  last sent = 5440  last heard = 0
 
   20000.6     unicast    Secondary:Netclkd Port
     port_index = 0  last sent = 0     last heard = 0
 
   20000.9     unicast    Secondary RFS Server Port
     port_index = 0  last sent = 19    last heard = 0 
 

The following example shows how to display the contents of the IPC retransmission queue:

Switch# show ipc queue
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for acknowledgement in the transmit queue.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for a response.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for additional fragments.
There are 0 IPC messages currently on the IPC inboundQ.
There are 0 messages currently in use by the system. 

Examples

The following example shows how to display the status of the local IPC server:

Switch# show ipc status
IPC System Status:
 
This processor is the IPC master server.
 
1000 IPC message headers in cache
227997 messages in, 222402 out, 217056 delivered to local port,
5486 acknowledgements received, 5484 sent,
0 NACKS received, 0 sent,
0 messages dropped on input, 0 messages dropped on output
0 no local port, 0 destination unknown, 0 no transport
0 missing callback or queue, 0 duplicate ACKs, 2 retries,
0 message timeouts.
0 ipc_output failures, 0 mtu failures,
0 msg alloc failed, 0 emer msg alloc failed, 0 no origs for RPC replies
0 pak alloc failed, 0 memd alloc failed
0 no hwq, 0 failed opens, 0 hardware errors
No regular dropping of IPC output packets for test purposes 

show lane

To display global and per-VCC LANE information for all the LANE components configured on an interface or any of its subinterfaces, on a specified subinterface, or on an emulated LAN, use the show lane EXEC command.

show lane [interface atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface-number] | name elan-name] [brief]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

subinterface-number

Subinterface number.

elan-name

Name of emulated LAN. Maximum length is 32 characters.

brief

Displays the global information, but not the per-VCC information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Entering the show lane command is equivalent to entering the show lane config, show lane server, show lane bus, and show lane client commands. The show lane command shows all LANE-related information except the show lane database information.

Examples

The following example is sample output of the show lane command.

Switch# show lane
LE Client ATM0  ELAN name: alpha  Admin: up  State: operational
Client ID: 2              
HW Address: 0041.0b0a.2c82   Type: ethernet             Max Frame Size: 1516
ATM Address: 47.00918100000000410B0A2C81.001122334455.00
 
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
   0         0         0  configure  47.333300000000000000000000.000111222333.00
 255         1         2  direct     47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.00
 256         1         0  distribute 47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.00
 257         0         0  send       47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.00
 258         0         0  forward    47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.00
 
LE Client ATM0.5  ELAN name: alpha5  Admin: up  State: operational
Client ID: 2              
HW Address: 0041.0b0a.2c82   Type: ethernet             Max Frame Size: 1516
ATM Address: 47.00918100000000410B0A2C81.001122334455.05
 
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
   0         0         0  configure  47.333300000000000000000000.000111222333.00
 259         1         5  direct     47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.05
 260         7         0  distribute 47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.05
 261         0        13  send       47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.05
 262        19         0  forward    47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.05
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
 264        22        12  data       47.333300000000000000000000.000011112222.05
 

Table 18-34 describes the significant fields in the sample display.


Table 18-34: show lane Command Field Descriptions 
Field Description

LE Client

Interface on which the LANE configuration server is configured.

Identifies the following lines as applying to the LANE configuration server. These lines are also displayed in output from the show lane lecs command.

config table

Name of the database associated with the LANE configuration server.

State

State of the configuration server: down or operational. If down, a "down reasons" field indicates why it is down. The reasons include the following: NO-config-table, NO-nsap-address, NO-config-pvc, and NO-interface-up.

ATM Address

ATM address or addresses of this configuration server.

LE Server

Identifies the following lines as applying to the LANE server. These lines are also displayed in output from the show lane server command.

ATM x/x/x.x

Interface or subinterface this LANE server is on.

ELAN name

Name of the emulated LAN served by this LE server.

State

Status of this LANE server. Possible states for a LANE server include down, waiting_ILMI, waiting_listen, up_not_registered, operational, and terminating.

Type

Type of emulated LAN.

Max Frame Size

Maximum frame size on this type of LAN.

ATM Address

ATM address of this server.

Config Server ATM addr

The ATM address used to reach the LANE configuration server.

control distribute: VCD 20, 2 members, 6 packets

Virtual circuit descriptor of the Control Distribute VCC.

proxy/ (ST: Init, Conn, Waiting, Adding, Joined, Operational, Reject, Term)

Status of the LANE client at the other end of the Control Distribute VCC.

lecid

Identifier for the LANE client at the other end of the Control Distribute VCC.

ST

Status of the LANE client at the other end of the Control Distribute VCC. Possible states are Init, Conn, Waiting, Adding, Joined, Operational, Reject, and Term.

VCD

Virtual channel descriptor used to reach the LANE client.

pkts

Number of packets sent by the LANE server on the Control Distribute VCC to the LANE client.

Hardware Addr

MAC-layer address of the LANE client.

ATM Address

ATM address of the LANE client.

LE BUS

Identifies the following lines as applying to the LANE broadcast-and-unknown server. These lines are also displayed in output from the show lane bus command.

ATM x/x/x.x

Interface or subinterface this LANE broadcast-and-unknown server is on.

ELAN name

Name of the emulated LAN served by this broadcast-and-unknown server.

State

Status of this LANE client. Possible states include down and operational.

Type

Type of emulated LAN.

Max Frame Size

Maximum frame size on this type of LAN.

ATM Address

ATM address of this LANE broadcast-and-unknown server.

data forward: vcd 22, 2 members, 10 packets

Virtual channel descriptor of the Data Forward VCC, number of LANE clients attached to the VCC, and the number of packets transmitted on the VCC.

lecid

Identifier assigned to each LANE client on the Data Forward VCC.

VCD

Virtual channel descriptor used to reach the LANE client.

Pkts

Number of packets sent by the broadcast-and-unknown server to the LANE client.

ATM Address

ATM address of the LANE client.

LE Client

Identifies the following lines as applying to a LANE client. These lines are also displayed in output from the show lane client command.

ATM x/x/x.x

Interface or subinterface this LANE client is on.

ELAN name

Name of the emulated LAN to which this client belongs.

State

Status of this LANE client. Possible states include initialState, lecsConnect, configure, join, busConnect, and operational.

HW Address

MAC address, in dotted hexadecimal notation, assigned to this LANE client.

Type

Type of emulated LAN.

Max Frame Size

Maximum frame size on this type of LAN.

ATM Address

ATM address of this LANE client.

VCD

Virtual channel descriptor for each of the VCCs established for this LANE client.

rxFrames

Number of frames received on the VCC.

txFrames

Number of frames transmitted on the VCC.

Type

Type of VCC; same as the SVC and PVC types. Possible VCC types are configure, direct, distribute, send, forward, and data.

ATM Address

ATM address of the LANE component at the other end of the VCC.

show lane bus

To display detailed LANE information for the broadcast-and-unknown server configured on an interface or any of its interfaces, on a specified subinterface, or on an emulated LAN, use the
show lane bus EXEC command.

show lane bus [interface atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface-number] | name elan-name]
[brief]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

subinterface-number

Subinterface number.

elan-name

Name of the emulated LAN. Maximum length is 32 characters.

brief

Keyword used to display the global information but not the per-VCC information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane bus command.

Switch# show lane bus interface atm 3/0/0.1
 
interface atm 3/0/0.1
type Ethernet 	name: pubs	AAL5-SDU length:1516
max frame age: 2 seconds	relayed frames/sec: 116
NSAP: 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1002.01
lecid	vcd	cnt	NSAP
*	80	659	45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1002.01
1	81	99	45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1000.01
5	89	41	45.000001415555122f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1100.01
6	99	101	45.000001415555124f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1300.01
 
 

Table 18-35 describes the significant fields in the sample display.


Table 18-35: show lane bus Command Field Descriptions 
Field Description

interface

Interface or subinterface for which information is displayed.

type

Type of emulated LAN interface.

name

Name of the emulated LAN.

MTU

Maximum transmission unit (packet) size on the emulated LAN.

AAL5-SDU

Maximum number of bytes in a LANE SDU encapsulated in an ATM AAL5 frame. This length includes a 2-byte marker and a full Ethernet-like frame from the destination MAC address field through the last byte of data. It does not include the Ethernet CRC or FRC, which is not present on emulated LAN frames. The number does not include the 8-byte AAL5 trailer in the last ATM cell of the frame, or the padding between the last data byte and the 8-byte trailer.

max frame age

After receiving a frame over Multicast Send VCC, the broadcast-and-unknown server must transmit the frame to all relevant Multicast Forward VCCs within this number of seconds. When the time expires, the server discards the frame.

NSAP

ATM address of this broadcast-and-unknown server.

lecid

Unique identifier of the LANE client at the other end of this VCC.

vcd

Virtual circuit descriptor that uniquely identifies this VCC.

cnt

For Multicast Send VCC, the number of packets sent from the client to the broadcast-and-unknown server.

For Multicast Forward VCC, the number of packets sent from the broadcast-and-unknown server clients.

NSAP

For Multicast Send VCC, the ATM address of the LANE client at the other end of this VCC.

For Multicast Forward VCC, the ATM address of the broadcast-and-unknown server.

show lane client

To display global and per-VCC LANE information for all the LANE clients configured on an interface or any of its subinterfaces, on a specified subinterface, or on an emulated LAN, use the show lane client EXEC command.

show lane client [interface atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface-number] | name elan-name]
[brief | detail]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

subinterface-number

Subinterface number.

elan-name

Name of the emulated LAN. Maximum length is 32 characters.

brief

Keyword used to display the global information but not the per-VCC information.

detail

Keywork used to display backup server connection information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane client command.

Switch# show lane client 
LE Client ATM0  ELAN name: alpha  Admin: up  State: operational
Client ID: 2              
HW Address: 0041.0b0a.2c82   Type: ethernet             Max Frame Size: 1516
ATM Address: 47.00918100000000410B0A2C81.001122334455.00
 
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
   0         0         0  configure  47.333300000000000000000000.000111222333.00
 255         1         2  direct     47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.00
 256         1         0  distribute 47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.00
 257         0         0  send       47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.00
 258         1         0  forward    47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.00
 
LE Client ATM0.5  ELAN name: alpha5  Admin: up  State: operational
Client ID: 2              
HW Address: 0041.0b0a.2c82   Type: ethernet             Max Frame Size: 1516
ATM Address: 47.00918100000000410B0A2C81.001122334455.05
 
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
   0         0         0  configure  47.333300000000000000000000.000111222333.00
 259         1         5  direct     47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.05
 260         7         0  distribute 47.333300000000000000000000.001122334455.05
 261         0        13  send       47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.05
 262        20         0  forward    47.333300000000000000000000.000000111111.05
 VCD  rxFrames  txFrames  Type       ATM Address
 264        22        12  data       47.333300000000000000000000.000011112222.05
 

Table 18-36 describes the significant fields in the sample display.


Table 18-36: show lane client Command Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Interface or subinterface for which information is displayed.

Name

Name of the emulated LAN.

MAC

MAC address of this LANE client.

type

Type of emulated LAN, Ethernet, or Token Ring.

MTU

Maximum transmission unit (packet) size on the emulated LAN.

AAL5-SDU length

Maximum number of bytes in a LANE SDU encapsulated in an AAL5 frame. This length includes a 2-byte marker and a full Ethernet-like frame from the destination MAC address field through the last byte of data. It does not include an Ethernet CRC (or FRC), which is not present on emulated LAN frames. The number does not include the 8-byte AAL5 trailer in the last ATM cell of the frame, or the padding between the last data byte and the 8-byte trailer.

NSAP

ATM address of this LANE client.

VCD

Virtual channel descriptor that uniquely identifies this VCC.

rxFrames

Number of packets received.

txFrames

Number of packets transmitted.

Type

Type of VCC; same as the SVC and PVC types. Possible VCC types are configure, direct, distribute, send, forward, and data.1

NSAP

ATM address of the LANE component at the other end of this VCC.

1The Configure Direct VCC is shown in this display as configure. The Control Direct VCC is shown as direct; the Control Distribute VCC is shown as distribute. The Multicast Send VCC and Multicast Forward VC are shown as send and forward, respectively. The data Direct VCC is shown as data.

show lane config

To display global LANE information for the configuration server configured on an interface, use the show lane config EXEC command.

show lane config [interface atm card/subcard/port] [brief]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

brief

Keyword used to display the global information, but not the per-VCC information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane config command on a configuration server with two ATM addresses.

Switch# show lane config
LE Config Server ATM 1/0/0 config table: table State: operational
ATM Address: 39.000000000000000000000000.000000000500.00
ATM Address: 39.000000000000000000000000.000000000500.01
cumulative total number of unrecognized packets received so far:0
cumulative total number of config requests received so far: 10
cumulative total number of config failures so far: 0
 

The following example shows an operational server even though the addresses are not completely registered. The first address in not registered with the ILMI, as indicated by the ilmi-state. The second address is not registered with either the ILMI or the ATM signalling subsystem, as indicated by the atmsig-state.

Switch# show lane config
LE Config Server ATM 1/0/0 config table: table State: operational
ATM Address: 39.000000000000000000000000.000000000500.00 ilmi-
ATM Address: 39.000000000000000000000000.000000000500.01 ilmi- atmsig-
cumulative total number of unrecognized packets received so far:0
cumulative total number of config requests received so far: 10
cumulative total number of config failures so far: 0
 

The following example displays some physical connectivity problems with the result that the configuration server ATM address is undetermined. Either the prefix was not obtained, or it is not there. As a result, the address cannot be computed and you see the message "EXACT ADDRESS NOT YET SET (NO PREFIX?)" in the display.

Switch# show lane config
LE Config Server ATM 1/0/0 config table: table State: operational
ATM Address: EXEACT ADDRESS NOT YET SET (NO PREFIX ?) ilmi- atmsig-
   actual user specified form:...
cumulative total number of unrecognized packets received so far:0
cumulative total number of config requests received so far: 0
cumulative total number of config failures so far: 0
 

Table 18-37 describes the significant fields in the sample displays.


Table 18-37: show lane config Command Field Descriptions
Field Description

LE Config Server

Major interface on which the LANE configuration server is configured.

config-table

Name of the database associated with the LANE configuration server.

State

State of the configuration server: down or operational. If down, the reasons field indicates why it is down. The reasons include the following: NO-config, NO-nsap-address, and No-interface-up.

ATM address

ATM address of this configuration server.

show lane database

To display the database of the configuration server, use the show lane database EXEC command.

show lane database [name]

Syntax Description

name

Specific database name.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Defaults

Shows all databases.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane database command.

Switch# show lane database
config-table: engandmkt - bound to interface/s: atm 1/0/0
default ELAN: none
ELAN eng: les NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1001.01
  LEC MAC 0800.200c.1100
  LEC NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1000.01
  LEC NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1300.01
ELAN mkt: les NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1001.02
  LEC MAC 0800.200c.1100
  LEC NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1000.02
  LEC NSAP 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1300.02
 

Table 18-38 describes the significant fields in the sample display.


Table 18-38: show lane database Command Field Descriptions
Field Description

config-table

Name of current database.

default ELAN

Default name, if one is established.

ELAN

Name of the emulated LAN whose data is reported in the line and the next three lines.

LEC MAC

MAC addresses of an individual LANE client in the emulated LAN. This display includes a separate line for every LANE client in this emulated LAN.

LEC NSAP

ATM addresses of all LANE clients in the emulated LAN.

show lane default-atm-addresses

To display the automatically assigned ATM address of each LANE component in a switch router or on a specified interface or subinterface, use the show lane default-atm-addresses EXEC command.

show lane default-atm-addresses [interface atm card/subcard/port.subinterface-number]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

.subinterface-number

Specifies the number of the subinterface.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

You do not need any of the LANE components running on this switch before using this command.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane default-atm-addresses command for the ATM 1/0/0 when all LANE components are located on that interface.

Switch# show lane default-atm-addresses interface atm 1/0/0
interface ATM1/0/0:
LANE Client:	47.000000000000000000000000.00000C304A98.**
LANE Server:	47.000000000000000000000000.00000C304A99.**
LANE Bus:	47.000000000000000000000000.00000C304A9A.**
LANE Config Server:	47.000000000000000000000000.00000C304A9B.00
note: ** is the subinterface number byte in hex
 

Table 18-39 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-39: show lane default-atm-addresses Field Descriptions
Field Description

interface

Displays the specified interface.

LANE Client

Displays the ATM address of the LANE client on the interface.

LANE Server

Displays the ATM address of the LANE server on the interface.

LANE Bus

Displays the ATM address of the LANE broadcast-and-unknown server on the interface.

LANE Config Server

Displays the ATM address of the LANE configuration server on the interface.

show lane le-arp

To display the LANE ARP table of the LANE client configured on an interface or any of its subinterfaces, on a specified subinterface, or on an emulated LAN, use the show lane le-arp
EXEC command.

show lane le-arp [interface atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface-number] | name elan-name]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number of the ATM interface.

.subinterface-number

Specifies the number of the subinterface.

elan-name

Name of the emulated LAN. Maximum length is 32 characters.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output of the show lane le-arp command.

Switch# show lane le-arp 
Hardware Addr   ATM Address                                 VCD  Interface
0000.0c52.3bc8  47.333300000000000000000000.000011112222.05 264  ATM0.5
 

Table 18-40 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-40: show lane le-arp Field Descriptions
Field Description

Hardware Addr

MAC address, in dotted hexadecimal notation, assigned to the LANE component at the other end of this VCD.

ATM Address

ATM address of the LANE component at the other end of this VCD.

VCD

Virtual channel descriptor.

