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COMMAND DESCRIPTION 20/190 82-CRA 119 1170/1-V1 Uen A | ![]() |
Copyright
© Copyright Ericsson AB 2009. All rights reserved.
Disclaimer
No part of this document may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the copyright owner. The contents of this document are subject to revision without notice due to continued progress in methodology, design and manufacturing. Ericsson shall have no liability for any error or damage of any kind resulting from the use of this document.
Trademark List
SmartEdge | is a registered trademark of Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson. | |
NetOp | is a trademark of Telefonaktiebolaget L M Ericsson. |
Commands starting with “show g” through commands starting “show j” are included.
show gre [peer tunl-name | tunnel]
Displays a Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnel or tunnel circuit information.