Interface

Interface or subinterface used to reach the specified component.

show lane name

To show the LAN emulation ARP server, use the show lane name EXEC command.

show lane name elan-name [brief]

Syntax Description

elan-name

Specifies the name for the emulated LAN.

brief

Displays all the information about the LANE except the connection client information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

show lane server

To display global information for the LANE server configured on an interface or any of its subinterfaces, on a specified subinterface, or on an emulated LAN, use the show lane server
EXEC command.

show lane server [interface atm card/subcard/port[.subinterface-number] | name elan-name]
[brief]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Card, subcard, and port number for the ATM interface.

.subinterface-number

Specifies the number for the subinterface.

elan-name

Name of the emulated LAN. Maximum length is 32 characters.

brief

Keyword used to display the global information but not the per-VCC information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show lane server command.

Switch# show lane server interface atm 3/0/0.1
 
interface atm 3/0/0.1	name: pubs
type: Ethernet 	MTU:1500	AAL5-SDU length:1516
NSAP: 45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1001.01
lecid/
proxy	vcd	cnt	NSAP
*	75	330	45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1001.01
1	76	33	45.000001415555121f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1000.01
5/P	87	15	45.000001415555122f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1100.01
6/P	95	53	45.000001415555124f.yyyy.zzzz.0800.200c.1300.01
 

Table 18-41 describes the significant fields in the sample display.


Table 18-41: show lane server Command Field Descriptions 
Field Description

interface

Interface or subinterface on which this LANE server is configured.

name

Name of emulated LAN.

type

Type of emulated LAN interface.

MTU

Maximum transmission unit (packet) size on the emulated LAN.

AAL5-SDU

Maximum number of bytes in a LANE SDU encapsulated in an AAL5 frame. This length includes a 2-byte marker and a full Ethernet-like frame from the destination MAC address field through the last byte of data. It does not include the Ethernet CRC or FRC, which is not present on emulated LAN frames. The number does not include the 8-byte AAL5 trailer in the last ATM cell of the frame, nor the padding between the last data byte and the 8-byte trailer.

NSAP

ATM address of this broadcast-and-unknown server.

lecid

Unique identifier of the LANE client at the other end of this VCC.

proxy

When a LANE client joins an emulated LAN, it includes a proxy bit that tells the LANE server that the LANE client does not guarantee to register all its MAC address-ATM address pairs with the LANE server. The Cisco Systems LANE clients must set the proxy bit. Workstation LANE clients, directly attached to ATM, do not set the proxy.

vcd

Virtual circuit descriptor that uniquely identifies this VCC.

cnt

For Multicast Send VCC, the number of packets sent from the client to the broadcast-and-unknown server.

For Multicast Forward VCC, the number of packets sent from the broadcast-and-unknown server clients.

NSAP

For Multicast Send VCC, the ATM address of the LANE client at the other end of this VCC.

For Multicast Forward VCC, the ATM address of the broadcast-and-unknown server.

show line

To display terminal line parameters, use the show line EXEC command.

Catalyst 8540 MSR

show line [line-num | console 0 | vty vty-line-num]

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

show line [line-num | aux 0 | console 0 | vty vty-line-num]

Syntax Description

line-num

Absolute line number of the terminal line.

aux 0

Displays parameters for the auxiliary line. (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

console 0

Displays parameters for the primary terminal line.

vty-line-num

VTY line number.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following sample output from the show line command shows line 2 as a virtual terminal with a transmit and receive rate of 9600 bps. The modem state, and the terminal screen width and length are also displayed.

Overruns occur when the UART serving the line receives a byte but has nowhere to put it because previous bytes were not taken from the UART by the host route processor. The byte is lost, and the overrun count increases when the route processor next looks at the UART status.

Switch# show line 2
 Tty Typ     Tx/Rx     A Modem  Roty AccO AccI  Uses    Noise   Overruns
   2 VTY   9600/9600   -    -      -    -    -     0        0        0/0
 
Line 2, Location: "", Type: ""
Length: 24 lines, Width: 80 columns
Baud rate (TX/RX) is 9600/9600
Status: No Exit Banner
Capabilities: none
Modem state: Idle
Special Chars: Escape  Hold  Stop  Start  Disconnect  Activation
                ^^x    none   -     -       none
Timeouts:      Idle EXEC    Idle Session   Modem Answer  Session   Dispatch
               0:10:00        never                        none     not set
Session limit is not set.
Time since activation: never
Editing is enabled.
History is enabled, history size is 10.
Full user help is disabled
Allowed transports are telnet.  Preferred is telnet.
No output characters are padded
No special data dispatching characters
 
 

Table 18-42 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-42: show line Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Tty

Line number. In this case, 17.

Typ

Type of line. In this case, a virtual terminal line (vty), which is active, in asynchronous mode denoted by the preceding "A." Possible values include:

CTY—Console

AUX—Auxiliary port (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

TTY—Asynchronous terminal port

lpt—Parallel printer

Tx/Rx

Transmit rate/receive rate of the line.

A

Indicates whether or not autobaud has been configured for the line. A value of "F" indicates that autobaud has been configured; a hyphen (-) indicates that it has not been configured.

Modem

Types of modem signals configured for the line. Possible values include:

callin

callout

cts-req

DTR-Act

inout

RIisCD

Roty

Rotary group configured for the line.

AccO, AccI

Output or Input access list number configured for the line.

Uses

Number of connections established to or from the line since the system was restarted.

Noise

Number of times noise has been detected on the line since the system was restarted.

Overruns

Hardware (UART) overruns or software buffer overflows, both defined as the number of overruns or overflows that occurred on the specified line since the system was restarted. Hardware overruns are buffer overruns; the UART chip has received bits from the software faster than it can process them. A software overflow occurs when the software has received bits from the hardware faster than it can process them.

Line

Current line.

Location

Location of the current line.

Type

Type of line, as specified by the line global configuration command.

Length

Length of the terminal or screen display.

Width

Width of the terminal or screen display.

Baud rate (TX/RX)

Transmit rate/receive rate of the line.

Status

State of the line: ready or not, connected or disconnected, active or inactive, exit banner or no exit banner, async interface active or inactive.

Capabilities

Current terminal capabilities. In this case, the line is usable as an asynchronous interface.

Modem state

Modem control state. This field should always read READY.

Special characters

Current settings that were input by the user (or taken by default) from the following global configuration commands:

  • escape-character

  • hold-character

  • stop-character

  • start-character

  • disconnect-character

  • activation-character

Timeouts

Current settings that were input by the user (or taken by default) from the following global configuration commands:

exec-timeout

session-timeout

dispatch-timeout

modem answer-timeout

Session limit

Maximum number of sessions.

Time since activation

Last time start_process was run.

Editing

Whether or not command line editing is enabled.

History

Current history length, set by the user (or taken by default) from the history configuration command.

Full user help

Whether or not full user help is enabled, set by the user (or taken by default) from the help line configuration command.

Transport methods

Current set transport method, set by the user (or taken by default) from the transport preferred line configuration command.

Character padding

Current set padding, set by the user (or taken by default) from the padding line configuration command.

Data dispatching characters

Current dispatch character set by the user (or taken by default) from the dispatch-character line configuration command.

Line protocol

Definition of the specified line's protocol and address.

Output, Input Packets

Number of output and input packets queued on this line.

Group codes

AT group codes.

show location

To display the system location, use the show location EXEC command.

show location

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display information for analyzing and evaluating the system.

show logging

To display the state of logging to the syslog, use the show logging EXEC command.

show logging

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the state of syslog error and event logging, including host addresses, and whether console logging is enabled. This command also displays SNMP configuration parameters and protocol activity.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show logging command.

Switch# show logging
Syslog logging: enabled
     	Console logging: disabled
     	Monitor logging: level debugging, 266 messages logged.
     	Trap logging: level informational, 266 messages logged.
     	Logging to 131.108.2.238
 
 

Table 18-43 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-43: show logging Field Descriptions
Field Description

Syslog logging

When enabled, system logging messages are sent to a UNIX host that acts as a syslog server; that is, it captures and saves the messages.

Console logging

If enabled, states the level; otherwise, this field displays disabled.

Monitor logging

Minimum level of severity required for a log message to be sent to a monitor terminal (not the console).

Trap logging

Minimum level of severity required for a log message to be sent to a syslog server.

show memory

To show statistics about switch memory, including memory free pool statistics, use the show memory EXEC command.

show memory [type] [allocating process] [dead] [free] [pci]

Syntax Description

type

Memory type to display (see Table 18-44). If type is not specified, statistics for all memory types present in the switch are displayed.

allocating-process

Displays allocating process name.

dead

Displays memory owned by dead processes.

free

Displays free memory statistics.

pci

Displays PCI memory statistics.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

You should use the summary option to limit the amount of information presented.

Table 18-44 lists the types of memory statistics that you specify in the show memory type EXEC command.


Table 18-44: show memory Type Options
Type Description

address

Displays memory starting at 0 through 4294967294.

allocating-process

Shows allocating process name.

dead

Displays memory owned by dead processes.

failures alloc

Displays memory allocation failures.

fast

Displays fast memory statistics.

free

Displays free memory statistics.

io

Displays IO memory statistics.

multibus

Displays multibus memory statistics.

pci

Displays PCI memory statistics.

processor

Displays processor memory statistics.

summary

Displays summary of memory usage per allocated PC.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show memory command.

Switch# show memory
               Head  FreeList    Total(b)     Used(b)     Free(b)  Largest(b)
Processor  6059E050  603F96C8    10887088     3249548     7637540     7601484
     Fast  6057E050  603FA454      131072       43444       87628       87280
 
          Processor memory
 
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
6059E050   1056 0        6059E498   1                  6001F4B4  List Elements
6059E498   2656 6059E050 6059EF20   1                  6001F4B4  List Headers
6059EF20   6000 6059E498 605A06B8   1                  60020628  *Init*
605A06B8   6000 6059EF20 605A1E50   1                  60020628  *Init*
605A1E50    168 605A06B8 605A1F20   1                  6002FBEC  *Init*
605A1F20   2548 605A1E50 605A293C   1                  600324B4  TTY data
605A293C   2000 605A1F20 605A3134   1                  600353B0  TTY Input Buf
605A3134    512 605A293C 605A335C   1                  600353E4  TTY Output Buf
605A335C   6000 605A3134 605A4AF4   1                  60020628  *Init*
605A4AF4   1056 605A335C 605A4F3C   1                  6001F4B4  messages
605A4F3C   1032 605A4AF4 605A536C   1                  6005D99C  *Init*
605A536C     52 605A4F3C 605A53C8   1                  60063034  ILMI Request
605A53C8  12528 605A536C 605A84E0   0  608B666 0       600441E0  (coalesced)
605A84E0   2548 605A53C8 605A8EFC   1                  60060C68  *Init*
605A8EFC     84 605A84E0 605A8F78   1                  60063280  Init
605A8F78     84 605A8EFC 605A8FF4   1                  60063280  Init
605A8FF4     84 605A8F78 605A9070   1                  60063280  Init
605A9070   3456 605A8FF4 605A9E18   1                  6001F4B4  Reg Service

The following example is sample output from the show memory free command.

Switch# show memory free
Head  FreeList    Total(b)     Used(b)     Free(b)  Largest(b)
Processor  6059E050  603F96C8    10887088     3249536     7637552     7601484
     Fast  6057E050  603FA454      131072       43444       87628       87280
 
Processor memory
 
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
 
             24    Free list 1
608B4724     36 608B46F8 608B4770   0  0       608198D 60069ED4  Exec
608198DC     24 608198B0 6081991C   0  608B472 608B3E4 60069ED4  Exec
608B3E48     52 608B3E10 608B3EA4   0  608198D 0       6006A0FC  Exec
 
             88    Free list 2
 
            104    Free list 3
608B60B4    112 608B6084 608B614C   0  0       0       60034890  (coalesced)
 
            116    Free list 4
 
            120    Free list 5
 
            124    Free list 6
 
            152    Free list 7
Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
608B3D08    204 608B3CD0 608B3DFC   0  0       0       60034890  (coalesced)
 
            216    Free list 8
608B5BD0    248 608B5B98 608B5CF0   0  0       0       60034890  (coalesced)
 
            264    Free list 9
 
            280    Free list 10
608BA45C    296 608BA430 608BA5AC   0  0       0       60034890  (coalesced)
 
            344    Free list 11
 
            384    Free list 12
 
            408    Free list 13
 
            472    Free list 14
 
            672    Free list 15
608BA848    712 608BA690 608BAB38   0  0       0       0         (fragment)
 
            760    Free list 16
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
 
           1144    Free list 17
 
           1500    Free list 18
 
           1684    Free list 19
608BAD50   1740 608BACFC 608BB444   0  0       0       0         (coalesced)
 
           2000    Free list 20
 
           3000    Free list 21
 
           4256    Free list 22
 
           4680    Free list 23
 
           5000    Free list 24
 
           5184    Free list 25
608BB514   7588 608BB4C0 608BD2E0   0  0       0       6006D054  (coalesced)
 
           9376    Free list 26
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
 
          10000    Free list 27
608B6664  12528 608B661C 608B977C   0  0       605A53C 0         (coalesced)
605A53C8  12528 605A5380 605A84E0   0  608B666 0       600441E0  (coalesced)
 
          18184    Free list 28
 
          20000    Free list 29
 
          32768    Free list 30
 
          65536    Free list 31
 
         131072    Free list 32
 
         262144    Free list 33
608C028C7601484 608BD398 0          0  0       0       60067AC8  (coalesced)
 
Total:   7637552
 
          Fast memory
 
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
 
             24    Free list 1
6057E050     36 603FA214 6057E09C   0  0       6057F6F 0         (fragment)
6057F6F8     28 6057E0B0 6057F73C   0  6057E05 60580D9 0         (fragment)
60580D98     28 6057F750 60580DDC   0  6057F6F 6058243 0         (fragment)
60582438     28 60580DF0 6058247C   0  60580D9 60582CA 0         (fragment)
60582CA4     48 60582490 60582CFC   0  6058243 60582F2 0         (fragment)
60582F24     48 60582D10 60582F7C   0  60582CA 605830A 0         (fragment)
605830A4     48 60582F90 605830FC   0  60582F2 6058475 0         (fragment)
60584758     28 60583110 6058479C   0  605830A 60585DF 0         (fragment)
60585DF8     28 605847B0 60585E3C   0  6058475 6058749 0         (fragment)
60587498     28 60585E50 605874DC   0  60585DF 0       0         (fragment)
 
             88    Free list 2
 
            152    Free list 3
 
            216    Free list 4
 
            280    Free list 5
 
            344    Free list 6
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
 
            408    Free list 7
 
            472    Free list 8
 
           1500    Free list 9
 
           2000    Free list 10
 
           3000    Free list 11
 
           5000    Free list 12
 
          10000    Free list 13
 
          20000    Free list 14
 
          32768    Free list 15
 
          65536    Free list 16
60588B38  87280 605874F0 0          0  0       0       0         (fragment)
 
 Address  Bytes Prev.    Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
         131072    Free list 17
 
         262144    Free list 18
 
Total:     87628
 
 

The display of show memory free contains the same types of information as the show memory display, except that only free memory is displayed, and the information is displayed, in order, for each free list.

The first section of the display includes summary statistics about the activities of the system memory allocator.

Table 18-45 describes significant fields shown in the first section of the display.


Table 18-45: show memory Field Descriptions—First Section
Field Description

Head

Hexadecimal address of the head of the memory allocation chain.

Free List

Hexadecimal address of the base of the free list.

Total (b)

Sum of used bytes plus free bytes.

Used (b)

Amount of memory in use.

Free (b)

Amount of memory not in use.

Largest (b)

Size of largest available free block.

The second section of the display is a block-by-block listing of memory use. Table 18-46 describes the significant fields in the second section of the display.


Table 18-46: Characteristics of Each Block of Memory—Second Section
Field Description

Address

Hexadecimal address of the block.

Bytes

Size of the block, in bytes.

Prev.

Address of the previous block (should match the Address field on previous line).

Next

Address of the next block (should match the address on the next line).

Ref

Reference count for that memory block, indicating how many different processes are using that block of memory.

PrevF

Address of the previous free block (if free).

NextF

Address of the next free block (if free).

Alloc PC

Address of the system call that allocated the block.

What

Name of process that owns the block, or "(fragment)" if the block is a fragment, or "(coalesced)" if the block was coalesced from adjacent free blocks.

The show memory io command displays the free IO memory blocks. This command quickly shows how much unused IO memory is available.

The following example is sample output from the show memory io command.

Switch# show memory io
Address   Bytes Prev.   Next     Ref  PrevF   NextF   Alloc PC  What
6132DA0   59264 6132664 6141520  0    0      600DDEC  3FCF0     *Packet Buffer*
600DDEC     500 600DA4C 600DFE0  0   6132DA0 600FE68 0 
600FE68     376 600FAC8 600FFE0  0   600DDEC 6011D54 0 
6011D54     652 60119B4 6011FEO  0   600FE68 6013D54 0 
614FCA0     832 614F564 614FFE0  0   601FD54 6177640 0 
6177640 2657056 6172E90 0        0   614FCA0 0       0 
Total: 2723244

show ncdp path root

To display the NCDP path from the current node to its root clock source, use the
show ncdp path root command.

show ncdp path root

When this command is executed, a PDU is built and sent towards its root clock source. As the PDU traverses nodes in the network, the NCDP entity on each node adds path information to the PDU. When the PDU reaches the node with the root clock source, it is routed back to the originating node. When the PDU is received by the originating node, the accumulated path information is displayed.

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Defaults

Disabled

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The operation of this command is asynchronous, and thus the PDU or response PDU could be dropped within the network, causing this command to fail.

Examples

Switch# show ncdp path root
Ncdp:name         :low-sodium
Ncdp:address      :4700918100000000603E7B6E0100603E7B6E0100
Ncdp:hop count    :0
Ncdp:clock source :BITS 0
 
Ncdp:name         :ls1010-b
Ncdp:address      :4700918100000000E0F751CC0100E0F751CC0100
Ncdp:hop count    :1
Ncdp:clock source :ATM0/1/3
 
Ncdp:name         :ls1010-c
Ncdp:address      :4700918100000000E0F751CD0100E0F751CD0100
Ncdp:hop count    :2
Ncdp:clock source :ATM0/1/0

Related Commands
Command Description

debug ncdp

Displays NCDP errors, events, and packet information.

ncdp (interface)

Enables NCDP and configures the network clocking hardware at the interface level.

show ncdp ports

Displays NCDP information at the port level.

show ncdp sources

Displays all of the NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes.

show ncdp status

Displays NCDP status information.

show ncdp timers

Displays NCDP information for the node-level timers.

show ncdp ports

To display NCDP information at the port level, use the show ncdp ports command.

show ncdp ports {port_number | {atm | cbr} card/subcard/port | all}

Syntax Description

port_number

Displays NCDP information for the given port.

card/subcard/port

Displays NCDP information for the given ATM interface.

all

Displays NCDP information for all ports.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to show NCDP information at the port and interface level.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ncdp ports command.

Switch# show ncdp ports 14
 port data --(14)-----ATM3/1/1--------------
 port_id                           : 14
 state                             : forwarding
 admin weight                      : 10
 root vector priority              : 1
 root vector stratum level         : 4
 root vector prs id                : 255
 root vector switch stratum level  : 4
 root vector address               : 4700918100000000E0F75D040100E0F75D040100
 designated_cost                   : 0
 hop_count                         : 0
 switch vector priority            : 1
 switch vector stratum level       : 4
 switch vector prs id              : 255
 switch vector switch stratum level: 4
 switch vector address             : 4700918100000000E0F75D040100E0F75D040100
 designated_port                   : 7
 topology_change_acknowledge       : 0
 tx_sequence_number                : 628
 rx_sequence_number                : 1212285
 config_pending                    : 0
 health                            : unknown

Related Commands
Command Description

debug ncdp

Displays NCDP errors, events, and packet information.

national reserve (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Selects the national bits for E1 IMA interfaces.

ncdp (interface)

Enables NCDP and configure the network clocking hardware at the interface level.

show ncdp path root

Displays the NCDP path from the current node to its root clock source

show ncdp sources

Displays all of the NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes.

show ncdp status

Displays NCDP status information.

show ncdp timers

Displays NCDP information for the node-level timers.

show ncdp sources

To display all of the NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes, use the
show ncdp sources command.

show ncdp sources

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ncdp sources command.

Switch# show ncdp sources
 = ncdp clock source information ==========================
 Source type: Normal port (ATM0/1/3, 26, DOWN) (health: unknown)
   Priority             : 1
   Stratum level        : 3e
   Prs id               : 0
   Switch stratum level : 4
   Address              : 4700918100000000400B0A2A8100400B0A2A8100
 
 Source type: ASP free running
   Priority             : 128
   Stratum level        : 4
   Prs id               : 255
   Switch stratum level : 4
   Address              : 4700918100000000400B0A2A8100400B0A2A8100

Related Commands
Command Description

debug ncdp

Displays NCDP errors, events, and packet information.

national reserve (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Selects the national bits for E1 IMA interfaces.

ncdp (interface)

Enables NCDP and configures the network clocking hardware at the interface level.

show ncdp path root

Displays the NCDP path from the current node to its root clock source.

show ncdp ports

Displays NCDP information at the port level.

show ncdp status

Displays NCDP status information.

show ncdp timers

Displays NCDP information for the node-level timers.

show ncdp status

To display NCDP status information, use the show ncdp status command.

show ncdp status

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display NCDP status information on the local node.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ncdp status command.

LS1010# show ncdp status
 = ncdp switch information ==== enabled ==============
 revertive
 root clock source priority:      1
 root clock source stratum level: 4
 root clock source prs id:        255
 stratum level of root switch:    4
 clocking root address:           4700918100000000E0F75D040100E0F75D040100
 hop count:                       1
 root path cost:                  10
 root port:                       14 <ATM3/1/1>
 max age:                         20
 hello time:                      500
 priority      of best source:    128
 stratum level of best source:    4
 prs id        of best source:    255
 switch stratum level:            4
 address:                         4700918100000000400B0A2A8100400B0A2A8100
 switch max age:                  11
 switch hello time:               500
 switch hold time:                500
 max diameter:                    11
 converged root count:            1181224
 converged:                       1
 total timer events:              1524768
 total queue events:              1195449
 rx config messages:              1195449
 tx config messages:              332043
 rx tcn messages:                 1
 tx tcn messages:                 6
 rx non-participant messages:     14
 rx unknown messages:             0

Related Commands
Command Description

debug ncdp

Displays NCDP errors, events, and packet information.

national reserve (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Selects the national bits for E1 IMA interfaces.

ncdp (interface)

Enables NCDP and configures the network clocking hardware at the interface level.

show ncdp path root

Displays the NCDP path from the current node to its root clock source.

show ncdp ports

Displays NCDP information at the port level.

show ncdp sources

Displays all of the NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes.

show ncdp timers

Displays NCDP information for the node-level timers.

show ncdp timers

To display NCDP information for the node-level timers, use the show ncdp timers command.

show ncdp timers

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display NCDP information for the node-level timers.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ncdp timers command.

LS1010# show ncdp timers
 = ncdp switch timer information ==========================
 hello   events           : 714
 tcn     events           : 0
 topo    events           : 1
 port    events           : 4
 msg_age events           : 0
 hold    events           : 332061
 ncdp    events           : 1195205

Related Commands
Command Description

debug ncdp

Displays NCDP errors, events, and packet information.

national reserve (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Selects the national bits for E1 IMA interfaces.

ncdp (interface)

Enables NCDP and configures the network clocking hardware at the interface level.

show ncdp path root

Displays the NCDP path from the current node to its root clock source.

show ncdp ports

Displays NCDP information at the port level.

show ncdp sources

Displays all of the NCDP clock sources configured on the node and their attributes.

show ncdp status

Displays NCDP status information.

show network-clocks

To show which ports are designated as network clock sources, use the show network-clocks
EXEC command.

show network-clocks

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command also displays what is configured at each priority, and the current priority of the functioning clock.

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following is sample output from the show network-clocks EXEC command for anATM switch router.

Switch# show network-clocks
Network clocking information:
---------------------------------------
Source switchover mode:    non-revertive
Netclkd state:             Active
Source selection method:   provisioned
NCLKM hardware status:     installed & usable
NCLKM status:              software enabled
Primary   clock source:    BITS 0 in T1 mode  
Secondary clock source:    not configured
Present   clock source:    BITS 0 in T1 mode Locking

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following is sample output from the show network-clocks EXEC command for an ATM switch router.

Switch# show network-clocks
clock configuration is NON-Revertive
Priority 1 clock source: No clock
Priority 2 clock source: No clock
Priority 3 clock source: No clock
Priority 4 clock source: No clock
Priority 5 clock source: System clock
Current clock source:System clock, priority:5
 

Related Commands
Command Description

network-clock-select

Allows the recovered clock to specify a particular port to provide network clocking.

show ntp associations

To show the status of NTP associations, use the show ntp associations EXEC command.

show ntp associations [detail]

Syntax Description

detail

Shows detailed information about each NTP association.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

Detailed descriptions of the information displayed by this command can be found in the
NTP specification (RFC 1305).

The following example is sample output from the show ntp associations command.

Switch# show ntp associations
     address         ref clock     st  when  poll reach  delay  offset    disp
 ~160.89.32.2      160.89.32.1       5    29  1024  377     4.2   -8.59     1.6
+~131.108.13.33    131.108.1.111     3    69   128  377     4.1    3.48     2.3
*~131.108.13.57    131.108.1.111     3    32   128  377     7.9   11.18     3.6
* master (synced), # master (unsynced), + selected, - candidate, ~ configured
 

Table 18-47 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-47: show ntp associations Field Descriptions
Field Description

address

Address of the peer.

ref clock

Address of the peer reference clock.

st

Peer stratum.

when

Time since the last NTP packet was received from the peer.

poll

Polling interval (seconds).

reach

Peer reachability (bit string, in octal).

delay

Round-trip delay to the peer (milliseconds).

offset

Relative time of the peer's clock to the local clock (milliseconds).

disp

Dispersion.

The first character of the line can be one or more of the following:

*

Synchronized to this peer.

#

Almost synchronized to this peer.

+

Peer selected for possible synchronization.

-

Peer is a candidate for selection.

~

Peer is statically configured.

The following example is sample output of the show ntp associations detail command.

Switch# show ntp associations detail
160.89.32.2 configured, insane, invalid, stratum 5
ref ID 160.89.32.1, time AFE252C1.6DBDDFF2 (00:12:01.428 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
our mode active, peer mode active, our poll intvl 1024, peer poll intvl 64
root delay 137.77 msec, root disp 142.75, reach 376, sync dist 215.363
delay 4.23 msec, offset -8.587 msec, dispersion 1.62
precision 2**19, version 3
org time AFE252E2.3AC0E887 (00:12:34.229 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
rcv time AFE252E2.3D7E464D (00:12:34.240 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
xmt time AFE25301.6F83E753 (00:13:05.435 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
filtdelay =     4.23    4.14    2.41    5.95    2.37    2.33    4.26    4.33
filtoffset =   -8.59   -8.82   -9.91   -8.42  -10.51  -10.77  -10.13  -10.11
filterror =     0.50    1.48    2.46    3.43    4.41    5.39    6.36    7.34
 
131.108.13.33 configured, selected, sane, valid, stratum 3
ref ID 131.108.1.111, time AFE24F0E.14283000 (23:56:14.078 PDT Sun Jul 4 1993)
our mode client, peer mode server, our poll intvl 128, peer poll intvl 128
root delay 83.72 msec, root disp 217.77, reach 377, sync dist 264.633
delay 4.07 msec, offset 3.483 msec, dispersion 2.33
precision 2**6, version 3
org time AFE252B9.713E9000 (00:11:53.442 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
rcv time AFE252B9.7124E14A (00:11:53.441 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
xmt time AFE252B9.6F625195 (00:11:53.435 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
filtdelay =     6.47    4.07    3.94    3.86    7.31    7.20    9.52    8.71
filtoffset =    3.63    3.48    3.06    2.82    4.51    4.57    4.28    4.59
filterror =     0.00    1.95    3.91    4.88    5.84    6.82    7.80    8.77
 
131.108.13.57 configured, our_master, sane, valid, stratum 3
ref ID 131.108.1.111, time AFE252DC.1F2B3000 (00:12:28.121 PDT Mon Jul 5 1993)
our mode client, peer mode server, our poll intvl 128, peer poll intvl 128
root delay 125.50 msec, root disp 115.80, reach 377, sync dist 186.157
delay 7.86 msec, offset 11.176 msec, dispersion 3.62
precision 2**6, version 2
org time AFE252DE.77C29000 (00:12:30.467 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
rcv time AFE252DE.7B2AE40B (00:12:30.481 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
xmt time AFE252DE.6E6D12E4 (00:12:30.431 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
filtdelay =    49.21    7.86    8.18    8.80    4.30    4.24    7.58    6.42
filtoffset =   11.30   11.18   11.13   11.28    8.91    9.09    9.27    9.57
filterror =     0.00    1.95    3.91    4.88    5.78    6.76    7.74    8.71   
 

Table 18-48 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-48: show ntp associations detail Field Descriptions
Field Descriptions

configured

Peer was statically configured.

dynamic

Peer was dynamically discovered.

our_master

Local machine is synchronized to this peer.

selected

Peer is selected for possible synchronization.

candidate

Peer is a candidate for selection.

sane

Peer passes basic sanity checks.

insane

Peer fails basic sanity checks.

valid

Peer time is believed to be valid.

invalid

Peer time is believed to be invalid.

leap_add

Peer is signalling that a leap second is added.

leap-sub

Peer is signalling that a leap second is subtracted.

unsynced

Peer is not synchronized to any other machine.

ref ID

Address of the machine to which peer is synchronized.

time

Last time stamp peer received from its master.

our mode

Our mode relative to peer (active/passive/client/server/bdcast/bdcast client).

peer mode

Peer's mode relative to us.

our poll ivl

Our poll interval to the peer.

peer poll ivl

Peer's poll interval to us.

root delay

Delay along the path to the root (ultimate stratum 1 time source).

root disp

Dispersion of the path to the root.

reach

Peer reachability (bit string in octal).

sync dist

Peer synchronization distance.

delay

Round-trip delay to the peer.

offset

Offset of the peer clock relative to our clock.

dispersion

Dispersion of the peer clock.

precision

Precision of the peer clock (in Hz).

version

NTP version number that peer is using.

org time

Originate time stamp.

rcv time

Receive time stamp.

xmt time

Transmit time stamp.

filtdelay

Round-trip delay, in milliseconds, of each sample.

filtoffset

Clock offset, in milliseconds, of each sample.

filterror

Approximate error of each sample.

show ntp status

To show the status of NTP, use the show ntp status EXEC command.

show ntp status

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show ntp status command.

Switch# show ntp status
Clock is synchronized, stratum 4, reference is 131.108.13.57
nominal freq is 250.0000 Hz, actual freq is 249.9990 Hz, precision is 2**19
reference time is AFE2525E.70597B34 (00:10:22.438 PDT Fri Apr 4 1997)
clock offset is 7.33 msec, root delay is 133.36 msec
root dispersion is 126.28 msec, peer dispersion is 5.98 msec
 
 

Table 18-49 shows the significant fields in the display.


Table 18-49: show ntp status Field Descriptions
Field Description

synchronized

System is synchronized to an NTP peer.

unsynchronized

System is not synchronized to any NTP peer.

stratum

NTP stratum of this system.

reference

Address of the peer to which the unit is synchronized.

nominal freq

Nominal frequency of the system hardware clock.

actual freq

Measured frequency of the system hardware clock.

precision

Precision of this system's clock (in Hz).

reference time

Reference time stamp.

clock offset

Offset of our clock to synchronized peer.

root delay

Total delay along the path to the root clock.

root dispersion

Dispersion of the root path.

peer dispersion

Dispersion of the synchronized peer.

show ppp multilink

To display bundle information for the multilink PPP bundles, use the show ppp multilink
EXEC command.

show ppp multilink

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output when no bundles are on a system.

impulse# show ppp multilink
No active bundles
 

The following example is sample output when a single multilink PPP bundle (named rudder) is on a system.

systema# show ppp multilink
Bundle rudder, 3 members, first link is BRI0: B-channel 1
0 lost fragments, 8 reordered, 0 unassigned, sequence 0x1E/0x1E rcvd/sent
 

The following example is sample output when two active bundles are on a system. Subsequent bundles would be displayed below the previous bundle.

impulse# show ppp multilink
Bundle rudder, 3 members, first link is BRI0: B-Channel 1
  0 lost fragments, 8 reordered, 0 unassigned, sequence 0x1E/0x1E rcvd/sent
Bundle dallas, 4 members, first link is BRI2: B-Channel 1
  0 lost fragments, 28 reordered, 0 unassigned, sequence 0x12E/0x12E rcvd/sent
 

The following example shows output when a stack group was created. On stack group member systema on stack group stackq, multilink PPP bundle hansolo has bundle interface Virtual-Access4. Two child interfaces are joined to this bundle interface. The first is a local PRI channel (serial 0:4), and the second is an interface from stack group member systemb.

systema# show ppp multilink
Bundle hansolo 2 members, Master link is Virtual-Access4
0 lost fragments, 0 reordered, 0 unassigned, 100/255 load
0 discarded,  0 lost received, sequence 40/66 rcvd/sent
members 2
 Serial0:4  
 systemb:Virtual-Access6    (1.1.1.1)

show privilege

To display your current level of privilege, use the show privilege EXEC command.

show privilege

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show privilege command. The current privilege level is 15.

Switch# show privilege
Current privilege level is 15

Related Commands
Command Description

enable password

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual.

show processes

To display information about the active processes, use the show processes EXEC command.

show processes [cpu]

Syntax Description

cpu

Displays utilization statistics.
Displays detailed route processor utilization statistics. (Catalyst 840 MSR)

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show processes command.

Switch# show processes
CPU utilization for five seconds: 0%/0%; one minute: 0%; five minutes: 0%
 PID QTy       PC Runtime (ms)    Invoked   uSecs    Stacks TTY Process
   1 M*         0         2156       3194     67510408/12000  0 Exec
   2 Lst 6001EFF0         4532       2266    2000 5808/6000   0 Check heaps
   3 Mst 6004867C            0          2       0 5680/6000   0 Timers
   4 Lwe 600804C0          908       7752     117 5404/6000   0 ARP Input
   5 Mwe 601A05A4            0          1       0 2712/3000   0 OIR Handler
   6 HE  6022A61C            0          1       0 5840/6000   0 ATM OAM input
   7 LE  6022BDA0            0          1       0 5852/6000   0 ATM ARP Input
   8 Lsp 6019F048            0      13593       0 5792/6000   0 Aal5 Reassembly
   9 Mwe 600E0344            0       6798       0 5524/6000   0 CDP Protocol
  10 Lwe 6011C744            0          1       0 5680/6000   0 Probe Input
  11 Mwe 6011C038            0          1       0 5716/6000   0 RARP Input
  12 Hwe 6010B7A0          660       3449     19110648/12000  0 IP Input
  13 Mwe 60138A70            0      13593       0 5764/6000   0 TCP Timer
  14 Lwe 6013A674            0          3       0 5640/6000   0 TCP Protocols
  15 Mwe 6026CE40            0          4       0 5696/6000   0 ATM-RT Background
  16 Mwe 60117C78            0          1       0 5544/6000   0 BOOTP Server
  17 Lsi 6016B72C            0       1133       0 5788/6000   0 IP Cache Ager
  18 Hwe 602691B8           28          9    3111 5032/6000   0 ILMI Input
  19 Mwe 60263284            8          5    1600 5268/6000   0 ILMI Request
  20 Mwe 60263338            4          5     800 5176/6000   0 ILMI Response
  21 Lwe 602522E4            0          1       0 5828/6000   0 Resource Mgmt ba
	 22 Mwe 602496F8            0          2       0 5680/6000   0 ATMCORE OAM Proc
  23 Mwe 6024CA90            0          2       0 5684/6000   0 ATMCORE OAM Ping
  24 Mwe 60203D50            0          7       0 5680/6000   0 ATMSIG Timer
  25 Mwe 6022528C            0       4534       0 5132/6000   0 SSCOP Input
  26 Mwe 6022555C            0       2266       0 5176/6000   0 SSCOP Output
  27 Mst 60225924            0          3       0 5252/6000   0 SSCOP Timer
  28 Mwe 602024D4            0          2       0 5680/6000   0 ATMSIG Input
  29 Mwe 602028E8            0          3       0 5364/6000   0 ATMSIG Output
  30 Mwe 60238488            0          2       0 5688/6000   0 ATM Soft VC Time
  31 Mwe 602923B8            0          2       0 5286/6000   0 IISP router
  32 Cwe 60012040            0          1       0 5720/6000   0 Critical Bkgnd
  33 Mwe 60011E68           36          2   18000 4720/6000   0 Net Background
  34 Lwe 600424F8            0          9       0 5544/6000   0 Logger
  35 Msp 600204E4            4      67968       0 5088/6000   0 TTY Background
  36 Hwe 6001235C         2100      62468      33 2708/3000   0 Net Input
  37 Msp 60011D98        13584       1133   11989 5120/6000   0 Per-minute Jobs

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show processes cpu command.

Switch# show processes cpu
CPU utilization for five seconds: 0%/0%; one minute: 0%; five minutes: 0% PID Runtime(ms) Invoked uSecs 5Sec 1Min 5Min TTY Process 1 2180 3212 678 0.00% 0.03% 0.07% 0 Exec 2 4536 2268 2000 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Check heaps 3 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Timers 4 912 7787 117 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ARP Input 5 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 OIR Handler 6 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATM OAM input 7 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATM ARP Input 8 0 13605 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Aal5 Reassembly Tim 9 0 6804 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 CDP Protocol 10 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Probe Input 11 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 RARP Input 12 660 3452 191 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 IP Input 13 0 13605 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 TCP Timer 14 0 3 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 TCP Protocols 15 0 4 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATM-RT Background 16 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 BOOTP Server 17 0 1134 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 IP Cache Ager 18 28 9 3111 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ILMI Input 19 8 5 1600 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ILMI Request 20 4 5 800 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ILMI Response 21 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Resource Mgmt backg PID Runtime(ms) Invoked uSecs 5Sec 1Min 5Min TTY Process 22 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATMCORE OAM Process 23 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATMCORE OAM Ping Rc 24 0 7 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATMSIG Timer 25 0 4538 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 SSCOP Input 26 0 2268 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 SSCOP Output 27 0 3 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 SSCOP Timer 28 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATMSIG Input 29 0 3 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATMSIG Output 30 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 ATM Soft VC Timer 31 0 2 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 IISP router 32 0 1 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Critical Bkgnd 33 36 2 18000 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Net Background 34 0 9 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Logger 35 4 68023 0 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 TTY Background 36 2100 62522 33 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0 Net Input 37 13596 1134 11989 0.00% 0.01% 0.00% 0 Per-minute Jobs

Table 18-50 describes the significant fields shown in the two displays.


Table 18-50: show processes Field Descriptions 
Field Description

utilization for five seconds

CPU utilization for the last 5 seconds, 1 minute, and 5 minutes.

route processor utilization for five seconds (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

CPU utilization for the last 5 seconds, 1 minute, and 5 minutes.

PID

Process ID.

Q

Process queue priority. Possible values are: H (high), M (medium), L (low).

Ty

Scheduler test. Possible values: * (currently running), E (waiting for an event), S (ready to run, voluntarily relinquished processor), rd (ready to run, wakeup conditions occurred), we (waiting for an event), sa (sleeping until an absolute time), si (sleeping for a time interval), sp (sleeping for a time interval [alternate call]), st (sleeping until a timer expires), hg (hung; the process never executes again), xx (dead; the process has terminated, but has not yet been deleted).

PC

Current program counter.

Runtime (ms)

CPU time the process has used, in milliseconds.

Invoked

Number of times the process has been invoked.

uSecs

Microseconds of CPU time for each process invocation.

Stacks

Low water mark/total stack space available (in bytes).

TTY

Terminal that controls the process.

Process

Name of process.

five seconds

CPU utilization by task in last 5 seconds (in hundredths of seconds).

one minute

CPU utilization by task in last minute (in hundredths of seconds).

five minutes

CPU utilization by task in last 5 minutes (in hundredths of seconds).


Note   Because the network server has a 4-ms clock resolution, run times are considered reliable only after a large number of invocations or a reasonable, measured run time.

show processes memory

To show memory utilization, use the show processes memory EXEC command.

show processes memory

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show processes memory command.

Switch# show processes memory
Total: 10887088, Used: 3249408, Free: 7637680
 PID  TTY  Allocated      Freed    Holding    Getbufs    Retbufs Process
   0    0      45016        300      32056          0          0 *Init*
   0    0        300      38640        300          0          0 *Sched*
   0    0    1649012     107596    2956340    1715216          0 *Dead*
   1    0     254992     253508      14144          0          0 Exec
   2    0          0          0       6660          0          0 Check heaps
   3    0         92         92       6660          0          0 Timers
   4    0         92          0       6752          0          0 ARP Input
   5    0         92          0       3752          0          0 OIR Handler
   6    0          0          0       6660          0          0 ATM OAM input
   7    0          0          0       6660          0          0 ATM ARP Input
   8    0          0          0       6660          0          0 Aal5 Reassemblk
   9    0        332         92       6900          0          0 CDP Protocol
  10    0        228          0       6888          0          0 Probe Input
  11    0         92          0       6752          0          0 RARP Input
  12    0        204          0      12864          0          0 IP Input
  13    0          0          0       6660          0          0 TCP Timer
  14    0        728          0       7388          0          0 TCP Protocols
  15    0        184         92       6752          0          0 ATM-RT Backgrod
  16    0        528          0       7188          0          0 BOOTP Server
  17    0          0          0       6660          0          0 IP Cache Ager
  18    0      37576      37056       6788          0          0 ILMI Input
  19    0      10164       8360       6752          0          0 ILMI Request
  20    0       1688       6956       6844          0          0 ILMI Response
  21    0          0          0       6660          0          0 Resource Mgmt d
  22    0        184         92       6752          0          0 ATMCORE OAM Prs
  23    0        184         92       6752          0          0 ATMCORE OAM Pis
  24    0         92         92       6660          0          0 ATMSIG Timer
  25    0        184         92       6752          0          0 SSCOP Input
  26    0        184         92       6752          0          0 SSCOP Output
  27    0         92         92       6660          0          0 SSCOP Timer
  28    0        184         92       6752          0          0 ATMSIG Input
  29    0        796       1512       7364          0          0 ATMSIG Output
  30    0         92         92       6660          0          0 ATM Soft VC Tir
  31    0        628         92       7196          0          0 IISP router
  32    0        128          0       6844          0          0 Critical Bkgnd
  33    0      24440      11224       8028          0          0 Net Background
  34    0        184         92       6752          0          0 Logger
  35    0      17236       2964       6844          0          0 TTY Background
  36    0        184          0       3844          0          0 Net Input
  37    0          0          0       6660          0          0 Per-minute Jobs
                                   3249012 Total

Table 18-51 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-51: show processes memory Field Descriptions
Field Description

Total

Total amount of memory held.

PID

Process ID.

TTY

Terminal that controls the process.

Allocated

Sum of all memory that the process has requested from the system.

Freed

How much memory a process has returned to the system.

Holding

Allocated memory minus freed memory. A value can be negative when it has freed more than it was allocated.

Process

Process name.

*Init*

System initialization.

*Sched*

The scheduler.

*Dead*

Processes (as a group) that are now dead.

show protocols

To display the configured protocols, use the show protocols EXEC command.

show protocols [type card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

type

Specifies an interface type as atm, atm-p, cbr, ethernet, or null.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard and port numbers for the interface-type.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New document

Usage Guidelines

This command shows the global and interface-specific status of any configured IP protocol.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show protocols command.

Switch# show protocols
Global values:
ATM0 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 1.2.2.2 255.0.0.0
Ethernet0 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 172.20.40.43 255.255.255.0
ATM3/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
ATM3/0/1 is down, line protocol is down
ATM3/0/2 is down, line protocol is down
ATM3/0/3 is up, line protocol is up

show redundancy (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

To list all redundancy-related information, use the show redundancy EXEC command.

show redundancy

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command is available on the primary route processor only.

Examples

The following example shows how to list redundancy information for an ATM switch router.

Switch# show redundancy
Primary
-------
Slot:                          a4/0/0
Uptime:                        4 minutes
Image:                         Version 11.3(19980716:020138)
[kartik-ehsa-integ
107]
Last Running Config. Sync:     4 minutes
Last Startup Config. Sync:     4 minutes
Last Restart Reason:           Normal boot
Secondary
---------
Slot:                          a8/0/0
Uptime:                        4 minutes
Image:                         Version 11.3(19980716:020138)
 

Related Commands
Command Description

main-cpu (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

redundancy (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Switches to the redundancy mode.

show registry

To show the function registry information, use the show registry EXEC command.

show registry [registry-name [registry-num] [brief]] [brief | statistics]

Syntax Description

registry-name

Name of the registry to examine.

registry-num

Number of the registry to examine.

brief

Displays limited functions and services information.

statistics

Displays function registry statistics.

Defaults

Brief

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show registry command.

Switch# show registry atm 0
Registry objects: 1799  bytes: 213412
 
--
Registry 23: ATM Registry
  Service 23/0:
      Stub service with 5 arguments
            0x6025E890
  Service 23/1:
      Stub service with 4 arguments
            0x602649A0
  Service 23/2:
      Stub service with 3 arguments
            0x60264B20
  Service 23/3:
      Stub service with 1 argument
            0x60263790
  Service 23/4:
      Stub service with 1 argument
            0x60261C30
  Service 23/5:
      Stub service with 1 argument
            0x60261CC0
  Service 23/6:
Stub service with 1 argument
            0x60261E78
  Service 23/7:
      Stub service with 2 arguments
            0x60262038
  Service 23/8:
      Stub service with 1 argument
            0x602620C0
  Service 23/9:
      Stub service with 2 arguments
            0x6023F610
  Service 23/10:
      List service with 1 argument
            0x602677A4
            0x60212F0C
            0x60233CA4
  Service 23/11:
      Stub service with 1 argument
  Service 23/12:
      Case service with 1 argument, 7 maximum cases
         3  0x6027CFCC
         6  0x602120B8
    default 0x60211BA8
Service 23/13:
      Stub service with 1 argument
            0x602650C0
  Service 23/14:
      Stub service with 1 argument
 
--
Registry 25: ATM routing Registry
  Service 25/0:
      List service with 2 arguments
            0x60268A50

Examples

The following example is sample output of a brief show display command.

Switch# show registry atm 3/0/0 brief
Registry objects: 1799  bytes: 213412
 
--
Registry 23: ATM Registry
  Service 23/0:
  Service 23/1:
  Service 23/2:
  Service 23/3:
  Service 23/4:
  Service 23/5:
  Service 23/6:
  Service 23/7:
  Service 23/8:
  Service 23/9:
  Service 23/10:
  Service 23/11:
  Service 23/12:
  Service 23/13:
  Service 23/14:
 
--
Registry 25: ATM routing Registry
  Service 25/0:

show reload

To display the reload status on the switch, use the show reload EXEC command.

show reload

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use show reload command to display a pending software reload.

Examples

The following show reload command represents a reload scheduled for 12:00 a.m. (midnight) on Saturday, April 20, 1998.

Switch# show reload
Reload scheduled for 00:00:00 PDT Sat April 20 1998 (in 12 hours and 12 minutes)

Related Commands
Command Description

reload

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show rhosts

To display information about current remote hosts, use the show rhosts EXEC command.

show rhosts

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display information about current users on the remote host. The information shows the local user, the host address, and the remote user.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show rhosts EXEC command.

Switch# show rhosts
Local user   Host            Remote user
jhunt          171.69.194.9    jhunt
 

show rif

To display the current contents of the RIF cache, use the show rif privileged EXEC command.

show rif

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show rif command:

Switch# show rif
Codes: * interface, - static, + remote
Hardware Addr  How   Idle (min)  Routing Information Field
5A00.0000.2333 atm0           		 	 	 	 3   08B0.0101.2201.0FF0
5B01.0000.4444 -                  -   -
0000.1403.4800 atm0           	 	 	 	 0   -
0000.2805.4C00 atm0           	 	 	 	 *   -
0000.2807.4C00 atm0           	 	 	 	 *   -
0000.28A8.4800 atm0           	 	 	 	 0   -
0077.2201.0001 atm0          	 	 	 	 	 10   0830.0052.2201.0FF0
 

In the display, entries marked with an asterisk (*) are the interface addresses of the router. Entries marked with a dash (-) are static entries. Entries with a number indicate cached entries. If the RIF timeout is set to a value other than the default of 15 minutes, the timeout is displayed at the top of the display. Table 18-52 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-52: show rif Field Descriptions
Field Description

Hardware Addr

MAC address for this entry.

How

Describes how the RIF has been learned. Possible values are atm0 or "-".

Idle (min)

Indicates how long (in minutes) since the last response was received directly from this node.

Routing Information Field

RIF number.

Related Commands
Command Description

multiring

Enables collection and use of RIF information on a subinterface.

rif

Used to enter static source-route information into the routing information field (RIF) cache.

show rmon alarms

To display the contents of the switch's RMON alarm table, use the show rmon alarms
EXEC command.

show rmon alarms

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

For additional information, refer to the RMON MIB described in RFC 1757.

You must have first enabled RMON on the interface, and configured RMON alarms to display alarm information with the show rmon alarms command.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show rmon alarms command.

Switch# show rmon alarms
Alarm 2 is active, owned by manager1
 Monitors ifEntry.1.1 every 30 seconds
 Taking delta samples, last value was 0
 Rising threshold is 15, assigned to event 12
 Falling threshold is 0, assigned to event 0
 On startup enable rising or falling alarm
 

Table 18-53 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-53: show rmon alarms Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Alarm 2 is active, owned by manager1

Unique index into the alarmTable, showing the alarm status is active, and the owner of this row, as defined in the RMON alarmTable.

Monitors ifEntry.1.1

Object identifier of the particular variable to be sampled. Equivalent to alarmVariable in RMON.

every 30 seconds

Interval in seconds over which the data is sampled and compared with the rising and falling thresholds. Equivalent to alarmInterval in RMON.

Taking delta samples

Method of sampling the selected variable and calculating the value to be compared against the thresholds. Equivalent to alarmSampleType in RMON.

last value was

Value of the statistic during the last sampling period. Equivalent to alarmValue in RMON.

Rising threshold is

Threshold for the sampled statistic. Equivalent to alarmRising Threshold in RMON.

assigned to event

Index of the eventEntry that is used when a rising threshold is crossed. Equivalent to alarmRisingEventIndex in RMON.

Falling threshold is

Threshold for the sampled statistic. Equivalent to alarmFallingThreshold in RMON.

assigned to event

Index of the eventEntry that is used when a falling threshold is crossed. Equivalent to alarmFallingEventIndex in RMON.

On startup enable rising or falling alarm

Alarm that may be sent when this entry is first set to valid. Equivalent to alarmStartupAlarm in RMON.

Related Commands
Command Description

rmon alarm

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show rmon events

To display the contents of the switches RMON event table, use the show rmon events
EXEC command.

show rmon events

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

For additional information, refer to the RMON MIB described in RFC 1757.

You must have first enabled RMON on the interface, and configured RMON events to display alarm information with the show rmon events command.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show rmon events command.

Switch# show rmon events
Event 12 is active, owned by manager1
 Description is interface-errors
 Event firing causes log and trap to community rmonTrap, last fired 00:00:00
 

Table 18-54 describes the fields shown in the display.


Table 18-54: show rmon events Field Descriptions
Field Description

Event 12 is active, owned by manager 1

Unique index into the eventTable, showing the event status is active, and the owner of this row, as defined in the eventTable of RMON.

Description is interface-errors

Type of event, in this case an interface error.

Event firing causes log and trap

Type of notification that the switch makes about this event. Equivalent to eventType in RMON.

community rmonTrap

If an SNMP trap is sent, it is sent to the SNMP community specified by this octet string. Equivalent to eventCommunity in RMON.

last fired

Last time the event was generated.

Related Commands
Command Description

rmon event

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show running-config

To display the configuration information currently running on the terminal, use the show running-config EXEC command. This command replaces the write terminal command.

show running-config

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

Modified: Replaced write terminal.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command in conjunction with the show startup-config command to compare the information in running memory to the information stored in a location specified by the config_file environment variable. This variable specifies the configuration file used for initialization (startup). Use the
bert (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010) command in conjunction with the
copy running-config startup-config command to set the config_file environment variable.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the running configuration.

Switch# show running-config
Building configuration...
 
Current configuration:
!
version 12.0
no service pad
service timestamps debug uptime
service timestamps log uptime
no service password-encryption
!
hostname Switch
!
boot host tftp dplatz/dummy.cfg 172.20.52.3
boot network tftp dplatz/dummy.cfg 172.20.52.3
boot system tftp dplatz/dummy.cfg 172.20.52.3
boot system flash cat8540m-wp-mz.120-2.5.W5.7.20
logging buffered 4096 debugging
enable password lab
!
no facility-alarm core-temperature major
no facility-alarm core-temperature minor
redundancy
 main-cpu
  sync config startup
  sync config running
no ip subnet-zero
ip host-routing
!
atm address 47.0091.8100.0000.0090.2156.d801.0090.2156.d801.00
atm address 47.0091.8100.0000.0040.0b0a.c501.0040.0b0a.c501.00
atm router pnni
 no aesa embedded-number left-justified
 node 1 level 56 lowest
  redistribute atm-static
!
!
lane database x
sgcp
!
!
interface Tunnel0
 no ip address
 no ip directed-broadcast
!
interface ATM0
 no ip address
 no ip directed-broadcast
 atm service-class 8 wrr-weight 15
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface Ethernet0
 ip address 172.20.52.11 255.255.255.224
 no ip directed-broadcast
!
interface Async1
 no ip address
 no ip directed-broadcast
 hold-queue 10 in
!
ip default-gateway 172.20.52.1
ip classless
!
!
atm pnni explicit-path identifier 1 name LS1010.path enable
 next-node LS1010 port 81901001
 next-node dallas 
 next-node NewLs1010 
!
atm pnni explicit-path identifier 2 name newpath enable
!
atm pnni explicit-path identifier 5 name test enable
!
line con 0
 no exec
 exec-timeout 0 0
 transport input none
line aux 0
 exec-timeout 0 0
line vty 0 4
 exec-timeout 0 0
 password lab
 no login
!
end

Related Commands
Command Description

bert (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Checks the bit errors on a line for a specified interval.

copy running-config

Copies the switch's running configuration file to another destination.

copy startup-config

Copies the switch's startup configuration file to another destination.

show startup-config

Shows the configuration file pointed to by the config_file environment variable.

show sessions

To display information about open Telnet or rlogin connections, use the show sessions
EXEC command.

show sessions

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the host name, address, number of unread bytes for the user to receive,
idle time, and connection name.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show sessions command.

Switch# show sessions
Conn Host                 Address          Byte    Idle  Conn Name
   1 MATHOM               192.31.7.21         0       0  MATHOM
*  2 CHAFF                131.108.12.19       0       0  CHAFF 
 

Table 18-55 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-55: show sessions Field Descriptions
Field Description

Conn

Name or address of the remote host to which the connection is made.

Host

Remote host to which the switch is connected through a Telnet session.

Address

IP address of the remote host.

Byte

Number of unread bytes displayed for the user to receive.

Idle

Interval (in minutes) since data was last sent on the line.

Conn Name

Assigned name of the connection.

Related Commands
Command Description

resume

switch to another open Telnet, LAT, or PAD session

where

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show sgcp

To display global configuration, operational state, and a summary of connection activity for SGCP, use the show sgcp EXEC command.

show sgcp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command shows the global configuration, operational state, and a summary of connection activity.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the global configuration, operational state, and a summary of connection activity.

Switch# show sgcp
SGCP Admin State ACTIVE, Oper State ACTIVE
SGCP call-agent: none  , SGCP graceful-shutdown enabled? FALSE
SGCP request timeout 2000, SGCP request retries 6
74 CES endpoint connections created
74 CES endpoints in active connections

Table 18-56 lists the field descriptions for the show sgcp command.

Related Commands
Command Description

sgcp

Enables the operation of the SGCP to interconnect ATM CES interface circuits on a switch.

sgcp call-agent

Sends SGCP response packets to a predetermined IP address and UDP port.

sgcp graceful-shutdown

Shuts down SGCP operation.

sgcp request retries

Specifies the number of times the ATM switch sends an SGCP request to the call agent without receiving a response and before ceasing to retry.

sgcp request timeout

Specifies the time the ATM switch waits after sending an SGCP request to the call agent before considering the request lost.

show sgcp connection

Displays a global list of SGCP connections or a single interface based on a related keyword.

show sgcp endpoint

Displays CES circuit endpoints that might or might not have connections created.

show sgcp statistics

Displays global statistics pertaining to SGCP activity.

show sgcp connection

To display a global list of SGCP connections or a single interface based on a related keyword,
use the show sgcp connection EXEC command.

show sgcp connection [interface cbr card/subcard/port]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard and port numbers for the CBR interface.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

If you show the allocated SGCP connections, it is easier to determine which single endpoints
to display.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the global list of SGCP connections.

Switch> show sgcp connection
Conn Endpt         Soft VC State         Call ID
CBR1.1.0/1         Dest- active VC       1564abc
CBR1.1.0/2         Src - active VC       123372c
CBR1.1.0/3         Dest- active VC       12343bc
CBR1.1.0/4         Src - active VC       1238926
CBR1.1.0/5         Dest- active VC       1003abc
CBR1.1.0/6         Src - active VC       12596dc
CBR1.1.0/7         Dest- active VC       124567c
CBR1.1.0/8         Src - active VC       14322bc
CBR1.1.0/9         Dest- active VC       120095c
CBR1.1.0/10        Src - active VC       129999c
CBR1.1.0/11        Dest- active VC       167776c
CBR1.1.0/12        Src - active VC       123456c
CBR1.1.0/14        Dest- active VC       1278764
CBR1.1.0/15        Src - active VC       123424c
CBR1.1.0/16        Dest- active VC       122345c

Related Commands
Command Description

sgcp

Enables the operation of the SGCP to interconnect ATM CES interface circuits on a switch.

show sgcp endpoint

Displays CES circuit endpoints that might or might not have connections created.

show sgcp endpoint

To display CES circuit endpoints that might or might not have connections created, use the
show sgcp endpoint EXEC command.

show sgcp endpoint [interface cbr card/subcard/port [endpoint_val]]

Syntax Description

card/subcard/portl

Specifies the card, subcard, and port numbers for the CBR interface.

endpoint_val

CES circuit ID:

  • T1 = 1 to 24

  • E1 = 1 to 31

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the endpoints that might be eligible for SGCP connections. The ATM switch router displays endpoints that follow:

Examples

The following example shows all CES circuits eligible to be SGCP endpoints.

Switch> show sgcp endpoint
Endpt         Timeslots Conn State            Call ID 
CBR1.1.0/1         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/2         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/3         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/4         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/5         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/6         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/7         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/8         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/9         1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/10        1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/11        1    active             
CBR1.1.0/12        1    no connection      
CBR1.1.0/14        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/15        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/16        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/17        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/18        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/19        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/20        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/21        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/22        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/23        1    active             1234abc
CBR1.1.0/24        1    active             1234abc
 

The following example shows a particular CES circuit SGCP endpoint.

Switch> show sgcp endpoint interface c1/1/0 1
 Call ID:    Conn ID:    CES VC state: no VC          
 Conn Mode none    , Conn State no connection     
 CreateConn rx 554, successful 552, failed 2
 DeleteConn rx 554, successful 554, failed 0
 ModifyConn rx 0, successful 0, failed 0
 DeleteConn tx 2, successful 2, failed 0
 Peer RELEASE rx 0, Net RELEASE rx 0
 

Table 18-56 lists possible strings that appear with the show sgcp endpoint command.


Table 18-56: Possible Strings with show sgcp endpoint 
Field Possible Strings

CES VC states:

no VC
waiting VC
initiating VC
active VC
tearing down VC

Connection states:

no connection
created-passive
created-initiator
active
ca delete pending
waiting delete rsp
waiting ca delete

Connection modes:

none
SendOnly
RecvOnly
SendRecv
Inactive
Loopback
ContTest

Related Commands
Command Description

sgcp

Enables the operation of the SGCP to interconnect ATM CES interface circuits on a switch.

show sgcp

Displays global configuration, operational state, and a summary of connection activity for SGCP.

show sgcp connection

Displays a global list of SGCP connections or a single interface based on a related keyword.

show sgcp statistics

To display global statistics pertaining to SGCP activity, use the show sgcp statistics
EXEC command.

show sgcp statistics

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(3c)W5(9)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Because circuit endpoint structures can be lost when you change interface circuit configuration, global statistics are useful once endpoint statistics are unavailable.

Examples

The following example displays global statistics for SGCP.

Switch# show sgcp stat
 UDP pkts rx 104517, tx 104874
 Unrecognized rx pkts 0, SGCP message parsing errors 0
 Duplicate SGC rsp tx 18
 CreateConn rx 53677, successful 48954, failed 4723
 DeleteConn rx 50808, successful 48872, failed 1936
 ModifyConn rx 20, successful 20, failed 0
 DeleteConn tx 357, successful 6, failed 351
 Peer RELEASE rx 24442, Net RELEASE rx 0
 

Table 18-57 lists field descriptions for the show sgcp statistics command.


Table 18-57: sgcp statistics Field Descriptions 
Field Description

UDP pkts rx

Number of UDP packets SGCP received.

UDP pkts tx

Number of UDP packets SGCP transmitted.

Unrecognized rx pkts

Number of packets that did not have a recognizable SGCP header.

SGCP message parsing errors

Number of packets that had an SGCP header, but had other parsing errors.

Duplicate SGCP rsp tx

This counter increments if an SGCP request is received that duplicates one for which a response exists in the response cache and a duplicate response is sent.

CreateConn rx

Total number of CreateConnection SGCP packets received.

CreateConn successful

Total number of CreateConnection requests to which SGCP positively responded.

CreateConn failed

Total number of CreateConnection requests to which SGCP responded negatively.

DeleteConn rx

Total number of DeleteConnection SGCP packets received, or retries were exceeded.

DeleteConn successful

Total number of DeleteConnection requests to which SGCP responded positively.

DeleteConn failed

Total number of DeleteConnection requests to which SGCP responded negatively.

ModifyConn rx

Total number of ModifyConnection SGCP packets received.

ModifyConn successful

Total number of ModifyConnection requests to which SGCP responded positively.

ModifyConn failed

Total number of ModifyConnection requests to which SGCP responded negatively.

DeleteConn tx

Total number of DeleteConnection SGCP packets transmitted.

Peer RELEASE rx

Total number of RELEASE messages received from the circuit peer.

Net RELEASE rx

Total number of network-generated RELEASE messages received.

Related Commands
Command Description

sgcp

Enables the operation of the SGCP to interconnect ATM CES interface circuits on a switch.

show sgcp

Displays global configuration, operational state, and a summary of connection activity for SGCP.

show sgcp connection

Displays a global list of SGCP connections or a single interface based on a related keyword.

show sgcp endpoint

Displays CES circuit endpoints that might or might not have connections created.

show snmp

To check the status of communications between the SNMP agent and SNMP manager, use the
show snmp EXEC command.

show snmp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command provides counter information for RFC 1213 SNMP operations. It also displays the chassis ID string defined with the snmp-server chassis-id command.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show snmp command.

Switch# show snmp
Chassis: SN#TS02K229
167 SNMP packets input
    0 Bad SNMP version errors
    0 Unknown community name
    0 Illegal operation for community name supplied
    0 Encoding errors
    167 Number of requested variables
    0 Number of altered variables
    0 Get-request PDUs
    167 Get-next PDUs
    0 Set-request PDUs
167 SNMP packets output
    0 Too big errors (Maximum packet size 484)
    0 No such name errors
    0 Bad values errors
    0 General errors
    167 Get-response PDUs
    0 SNMP trap PDUs

Related Commands
Command Description

snmp-server community

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

show sscop

To show SSCOP details for all ATM interfaces, use the show sscop EXEC command.

show sscop

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show sscop command.

Switch# show sscop atm 3/0/0
SSCOP details for interface ATM3/0/0
   Current State = Data Transfer Ready
   Send Sequence Number: Current = 2, Maximum = 9
   Send Sequence Number Acked = 3
   Rcv Sequence Number: Lower Edge = 2, Upper Edge = 2, Max = 9
   Poll Sequence Number = 1876, Poll Ack Sequence Number = 2
   Vt(Pd) = 0
   Connection Control: timer = 1000
   Timer currently Inactive
   Keep Alive Timer = 30000
   Current Retry Count = 0, Maximum Retry Count = 10
      Statistics -
      Pdu's Sent = 0, Pdu's Received = 0, Pdu's Ignored = 0
      Begin = 0/1, Begin Ack = 1/0, Begin Reject = 0/0
      End = 0/0, End Ack = 0/0
      Resync = 0/0, Resync Ack = 0/0
      Sequenced Data = 2/0, Sequenced Poll Data = 0/0
      Poll = 1591/1876, Stat = 0/1591, Unsolicited Stat = 0/0
      Unassured Data = 0/0, Mgmt Data = 0/0, Unknown Pdu's = 0

Table 18-58 describes the fields shown in the display. Interpreting this output requires an understanding of the SSCOP; it is usually displayed by Cisco technicians to help diagnose network problems.


Table 18-58: show sscop Field Descriptions 
Field Description

SSCOP details for interface

Interface card, subcard, and port.

Current State

SSCOP state for the interface.

Send Sequence Number

Current and maximum send sequence number.

Send Sequence Number Acked

Sequence number of packets already acknowledged.

Rcv Sequence Number

Sequence number of packets received.

Poll Sequence Number

Current poll sequence number.

Poll Ack Sequence Number

Poll sequence number already acknowledged.

Vt (Pd)

Number of SD frames sent that trigger sending a Poll frame.

Connection Control

Timer used for establishing and terminating SSCOP.

Keep Alive Timer

Timer used to send keepalives on an idle interface.

Current Retry Count

Current count of the retry counter.

Maximum Retry Count

Maximum value the retry counter can take.

PDUs Sent

Total number of SSCOP frames sent.

PDUs Received

Total number of SSCOP frames received.

PDUs Ignored

Number of invalid SSCOP frames ignored.

Begin

Number of Begin frames sent/received.

Begin Ack

Number of Begin ACK frames sent/received.

Begin Reject

Number of Begin Reject frames sent/received.

End

Number of End frames sent/received.

End Ack

Number of End ACK frames sent/received.

Resync

Number of Resync frames sent/received.

Resync Ack

Number of Resync ACK frames sent/received.

Sequenced Data

Number of Sequenced Data frames sent/received.

Sequenced Poll Data

Number of Sequenced Poll Data frames sent/received.

Poll

Number of Poll frames sent/received.

Stat

Number of Stat frames sent/received.

Unsolicited Stat

Number of Unsolicited Stat frames sent/received.

Unassured Data

Number of Unassured Data frames sent/received.

Mgmt Data

Number of Mgmt Data frames sent/received.

Unknown PDUs

Number of Unknown PDU frames sent/received.

show stacks

To monitor the stack utilization of processes and interrupt routines, use the show stacks EXEC command. The display includes the reason for the last system reboot.

show stacks number

Syntax Description

number

Shows the detail for a specific process (enable mode only).

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

If the system was reloaded because of a system failure, a saved system stack trace is displayed. This information is useful to Cisco engineers for troubleshooting purposes.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show stacks command following a system failure.

Switch# show stacks
Minimum process stacks:
Free/Size  Name
5724/6000  Autoinstall
5192/6000  Setup
11528/12000  BootP Resolver
10504/12000  Init
 
Interrupt level stacks:
Level    Called Unused/Size  Name
  1        9137   4460/6000  Switch Interrupt
  2       71781   5292/6000  Ethernet Interrupt
  3           0   5676/6000  OIR interrupt
  4           0   6000/6000  PCMCIA Interrupt
  5      326900   5624/6000  Console Uart
  6           0   6000/6000  Error Interrupt
  7    34179793   5668/6000  NMI Interrupt Handle

show startup-config

To show the configuration file pointed to by the config_file environment variable, use the
show startup-config EXEC command. This command replaces the show configuration command.

show startup-config

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command. Originally show configuration.

12.0(3c)W5(9)

Modified: Changed to show startup-config.

Usage Guidelines

The show startup-config command shows the configuration file specified by the config_file environment variable. The switch informs you whether the displayed configuration is a complete configuration or a distilled version. A distilled configuration is one that does not contain access lists.

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show startup-config command.

Switch# show startup-config
Using 1288 out of 129016 bytes
!
version xx.x
no service pad
service udp-small-servers
service tcp-small-servers
!
hostname Switch3
!
boot bootldr bootflash:/home/cyadaval/xxxxxx-i-m.bin.Z
!
atm address 47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.ce01.0000.0ca7.ce01.00
!
interface ATM0
 ip address 1.2.2.2 255.0.0.0
 no ip route-cache
 map-group ab
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface Ethernet0
 ip address 172.20.40.43 255.255.255.0
 no ip route-cache
!
interface ATM3/0/0
 no atm auto-link-determination
 no atm address-registration
 atm uni type public side user
!
interface ATM3/1/0
 no keepalive
!
interface ATM3/1/1
 no keepalive
!
interface ATM3/1/2
 no keepalive
 atm pvc 0 100 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1 interface  ATM3/1/1 0 100
 atm pvp 1 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
 atm pvp 2 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
 atm pvp 3 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
!
interface ATM3/1/2.1 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/2.2 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/2.3 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/3
 no keepalive
 atm pvc 0 200 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1 interface  ATM0 0 200  encap aal5snap
!
ip domain-name cisco.com
ip name-server 198.92.30.32
!
map-list ab
 ip 1.1.1.1 atm-vc 200
!
line con 0
 exec-timeout 0 0
line vty 0
 password Switch
 login
line vty 1 4
 login
!
end
 

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show startup-config command.

Switch# show startup-config
Using 1288 out of 129016 bytes
!
version xx.x
no service pad
service udp-small-servers
service tcp-small-servers
!
hostname Switch3
!
boot bootldr bootflash:/home/cyadaval/xxxxxx-i-m.bin.Z
!
atm address 47.0091.8100.0000.0000.0ca7.ce01.0000.0ca7.ce01.00
!
interface ATM0
 ip address 1.2.2.2 255.0.0.0
 no ip route-cache
 map-group ab
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface Ethernet0
 ip address 172.20.40.43 255.255.255.0
 no ip route-cache
!
interface ATM3/0/0
 no atm auto-link-determination
 no atm address-registration
 atm uni type public side user
!
interface ATM3/1/0
 no keepalive
!
interface ATM3/1/1
 no keepalive
!
interface ATM3/1/2
 no keepalive
 atm pvc 0 100 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1 interface  ATM3/1/1 0 100
 atm pvp 1 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
 atm pvp 2 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
 atm pvp 3 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1
!
interface ATM3/1/2.1 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/2.2 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/2.3 point-to-point
 atm maxvp-number 0
!
interface ATM3/1/3
 no keepalive
 atm pvc 0 200 rx-cttr 1 tx-cttr 1 interface  ATM0 0 200  encap aal5snap
!
ip domain-name cisco.com
ip name-server 198.92.30.32
!
map-list ab
 ip 1.1.1.1 atm-vc 200
!
line con 0
 exec-timeout 0 0
line aux 0
 transport input all)
line vty 0
 password Switch
 login
line vty 1 4
 login
!
end
 

Examples

The following example is partial sample output from the show startup-config command when the configuration file is compressed.

Switch# show startup-config
Using 21542 out of 65536 bytes, uncompressed size = 142085 bytes
!
version 11.2 
service compress-config
!
hostname rose
!
boot system flash gs7-k.sthormod_clean
boot system rom

Related Commands
Command Description

copy running-config

Copies the switch's running configuration file to another destination.

description

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. See Appendix D.

service compress-config

Cisco IOS command removed from this manual. SeeAppendix D .

show bootflash:

Displays information about the bootflash: file system.

show running-config

Displays the configuration information currently running on the terminal.

show subsys

To display the subsystem information, use the show subsys EXEC command.

show subsys [class class | name name]

Syntax Description

class

Specifies the subsystem class to display. Valid entries are driver, kernel, library, management, protocol, and registry.

name

Specifies the name of a subsystem to display.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show subsys command.

Switch# show subsys
 
                    Class         Version   Required Subsystems
static_map          Kernel      1.000.001
arp                 Kernel      1.000.001
ether               Kernel      1.000.001
compress            Kernel      1.000.001
alignment           Kernel      1.000.002
monvar              Kernel      1.000.001
slot                Kernel      1.000.001
oir                 Kernel      1.000.001
atm                 Kernel      1.000.001
ip_addrpool_sys     Library     1.000.001
chat                Library     1.000.001
dialer              Library     1.000.001
flash_services      Library     1.000.001
ip_localpool_sys    Library     1.000.001   ip_addrpool_sys
nvram_common        Driver      1.000.001
route processor     Driver      1.000.001
sonict              Driver      1.000.001
oc3suni             Driver      1.000.001
oc12suni            Driver      1.000.001
ds3suni             Driver      1.000.001

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show subsys command.

Switch# show subsys
 
                    Class         Version   Required Subsystems
static_map          Kernel      1.000.001
arp                 Kernel      1.000.001
ether               Kernel      1.000.001
compress            Kernel      1.000.001
alignment           Kernel      1.000.002
monvar              Kernel      1.000.001
slot                Kernel      1.000.001
oir                 Kernel      1.000.001
atm                 Kernel      1.000.001
ip_addrpool_sys     Library     1.000.001
chat                Library     1.000.001
dialer              Library     1.000.001
flash_services      Library     1.000.001
ip_localpool_sys    Library     1.000.001   ip_addrpool_sys
nvram_common        Driver      1.000.001
ASP                 Driver      1.000.001
sonict              Driver      1.000.001
oc3suni             Driver      1.000.001
oc12suni            Driver      1.000.001
ds3suni             Driver      1.000.001

show switch fabric (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

To show the details of the switch fabric for an ATM switch router, use the show switch fabric
EXEC command.

show switch fabric

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(4a)W5(11a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command shows the details of all MSCs in one display. It also displays the condition of the entire ATM switch router.

Examples

The following example shows how to display information about the fabric of an ATM switch router.

Switch# show switch fabric
MMC Switch Fabric (idb=0x60848BE0)
 
  Key: Rej. Cells  - # cells rejected due to lack of resources
                            or policing (16-bit)
       Inv. Cells    - # good cells that came in on a non-existent conn.
       Mem Buffs     - # cell buffers currently in use
       RX Cells      - # rx cells (16-bit)
       TX Cells      - # tx cells (16-bit)
       Rx HEC        - # cells Received with HEC errors
       Tx PERR       - # cells with memory parity errors
 
  MSC#     Rej. Cells    Inv. Cells    Mem. Buffs    Rx Cells     Tx Cells     R x HEC      Tx PErr
 -----    -----------   ------------   -----------  -----------  ----------   ----------   ----------
 MSC 0:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 1:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 2:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 3:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 4:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 5:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 6:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 MSC 7:            0               0           0           0           0          0           0
 
 Switch Fabric Statistics
 
      Rejected Cells: 0
      Invalid Cells: 0
      Memory Buffers: 0
      Rx Cells: 0
      Tx Cells: 0
      RHEC: 0
      TPE: 0
# marker intrs = 0
# marker list entries = 0
# ivcs used = 0
# ovcs used = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 0 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 1 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 2 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 3 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 4 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 5 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 6 = 0
     ivcs used for MSC 7 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 0 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 1 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 2 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 3 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 4 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 5 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 6 = 0
     ovcs used for MSC 7 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 0 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 1 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 2 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 3 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 4 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 5 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 6 = 0
#     vpts used for MSC 7 = 0
# vpts used = 0
# vpt ovcs used = 0
 port   type   status  RXcells TXcells RHEC   TPE
 0/0/0 155MBPS xytrpm 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
 0/0/1 155MBPS xytrpm 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
 0/0/2 155MBPS xytrpm 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
 0/0/3 155MBPS xytrpm 0x0000 0x0000 0x0000
 
Switch#

Related Commands
Command Description

show controllers

Displays information about a physical port device.

show switch module (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Displays interface, Max vpi-bits, and status information per switch module.

show switch module (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

To display interface, Max vpi-bits, and status information per switch module, use the show switch module EXEC command.

show switch module [interface | atm] card/subcard/port

Syntax Description

module

Specifies a module.

interface

Specifies an interface type.

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

card/subcard/port

Identifies the card, subcard, and port number of the interface.

Defaults

None

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

12.0(4a)W5(11a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

None

Examples

The following example shows the interface, Max vpi-bits, and status information per switch module:

Switch# show switch module
Module ID  Interface  Maxvpi-bits  State
----------------------------------------
2            ATM2/0/0   8           DOWN
========================================
3            ATM2/0/1   8           DOWN
========================================
4            ATM9/0/0   8           DOWN
========================================
5           ATM10/0/0   8        UP-LPBK
            ATM10/0/2   8           DOWN
            ATM10/0/1   8           DOWN
            ATM10/0/3   8           DOWN
========================================
6           ATM11/0/0   8           DOWN
========================================
7           ATM12/0/0   8             UP
            ATM12/0/2   8           DOWN
            ATM12/0/1   8           DOWN
            ATM12/0/3   8           DOWN
========================================
 

The following example shows how to display interface, Max vpi-bits, and status information for interface atm 10/0/0:

Switch# show switch module interface atm10/0/0
Module ID  Interface  Maxvpi-bits  State
----------------------------------------
5           ATM10/0/0   8        UP-LPBK
            ATM10/0/2   8           DOWN
            ATM10/0/1   8           DOWN
            ATM10/0/3   8           DOWN
========================================
 

The following example shows how to display interface, Max vpi-bits, and status information for
module 0:

Switch# show switch module module-id 0
Module ID  Interface  Maxvpi-bits  State
----------------------------------------
0            ATM0/0/0   8             UP
             ATM0/0/4   8           DOWN
             ATM0/0/1   8           DOWN
             ATM0/0/5   8           DOWN
             ATM0/0/2   8             UP
             ATM0/0/6   8           DOWN
             ATM0/0/3   8             UP
             ATM0/0/7   8           DOWN
========================================
 

Related Commands
Command Description

show switch fabric (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

Displays the details of the switch fabric for an ATM switch router.

show controllers

Displays information about a physical port device.

show tacacs

To show current TACACS+ server statistics, use the show tacacs EXEC command.

show tacacs

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display information for analyzing and evaluating the TACACS+ server.

show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings

To display the requested entries from the ATM TDP tag binding database, use the
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings [ip-address {mask | length}] [local-tag | remote-tag vpi vci] [neighbor atm card/subcard/port] [remote-tag vpi vci]

Syntax Description

ip-address

Destination prefix.

mask

Destination netmask prefix.

length

Netmask length, in the range of 1 to 32.

local-tag vpi vci

Selects tag values assigned by this switch.

neighbor atm card/subcard/port

Selects tags assigned by a neighbor on the specified ATM interface.

remote-tag vpi vci

Selects tag values assigned by another switch.

Defaults

Displays all database entries.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The display output can show the entire database or a subset of entries based on the prefix, the VC tag value, or an assigning interface.

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings command.

Switch# show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings
Destination: 13.0.0.0/8
    Tailend Switch ATM0/1/0 1/33 Active -> Terminating Active
    Tailend Switch ATM0/1/0 1/34 Active -> Terminating Active
    Tailend Switch ATM0/0/0.10 10/33 Active -> Terminating Active
 Destination: 11.0.0.0/8
    Transit ATM0/1/0 1/45 Active -> ATM0/0/0.10 10/33 Active
 Destination: 128.1.0.0/16
    Transit ATM0/1/0 1/46 Active -> ATM0/0/0.10 10/34 Active
 Destination: 167.1.0.0/16
    Transit ATM0/0/0.10 10/34 Active -> ATM0/1/0 1/36 Active
 


Table 18-59: show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Destination: 10.16.0.16/32

Destination IP address/length of netmask

Tailend Switch

VC type:

  • Tailend—VC that terminates at this switch

  • Headend—VC that originates at this switch

  • Transit—VC that passes through this switch

ATM1/0/1

ATM interface

1/35

VPI/VCI

Active

TVC state:

  • Active—Set up and working

  • Bindwait—Waiting for response

Related Commands
Command Description

show tag-switching atm-tdp summary

Displays summary information on ATM tag bindings.

show tag-switching atm-tdp capability

To display the ATM TDP tag capabilities for all interfaces, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp capability privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching atm-tdp capability

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching atm-tdp capability command.

Switch# show tag-switching atm-tdp capability
 
VPI           VCI           Alloc   Odd/Even VC Merge     
ATM0/1/0       Range         Range         Scheme  Scheme   IN   OUT  
  Negotiated   [1 - 1]       [33 - 1023]   UNIDIR           -    -    
  Local        [1 - 1]       [33 - 16383]  UNIDIR           NO   NO   
  Peer         [1 - 1]       [33 - 1023]   UNIDIR           -    -    
 
               VPI           VCI           Alloc   Odd/Even VC Merge     
ATM0/0/0.10    Range         Range         Scheme  Scheme   IN   OUT  
  Negotiated   [10 - 10]     [33 - 16383]  UNIDIR           -    -    
  Local        [10 - 10]     [33 - 16383]  UNIDIR           NO   NO   
  Peer         [10 - 10]     [33 - 16383]  UNIDIR           -    - 

Related Commands
Command Description

tag-switching atm control-vc

Configures the VPI/VCI to be used for the initial link to the tag switching peer.

show tag-switching atm-tdp summary

To display summary information on ATM tag bindings, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp summary privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching atm-tdp summary

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example displays output from the show tag-switching atm-tdp summary command.

Switch# show tag-switching atm-tdp summary
Total number of destinations: 40
 
TC-ATM bindings summary
interface      total   active  local   remote  Bwait   Rwait   IFwait
ATM0/0/0       21      21      10      11      0       0       0
ATM0/0/1       21      21      11      10      0       0       0
ATM0/0/2       49      49      31      18      0       0       0
ATM0/0/3       45      45      31      14      0       0       0
ATM0/1/0       6       6       0       6       0       0       0
ATM0/1/2       64      64      34      30      0       0       0
ATM0/1/0.18    20      20      10      10      0       0       0
ATM0/1/0.19    25      25      13      12      0       0       0
ATM0/1/1.51    15      15      9       6       0       0       0
ATM0/1/1.52    3       3       1       2       0       0       0
 

Table 18-61 describes the show tag-switching atm-tdp summaries.


Table 18-60: show tag-switching atm-tdp summary Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Total number of destinations

Number of known destination address prefixes.

interface

Name of an interface with associated ATM tag bindings.

total

Total number of ATM tags on this interface.

active

Number of ATM tags in an "active" state, ready to use for data transfer.

local

Number of ATM tags on this interface assigned by this tag switch.

remote

Number of ATM tags on this interface assigned by the neighbor tag switch.

Bwait

Number of bindings waiting for a tag assignment from the neighbor tag switch.

Rwait

Number of TVCs waiting for remote resources because the neighbor has run out of VC space.

IFwait

Number of TVCs waiting for response from the tag ATM API. For the ATM switch router, this value is always 0.

Related Commands
Command Description

show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings

Displays the requested entries from the ATM TDP tag binding database.

show tag-switching interfaces

To display information about interfaces where tag switching is enabled, use the show tag-switching interface privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching interfaces [type card/subcard/port | all] [detail]

Syntax Description

type

Specifies one of the interface types listed in Table 18-61.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the interface.

detail

Displays detailed tag switching information by interface.

Defaults

Displays tag switching information for all interfaces.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Displays information about the requested interface or all interfaces where tag switching is enabled.


Table 18-61: Interface Types for the show tag-switching interfaces Command
Type Description

atm

Specifies the ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies the ATM pseudo interface.

cbr

Specifies the CBR interface.

ethernet

Specifies the Ethernet interface (0).

null

Specifies the null interface.

serial

Specifies the serial interface.

tunnel

Specifies the tunnel interface.

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching interfaces command.

Switch# show tag-switching interface
Interface              IP    Tunnel   Operational
ATM0/0/0               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/0/1               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/0/2               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/0/3               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/0               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/0.18            Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/0.19            Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/1.51            Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/1.52            Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
ATM0/1/2               Yes   No       Yes         (ATM tagging)
 

Tag-switching interface descriptions are provided in Table 18-62.


Table 18-62: show tag-switching interface Field Descriptions
Field Description

Interface

Interface name.

IP

Whether the interface is configured to tag IP packets.

Tunnel

Whether a tunnel is configured through this interface.

Operational

Whether packets are being tagged.

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching interfaces command for a single interface using the detail option.

Switch# show tag interfaces atm 0/0/1 detail
Interface ATM0/0/1:
        IP tagging enabled
        TSP Tunnel tagging not enabled
        Tagging operational
        MTU = 8940
        ATM tagging: Tag VPI range = 2 - 5, Control VC = 6/32

Related Commands
Command Description

tag-switching ip (interface)

Enables tag switching of IPv4 packets on an interface.

show tag-switching tdp discovery

To display the status of the TDP discovery process, use the show tag-switching tdp discovery privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching tdp discovery

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching tdp discovery command. The interfaces over which TDP discovery is running follow.

Switch# show tag-switching tdp discovery
Local TDP Identifier:
    172.20.40.161:0
TDP Discovery Sources:
    Interfaces:
        ATM0/1/0: xmit/recv
            TDP Id: 172.20.40.164:1
        ATM0/0/0.10: xmit/recv
            TDP Id: 172.20.40.163:1


Table 18-63: show tag-switching tdp discovery Field Descriptions
Field Description

Local TDP Identifier

TDP identifier for the local switch. A TDP identifier is a 6-byte quantity displayed as IP address:number.

The Cisco convention is to use a switch identification for the first 4 bytes of the TDP identifier, and integers starting with 0 for the last 2 bytes.

Interfaces

Interfaces engaging in TDP discovery activity: xmit indicates that the interface is transmitting TDP discovery Hello packets; recv indicates that the interface is receiving TDP discovery Hello packets.

Related Commands
Command Decription

show tag-switching tdp neighbor

Displays the status of TDP sessions.

show tag-switching tdp neighbor

To display the status of TDP sessions, use the show tag-switching tdp neighbor privileged
EXEC command.

show tag-switching tdp neighbor [ip-addres type card/subcard/port] [detail]

Syntax Description

ip-address

Specifies the IP address of the neighbor.

type

Specifies one of the interface types listed in Table 18-64.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number of the interface.

detail

Displays detailed TDP neighbor information by interface.

Defaults

Displays information about all TDP neighbors.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

The neighbor information branch can give information about all TDP neighbors or can be limited to the following:

Displays information about the requested interface or all interfaces where tag switching is enabled.


Table 18-64: Interface Types for the show tag-switching tdp neighbor Command
Type Description

atm

Specifies the ATM interface.

atm-p

Specifies the ATM pseudo interface.

cbr

Specifies the CBR interface.

ethernet

Specifies the Ethernet interface (0).

null

Specifies the null interface.

serial

Specifies the serial interface.

tunnel

Specifies the tunnel interface.

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching tdp neighbor command.

Switch# show tag-switching tdp neighbor
Peer TDP Ident: 1.0.12.12:2; Local TDP Ident 1.0.11.11:2
        TCP connection: 1.0.12.12.11008 - 1.0.11.11.711
        State: Oper; PIEs sent/rcvd: 2199/2198; Downstream on demand
        Up time: 02:31:58
        TDP discovery sources:
          ATM0/0/1
Peer TDP Ident: 1.0.12.12:8; Local TDP Ident 1.0.11.11:7
        TCP connection: 1.0.12.12.11015 - 1.0.11.11.711
        State: Oper; PIEs sent/rcvd: 2119/2130; Downstream on demand
        Up time: 02:31:39
        TDP discovery sources:
          ATM0/1/0.19
Peer TDP Ident: 1.0.12.12:7; Local TDP Ident 1.0.11.11:6
        TCP connection: 1.0.12.12.11016 - 1.0.11.11.711
        State: Oper; PIEs sent/rcvd: 2120/2119; Downstream on demand
        Up time: 02:31:38
        TDP discovery sources:
          ATM0/1/0.18


Table 18-65: show tag-switching tdp neighbor Field Descriptions
Field Description

Peer TDP Ident

TDP identifier of the neighbor (peer) for this session.

Local TDP Ident

TDP identifier for the local tag switch for this session.

TCP connection

Specifies the TCP connection used to support the TDP session. The format for displaying the TCP connection is:
peer I address.peer port
local IP address
.local port

State

State of the TDP session. Generally this is Oper (operational); or transient.

PIEs sent/rcvd

Number of TDP PIEs sent to and from the session peer, including transmission and receipt of periodic keepalive PIEs required to maintain the TDP session.

Downstream

Indicates that the downstream method of tag distribution is being used for this TDP session. When this method is being used, a tag switch advertises all of its locally assigned (incoming) tags to its TDP peer (subject to any configured access list restrictions).

Downstream on demand

Indicates that the downstream on-demand method of tag distribution is being used for this TDP session. When this method is being used, a tag switch advertises its locally assigned (incoming) tags to its TDP peer only when the peer asks for them.

Up time

Length of time the TDP session has existed.

TDP Discovery Sources

Source(s) of TDP discovery activity that led to the establishment of this TDP session.

Addresses bound to peer TDP Ident

The known interface addresses of the TDP session peer. These are addresses that might appear as "next hop" addresses in the local routing table, and are used to maintain the TFIB.

Related Commands
Command Description

show tag-switching tdp discovery

Displays the status of the TDP discovery process.

show tag-switching tdp parameters

To display available TDP parameters, use the show tag-switching tdp parameters privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching tdp parameters

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Examples

The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching tdp parameters command.

Switch# show tag-switching tdp parameters
Protocol version: 1
 No tag pool for downstream tag distribution
 Session hold time: 15 sec; keep alive interval: 5 sec
 Discovery hello: holdtime: 15 sec; interval: 5 sec
 Discovery directed hello: holdtime: 15 sec; interval: 5 sec

Related Commands
Command Description

tag-switching tdp holdtime

Configures the hold time for a TDP session.

show tag-switching tsp-tunnels

To display TSP tunnel status and configuration, use the show tag-switching tsp tunnels privileged EXEC command.

show tag-switching tsp-tunnels [ip-address | all | head | middle | tail | remote}
[tunnel-interface-num]] [brief]

Syntax Description

ip-address

Specifies an IP address that restricts the display to TSP tunnels originating at this IP address.

all

Restricts the display to TSP tunnels that originate, transit, or terminate locally.

head

Restricts the display to TSP tunnels that originate at the node.

middle

Restricts the display to TSP tunnels that transit through the node.

tail

Restricts the display to TSP tunnels that terminate at the node.

remote

Restricts the display to TSP tunnels originating elsewhere. This is, in effect, a combination of middle and tail.

tunnel-interface-num

The interface number part of the TSP tunnel identifier. See "Usage Guidelines."

brief

Displays TSP tunnels using a format of one line per tunnel.

Defaults

Displays all TSP tunnels through the node.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.3(3a)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Each TSP tunnel has a globally unique identifier that is used when signalling the TSP tunnel. This identifier, available at each hop, is the combination of the originating IP address (ip-address) and the interface number of the tunnel interface (tunnel-interface-num) used to configure the TSP tunnel at the head end.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show tag-switching tsp-tunnels command.

Switch# show tag-switching tsp-tunnels
Signalling Summary:
            TSP Tunnels Process:            running
            RSVP Process:                   running
            Forwarding:                     enabled
TUNNEL ID               DESTINATION      STATUS           CONNECTION
10.106.0.6 0            10.2.0.12        up               up

Related Commands
Command Description

tag-switching tsp-tunnels

Enables support for TSP tunnel negotiation.

show tcp

To display the status of TCP connections, use the show tcp EXEC command.

Catalyst 8540 MSR

show tcp [line-number] {brief | console | vty}

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

show tcp [line-number] {aux | brief | console | vty}

Syntax Description

line-number

Absolute line number of the line for which you want to display the Telnet connection status.

brief

Keyword used to limit the display of information.

console

Keyword used to display the primary terminal line.

vty

Keyword used to display the virtual terminal.

aux

(Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Line number on which to execute the chat script. If a line number is not specified, the current line number is chosen. If the specified line is busy, the script is not executed and an error message appears.

This command is not optional if you specify a dialer-string. If the dialer-string argument is specified, aux 0 must be entered.

This command functions only on physical terminal (tty) lines.

It does not function on virtual terminal (vty) lines.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show tcp command.

Switch# show tcp
con0 (console terminal), connection 1 to host MATHOM
Connection state is ESTAB, I/O status: 1, unread input bytes: 1
Local host: 172.30.7.18, 33537 Foreign host: 192.31.7.17, 23
Enqueued packets for retransmit: 0, input: 0, saved: 0
Event Timers (current time is 2043535532):
Timer:       Retrans   TimeWait    AckHold    SendWnd   KeepAlive
Starts:           69          0         69          0           0
Wakeups:           5          0          1          0           0
Next:     2043536089          0          0          0           0
iss: 2043207208 snduna: 2043211083 sndnxt: 2043211483    sndwnd: 1344
irs: 3447586816 rcvnxt: 3447586900 rcvwnd:       2144 delrcvwnd:   83
RTTO: 565 ms, RTV: 233 ms, KRTT: 0 ms, minRTT: 68 ms, maxRTT: 1900 ms
ACK hold: 282 ms
Datagrams (max data segment is 536 bytes):
Rcvd: 106 (out of order: 0), with data: 71, total data bytes: 83
Sent: 96 (retransmit: 5), with data: 92, total data bytes: 4678
 

Table 18-66 describes the following lines of output shown in the display.

con0 (console terminal), connection 1 to host MATHOM 
Connection state is ESTAB, I/O status: 1, unread input bytes: 1 
Local host: 172.30.7.18, 33537 Foreign host: 192.31.7.17, 23 
Enqueued packets for retransmit: 0, input: 0, saved: 0
 


Table 18-66: show tcp Field Descriptions—First Section of Output 
Field Description

con0

Number identifying the line (console terminal) and location string.

connection 1

Number identifying the TCP connection.

to host MATHOM

Name of the remote host to which the connection has been made.

Connection state is ESTAB. A connection progresses through a series of states during its lifetime. A connection progresses through these states in the following order:

  • LISTEN—Waiting for a connection request from any remote TCP and port.

  • SYNSENT—Waiting for a matching connection request after having sent a connection request.

  • SYNRCVD—Waiting for a confirming connection request acknowledgment after having both received and sent a connection request.

  • ESTAB—Indicates an open connection; data received can be delivered to the user. This is the normal state for the data transfer phase of the connection.

  • FINWAIT1—Waiting for a connection termination request from the remote TCP or an acknowledgment of the connection termination request previously sent.

  • FINWAIT2—Waiting for a connection termination request from the remote TCP host.

to host MATHOM (Continued)

  • CLOSEWAIT—Waiting for a connection termination request from the local user.

  • CLOSING—Waiting for a connection termination request acknowledgment from the remote TCP host.

  • LASTACK—Waiting for an acknowledgment of the connection termination request previously sent to the remote TCP host.

  • TIMEWAIT—Waiting for enough time to pass to be sure the remote TCP host has received the acknowledgment of its connection termination request.

  • CLOSED—Indicates no connection state at all.

For more information, refer to RFC 793, Transmission Control Protocol functional specification.

I/O status: 1

Number describing the current internal status of the connection.

unread input bytes:1

Number of bytes that the lower-level TCP processes read, but the higher-level TCP processes have not yet processed.

Local host: 192.31.7.18

IP address of the network server. 33537 local port number, as derived from the following equation: line-number + (512 * random-number). (The line number uses the lower nine bits; the other bits are random.)

Foreign host: 192.31.7.17

IP address of the remote host to which the TCP connection has been made.

23

Destination port for the remote host.

Enqueued packets for retransmit: 0

Number of packets waiting on the retransmit queue. These are packets on this TCP connection that were sent but not acknowledged by the remote TCP host.

input: 0

Number of packets that are waiting on the input queue to be read by the user.

saved: 0

Number of received out-of-order packets that are waiting for all packets comprising the message to be received before they enter the input queue. For example, if packets 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6 were received, packets 1 and 2 enter the input queue, and packets 4, 5, and 6 enter the saved queue.

Examples

The following lines of output show the current time according to the system clock of the local host.

Event Timers (current time is 2043535532):
The time shown is the number of milliseconds since the system started.
 

The following lines of output display the number of times that various local TCP timeout values were reached during this connection. In this example, the local host retransmitted 69 times because it received no response from the remote host, and it transmitted an acknowledgment many more times because there was no data on which to piggyback.

Timer:       Retrans   TimeWait    AckHold    SendWnd   KeepAlive
Starts:           69          0         69          0           0
Wakeups:           5          0          1          0           0
Next:     2043536089          0          0          0           0
 

Table 18-67 describes the fields in the preceding lines of output.


Table 18-67: show tcp Field Descriptions—Second Section of Output
Field Description

Timer:

Names of the timers in the display.

Starts:

Number of times the timer has been started during this connection.

Wakeups:

Number of keepalives transmitted without receiving any response. (This field is reset to zero when a response is received.)

Next:

System clock setting that triggers the next time this timer goes off.

Retrans

Retransmission interval time TCP packets that were not acknowledged and are waiting for retransmission.

TimeWait

TimeWait timer ensures that the remote system receives a request to disconnect a session.

AckHold

Acknowledgment timer delays the sending of acknowledgments to the remote TCP in an attempt to reduce network use.

SendWnd

Send Window timer ensures that there is no closed window due to a lost TCP acknowledgment.

KeepAlive

KeepAlive timer controls the transmission of test messages to the remote TCP to ensure that the interface has not been broken without the local TCP's knowledge.

Examples

The following lines of output display the sequence numbers that TCP uses to ensure sequenced, reliable transport of data. The local host and remote host each use these sequence numbers for flow control and to acknowledge receipt of datagrams. Table 18-68 describes the specific fields in the following lines of output.

iss: 2043207208 snduna: 2043211083 sndnxt: 2043211483    sndwnd: 1344
irs: 3447586816 rcvnxt: 3447586900 rcvwnd:       2144 delrcvwnd:   83


Table 18-68: show tcp Field Descriptions—Sequence Number
Field Description

iss: 2043207208

Initial send sequence number.

snduna: 2043211083

Last send sequence number the local host sent for which it has not received an acknowledgment.

sndnxt: 2043211483

Sequence number the local host is sending next.

sndwnd: 1344

TCP window size of the remote host.

irs: 3447586816

Initial receive sequence number.

rcvnxt: 3447586900

Last receive sequence number the local host has acknowledged.

rcvwnd: 2144

Local host's TCP window size.

delrcvwnd: 83

Delayed receive window—The data the local host has read from the connection but has not yet subtracted from the receive window that the host has advertised to the remote host. The value in this field gradually increases until it is larger than a full-sized packet, at which point it is applied to the rcvwnd field.

Examples

The following lines of output display values that the local host uses to track transmission times so that TCP can adjust to the network it is using.

Table 18-69 describes the fields in the following line of output.

RTTO: 565 ms, RTV: 233 ms, KRTT: 0 ms, minRTT: 68 ms, maxRTT: 1900 ms
ACK hold: 282 ms


Table 18-69: show tcp Field Descriptions—Line Beginning with RTTO
Field Description

RTTO: 565 ms

Round-trip timeout.

RTV: 233 ms

Variance of the round-trip time.

KRTT: 0 ms

New round-trip timeout (using the Karn algorithm). This field separately tracks the round-trip time of packets that were retransmitted.

minRTT: 68 ms

Smallest recorded round-trip timeout (hard-wired value used for calculation).

maxRTT: 1900 ms

Largest recorded round-trip timeout.

ACK hold: 282 ms

Time the local host delays an acknowledgment in order to piggyback data on it.

For more information on these fields, refer to "Round Trip Time Estimation," P. Karn & C. Partridge, ACM SIGCOMM-87, August 1987.

Table 18-70 describes the fields in the following lines of output.

Datagrams (max data segment is 536 bytes):
Rcvd: 106 (out of order: 0), with data: 71, total data bytes: 83
Sent: 96 (retransmit: 5), with data: 92, total data bytes: 4678
 


Table 18-70: show tcp Field Descriptions—Last Section of Output 
Field Description

Rcvd: 106 (out of order: 0)

Number of datagrams the local host has received during this connection (and the number of these datagrams that were out of order).

with data: 71

Number of these datagrams that contained data.

total data bytes: 83

Total number of bytes of data in these datagrams.

Sent: 96 (retransmit: 5)

Number of datagrams the local host sent during this connection (and the number of these datagrams that had to be retransmitted).

with data: 92

Number of these datagrams that contained data.

total data bytes: 4678

Total number of bytes of data in these datagrams.

show tech-support

To show information about the switch router for use when contacting technical support, use the
show tech-support EXEC configuration command.

show tech-support [page] [password] [ipmulticast | rsvp]

Syntax Description

page

Pages through output.

password

Includes passwords in output.

ipmulticast

Displays IP multicast-related information.

rsvp

Displays RSVP-related information.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

Use the show tech-support to gather information about the current software image, configuration, controllers, counters, stacks, interfaces, memory, and buffers.

The output from this command contains a lot of information. Use the page option to control the amount of information presented on the screen. When you use the page option, pressing the space bar displays the next page of information.

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show tech-support EXEC command. Not all the information from this command is in the example.

Switch# show tech-support page 
------------------ show version ------------------
 
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) XXXXXX WA4-x Software (XXXXXX-WP-M), Version x.x(x.x)WA4(x.x)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Mon 19-Jan-98 02:41 by
Image text-base: 0x60010910, data-base: 0x605B8000
 
ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 11.2(1.4.WA3.0) [integ 1.4.WA3.0], RELEASE SOFTWARE
 
Switch uptime is 4 days, 20 hours, 38 minutes
System restarted by reload
System image file is "slot0:xxxxxx-wp-mz.113-0.8.TWA4.1.30", booted via slot0:
 
cisco xxx (R4600) processor with 65536K bytes of memory.
R4700 processor, Implementation 33, Revision 1.0
Last reset from power-on
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
22 ATM network interface(s)
123K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
 
8192K bytes of Flash internal SIMM (Sector size 256K).
Configuration register is 0x100
 
 
------------------ show running-config ------------------
 
 
Building configuration...
 
Current configuration:
!
version xx.x
no service pad
no service udp-small-servers
no service tcp-small-servers
!
hostname Switch
!
enable password <removed>
!
ip host-routing
!
atm e164 translation-table
!
atm threshold-group 5 max-cells 50000
atm abr-mode efci
atm address 47.0091.8100.0000.0040.0b0a.2a81.0040.0b0a.2a81.00
atm router pnni
 node 1 level 80 lowest peer-group-identifier 80:47.01B1.0000.0000.0000.0000.000
0
  parent 2
  redistribute atm-static
  election leadership-priority 205
 node 2 level 72 peer-group-identifier 72:B7.809A.0000.0000.0000.0000.0000
   aggregation-mode link CBR     aggressive
!
!
interface ATM0/0/0
 no ip address
 loopback pif
 tag-switching ip
!
interface ATM0/0/1
 no ip address
 atm pvp 51
 ntp broadcast client
!
interface ATM0/0/1.51 point-to-point
!
interface ATM0/0/2
 no ip address
!
interface ATM0/0/3
 no ip address
!
interface ATM0/1/0
 --More--

show terminal

To obtain information about the terminal configuration parameter settings for the current terminal
line, use the show terminal EXEC command.

show terminal

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show terminal command.

Switch# show terminal
Line 0, Location: "", Type: ""
Length: 24 lines, Width: 80 columns
Status: Ready, Active
Capabilities: none
Modem state: Ready
Special Chars: Escape  Hold  Stop  Start  Disconnect  Activation
                ^^x    none   -     -       none
Timeouts:      Idle EXEC    Idle Session   Modem Answer  Session   Dispatch
               00:10:00        never                        none     not set
                            Idle Session Disconnect Warning
                              never
Modem type is unknown.
Session limit is not set.
Time since activation: 00:23:38
Editing is enabled.
History is enabled, history size is 10.
DNS resolution in show commands is enabled
Full user help is disabled
Allowed transports are telnet.  Preferred is telnet.
No output characters are padded
No special data dispatching characters
 

Table 18-71 describes the fields in the first two lines of show terminal output.


Table 18-71: show terminal Field Descriptions—First Two Lines of Output
Field Description

Line 0

Current terminal line.

Location: ""

Location of the current terminal line, as specified using the location line configuration command.

Type: ""

Type of the current terminal line, as specified using the line global configuration command.

Length: 24 lines

Length of the terminal display.

Width: 80 columns

Width of the terminal display, in character columns.

The following line of output indicates the status of the line.

    Status: Ready, Active
     
    

Table 18-72 describes the possible values for the Status field.


Table 18-72: show terminal Field Description—Status Field
Field Description

Active

A process is actively using the line.

Autobauding

The line is running the autobaud process.

Carrier Dropped

Some sense of "carrier" was dropped, and the line process should be stopped.

Connected

The line has at least one active connection.

Input Stopped

The input was turned off because of hardware flow control or overflow.

No Exit Banner

The normal exit banner is not displayed on this line.

Ready

The line state is "ready."

SLIP Mode

The line is running SLIP or PPP.

The following line of output indicates the status of the capabilities of the line. These capabilities correspond closely to configurable parameters that can be set using configuration commands.

    Capabilities: Enabled
     
    

Table 18-73 describes the possible values for the Capabilities field.


Table 18-73: show terminal Field Descriptions—Capabilities Field
Field Description

Autobaud Full Range

Corresponds to the autobaud command.

Enabled

The user is successfully "enabled."

EXEC Suppressed

Corresponds to the no exec command.

Hangup on Last Close

Corresponds to the autohangup command.

Notification Set

Corresponds to the notify command.

Output Non-Idle

Corresponds to the session-timeout command.

The following line of output indicates the modem state. Possible values include Autobauding, Carrier Dropped, Hanging Up, Idle, and Ready.

    Modem state: Ready
     
    

The following lines of output indicate the special characters that can be entered to activate various terminal operations. The none or hyphen (-) values imply that no special characters are set.

Special Chars: Escape  Hold  Stop  Start  Disconnect  Activation
                ^^x    none   -     -       none
 

The following lines of output indicate the timeout values that were configured for the line.

Timeouts:      Idle EXEC    Idle Session   Modem Answer  Session   Dispatch
                never         never         0:00:15      not imp   not set
 

Table 18-74 describes the fields in the preceding lines of output.


Table 18-74: show terminal Field Descriptions—Timeouts Fields
Field Description

Idle EXEC

Interval that the EXEC command interpreter waits for user input before resuming the current connection; or if no connections exist, returning the terminal to the idle state and disconnecting the incoming session. This interval is set using the exec-timeout command.

Idle Session

Interval that the software waits for traffic before closing the connection to a remote computer and returning the terminal to an idle state. This interval is set using the session-timeout command.

Modem Answer
Session

Not implemented.

Dispatch

Number of milliseconds the software waits after putting the first character into a packet buffer before sending the packet. This interval is set using the dispatch-timeout command.

The following lines of output indicate how various options were configured.

Session limit is not set.
Allowed transports are telnet rlogin. Preferred is telnet
No output characters are padded

show users

To display information about the active lines on the switch router, use the show users EXEC command.

show users [all]

Syntax Description

all

Specifies that all lines be displayed, regardless of whether anyone is using them.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.2(5)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command displays the line number, connection name, idle time, and terminal location.

Examples

In the following two examples, the asterisk (*) indicates the current terminal session.

The following example is sample output from the show users command.

Switch# show users
       Line            User             Host(s)         Idle Location
       0 con 0                          idle
*      2 vty 0         jim              idle             0   GRUMPY.CISCO.COM
 

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example is sample output from the show users all command.

Switch# show users all
     Line        User           Host(s)       Idle  Location
*    0 vty 0     jim            idle         0    GRUMPY.CISCO.COM
     1 vty 1
     2 con 0
     3 vty 2
 

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example is sample output from the show users all command.

Switch# show users all
     Line        User           Host(s)       Idle  Location
*    0 vty 0     jim            idle         0    GRUMPY.CISCO.COM
     1 vty 1
     2 con 0
     3 aux 0
     4 vty 2
 

Table 18-75 describes the significant fields shown in the displays.


Table 18-75: show users Field Descriptions
Field Description

Line

The first subfield (0 in the example output) is the absolute line number and contains three subfields. The second subfield (vty) indicates the type of line. Possible values are:

  • con—Console

  • aux—Auxiliary port (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

  • tty—Asynchronous terminal port

  • vty—Virtual terminal

  • The third subfield (0 in the example output) indicates the relative line number within the type.

User

User using the line. If no user is listed in this field, the line is idle.

Host(s)

Host to which the user is connected (outgoing connection). A value of "idle" means that there is no outgoing connection to a host.

Idle

Interval (in minutes) since the user had an entry.

Location

Either the hard-wired location for the line or, if there is an incoming connection, the host from which the incoming connection came.

show vc

To display active virtual circuits (PVCs, SVCs, and soft VCs), use the show vc EXEC command.

Catalyst 8540 MSR

show vc [interface {atm card/subcard/port [vpi vci] | serial card/subcard/port[.channel#] [dlci]}]

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

show vc [interface {atm card/subcard/port [vpi vci]| serial card/subcard/port[:n] [dlci]}]

Syntax Description

interface

Specifies an interface type, either atm or serial.

atm

Specifies an ATM interface.

card/subcard/port

Specifies the card, subcard, and port number for the serial interface. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

vpi vci

Virtual path identifier and virtual channel identifier to display.

serial

Specifies a serial interface.

.channel#

Channel group identifier for the serial interface. (Catalyst 8540 MSR)

dlci

Specifies the data-link connection identifier.

:n

serial interface number. (Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010)

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

11.1(4)

New command

Usage Guidelines

This command can be used to display a summary of all VCs in the system or on an interface, or to display the details of a particular VC. The interface specified can either be an ATM or Frame Relay interface, and the VC specified can be an ATM or a Frame Relay VC.

Examples

The following example displays the details of a specific ATM VC.

Switch# show vc interface atm 1/1/0 0 99
Interface: ATM1/1/0, Type: ds3suni 
VPI = 0  VCI = 99
Status: UP
Connection-type: PVC 
Cast-type: point-to-point
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): pass
Packet-discard-option: disabled
Time-since-last-status-change: 00:02:54
Wrr weight: 32
Number of OAM-configured connections: 0
OAM-configuration: disabled
OAM-states:  Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface: Serial3/0/0:1, Type: FRPAM-SERIAL 
Cross-connect-DLCI = 99 
Threshold Group: 3, Cells queued: 0
Rx cells: 0, Tx cells: 0
Tx Clp0:0,  Tx Clp1: 0
Rx Clp0:0,  Rx Clp1: 0
Rx Upc Violations:0, Rx cell drops:0
Rx Clp0 q full drops:0, Rx Clp1 qthresh drops:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 100
Rx service-category: VBR-NRT (Non-Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01: 81
Rx scr-clp0 : 81
Rx mcr-clp01: none
Rx      cdvt: 1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs: 50
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 100
Tx service-category: VBR-NRT (Non-Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01: 81
Tx scr-clp0 : 81
Tx mcr-clp01: none
Tx      cdvt: none
Tx       mbs: 50

Examples

The following example shows the last explicit-path status for a soft VC along with the accumulated aggregate administrative weight for the full path.

Switch# show vc interface atm 0/1/3 0 42
Interface:ATM0/1/3, Type:oc3suni 
VPI = 0  VCI = 42
Status:UP
Connection-type:SoftVC 
Cast-type:point-to-point
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC):pass
Packet-discard-option:disabled
Time-since-last-status-change:2d22h
 Soft vc location:Source
 Remote ATM address:47.0091.8100.0000.1060.705b.d900.4000.0c81.9000.00
 Remote VPI:0  
 Remote VCI:42
 Soft vc call state:Active
 Number of soft vc re-try attempts:0 
 First-retry-interval:5000 milliseconds
 Maximum-retry-interval:60000 milliseconds
 Aggregate admin weight:40080
 TIME STAMPS:
 Current Slot:4
  Outgoing Setup     March 30 13:44:28.543
  Incoming Release   March 30 13:44:28.999
  Outgoing Setup     March 30 13:44:33.999
  Incoming Connect   March 30 13:44:34.031
 
 Explicit-path 1:result=1  PNNI_SUCCESS  (chicago.path1)
 Only-explicit
Number of OAM-configured connections:0
OAM-configuration:disabled
OAM-states: Not-applicable
Cross-connect-interface:ATM0/0/3, Type:oc3suni 
Cross-connect-VPI = 0 
Cross-connect-VCI = 35
Cross-connect-UPC:pass
Cross-connect OAM-configuration:disabled
Cross-connect OAM-state: Not-applicable
Rx cells:0, Tx cells:0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index:1
Rx service-category:UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Rx pcr-clp01:7113539
Rx scr-clp01:none
Rx mcr-clp01:none
Rx      cdvt:1024 (from default for interface)
Rx       mbs:none
Tx connection-traffic-table-index:1
Tx service-category:UBR (Unspecified Bit Rate)
Tx pcr-clp01:7113539
Tx scr-clp01:none
Tx mcr-clp01:none
Tx      cdvt:none
Tx       mbs:none

Examples

Catalyst 8540 MSR

The following example displays all the VCs in a system.

Switch# show vc
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
ATM0/0/0          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/45     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/0          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/35     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/0/1          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/46     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/1          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/36     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/0/2          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/47     QSAAL    UP
ATM0/0/2          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/37     ILMI     UP
ATM0/0/2          0/18     PVC     ATM0              0/54     PNNI     UP
ATM0/0/3          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/48     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/3          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/38     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/1/0          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/49     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/1/0          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/39     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/1/1          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/50     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/1/1          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/40     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/1/2          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/51     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/1/2          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/41     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/1/3          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/52     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/1/3          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/42     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/35     PVC     ATM0/0/0          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/36     PVC     ATM0/0/1          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/37     PVC     ATM0/0/2          0/16     ILMI     UP
ATM0              0/38     PVC     ATM0/0/3          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/39     PVC     ATM0/1/0          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
ATM0              0/40     PVC     ATM0/1/1          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/41     PVC     ATM0/1/2          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/42     PVC     ATM0/1/3          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/43     PVC     ATM-SEC0          0/29     IPC      DOWN
ATM0              0/44     PVC     ATM-SEC0          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0              0/45     PVC     ATM0/0/0          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/46     PVC     ATM0/0/1          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/47     PVC     ATM0/0/2          0/5      QSAAL    UP
ATM0              0/48     PVC     ATM0/0/3          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/49     PVC     ATM0/1/0          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/50     PVC     ATM0/1/1          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/51     PVC     ATM0/1/2          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/52     PVC     ATM0/1/3          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/53     PVC     ATM-SEC0          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0              0/54     PVC     ATM0/0/2          0/18     PNNI     UP
ATM-SEC0          0/5      PVC     ATM0              0/53     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM-SEC0          0/16     PVC     ATM0              0/44     ILMI     DOWN
ATM-SEC0          0/29     PVC     ATM0              0/43     IPC      DOWN
 

Examples

Catalyst 8510 MSR and LightStream 1010

The following example displays all the VCs in a system.

Switch1# show vc
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
ATM0/0/0          0/5      PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/49     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/0          0/16     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/35     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/0/0          0/18     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/73     PNNI     DOWN
ATM0/0/1          0/5      PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/50     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/1          0/16     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/36     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/0/2          0/5      PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/51     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/2          0/16     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/37     ILMI     DOWN
ATM0/0/3          0/5      PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/52     QSAAL    DOWN
ATM0/0/3          0/16     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/38     ILMI     DOWN
ATM2/0/0          0/47     PVC     ATM1/1/0          0/16     ILMI     UP
ATM2/0/0          0/48     PVC     ATM1/1/1          0/16     ILMI     DOWN
ATM2/0/0          0/49     PVC     ATM0/0/0          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
ATM2/0/0          0/61     PVC     ATM1/1/0          0/5      QSAAL    UP
ATM2/0/0          0/62     PVC     ATM1/1/1          0/5      QSAAL    DOWN
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
ATM2/0/0          0/63     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/32     LSIPC    UP
ATM2/0/0          0/64     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/39     LSIPC    UP
ATM2/0/0          0/65     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/33     IWFLMI   UP
ATM2/0/0          0/66     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/34     IWFLMI   UP
ATM2/0/0          0/67     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/37     IWFLMI   UP
ATM2/0/0          0/68     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/48     IWFLMI   UP
ATM2/0/0          0/69     PVC     ATM-P3/0/0        0/35     IWFLMI   UP
ATM2/0/0          0/70     PVC     ATM0/1/2          0/18     PNNI     UP
ATM2/0/0          0/71     PVC     ATM1/0/1          0/18     PNNI     UP
ATM2/0/0          0/72     PVC     ATM0/1/3          0/18     PNNI     UP
ATM2/0/0          0/73     PVC     ATM0/0/0          0/18     PNNI     DOWN
Serial3/0/0:1     44      SoftVC  Serial3/0/0:2       55               UP
 

The following example displays the summary of VCs on a serial interface.

Switch# show vc interface serial 3/0/0:1
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
Serial3/0/0:1     44      SoftVC  Serial3/0/0:2       55               UP
Serial3/0/0:1     66      SoftVC  ATM1/1/0          0/66              UP
Serial3/0/0:1     99      PVC     ATM1/1/0          0/99              UP
 

The following example displays the summary of VCs on an ATM interface

Switch1# show vc interface atm 1/1/0
Interface      Conn-Id    Type   X-Interface     X-Conn-Id   Encap  Status
ATM1/1/0          0/5      PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/61     QSAAL    UP
ATM1/1/0          0/16     PVC     ATM2/0/0          0/47     ILMI     UP
ATM1/1/0          0/66     SoftVC  Serial3/0/0:1       66              UP
ATM1/1/0          0/99     PVC     Serial3/0/0:1       99              UP

Examples

The following example displays the details of a particular Frame Relay VC.

Switch# show vc interface serial 3/0/0:1 44
Interface: Serial3/0/0:1, Type: FRPAM-SERIAL 
DLCI = 44     Status : ACTIVE
Connection-type: SoftVC 
Cast-type: point-to-point
Usage-Parameter-Control (UPC): tag-drop
pvc-create-time : 00:05:36      Time-since-last-status-change : 00:05:34 
Interworking Function Type : network
de-bit Mapping : map-clp-or-de       clp-bit Mapping : map-de      
Soft vc location: Source
Remote ATM address: 47.0091.8100.0000.00e0.1e79.8803.4000.0c81.8020.00
Remote DLCI : 55   
Soft vc call state: Active
Number of soft vc re-try attempts: 0 
Slow-retry-interval: 60 seconds
Aggregate admin weight: 0
ATM-P Interface: ATM-P3/0/0, Type: ATM-PSEUDO 
ATM-P VPI = 18  ATM-P VCI = 12
ATM-P Connection Status: UP
Cross-connect-interface: Serial3/0/0:2, Type: FRPAM-SERIAL 
Cross-connect-DLCI = 55 
tx Frames : 0   Rx Frames : 0
tx Bytes : 0    Rx Bytes : 0
tx Frames Discarded : 0         Rx Frames Discarded : 0
tx Bytes Discarded  : 0         Rx Bytes Discarded  : 0
Rx connection-traffic-table-index: 100
Rx service-category: VBR-NRT (Non-Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Rx pir: 64000
Rx cir: 64000
Rx Bc : 32768
Rx Be : 32768
Tx connection-traffic-table-index: 100
Tx service-category: VBR-NRT (Non-Realtime Variable Bit Rate)
Tx pir: 64000
Tx cir: 64000
Tx Bc : 32768
Tx Be : 32768

Related Commands
Command Description

atm pvcc

Used to create a PVC.

frame-relay pvc

Used to create a Frame Relay-to-ATM network interworking or to service interworking PVC or Frame-Relay- to-Frame Relay cross-connected PVC.

frame-relay soft-vc

Used to create Frame Relay soft PVCs on the switch.

show atm interface

Displays ATM-specific information about an ATM interface.

show atm status

Displays current information about ATM interfaces and the number of installed connections.

show atm vc

Displays the ATM layer connection information about the virtual connection.

show atm vc signalling

Shows the ATM VC signalling activity.

show version

To display the system hardware configuration, software version, and names and sources of configuration files and boot images, use the show version EXEC command.

show version

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History
Release Modification

Examples

The following example is sample output from the show version command.

Switch# show version
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) XXXXXX WA4-x Software (XXXXXX-WP-M), Version x.x(x.x)WA4(x.x)
Copyright (c) 1986-1998 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Mon 19-Jan-98 02:41 by
Image text-base: 0x60010910, data-base: 0x605B8000
 
ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 11.2(1.4.WA3.0) [integ 1.4.WA3.0], RELEASE SOFTWARE
 
Switch uptime is 4 days, 20 hours, 38 minutes
System restarted by reload
System image file is "slot0:xxxxxx-wp-mz.113-0.8.TWA4.1.30", booted via slot0:
 
cisco xxx (R4600) processor with 65536K bytes of memory.
R4700 processor, Implementation 33, Revision 1.0
Last reset from power-on
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
22 ATM network interface(s)
123K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
 
8192K bytes of Flash internal SIMM (Sector size 256K).
Configuration register is 0x100
 

Table 18-76 describes the significant fields shown in the display.


Table 18-76: show version Field Descriptions 
Field Description

Software version 11.2

You should always specify the complete version number when reporting a possible software problem. In the example output, the version number is 11.2.

System Bootstrap, Version

Bootstrap version string.

Current date and time

Boot date and time

Switch uptime is

Current date and time, the date and time the system was last booted, and uptime, or the length of time the system has been up and running.

System restarted by reload

Also displayed is a log of how the system was last booted, as a result of normal system startup or system error. For example, information can be displayed to indicate a bus error that is generally the result of an attempt to access a nonexistent address, as follows: "System restarted by bus error at PC 0xC4CA, address 0x210C0C0".

Running default software

If the software is booted over the network, the Internet address of the boot host is shown. If the software is loaded from onboard ROM, this line reads "running default software." The names and sources of the host and network configuration files are also shown.

The output of the show version EXEC command also provides certain messages, such as bus error messages. If such error messages appear, report the complete text of this message to your technical support specialist.


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Posted: Wed Sep 6 15:52:55 PDT 2000
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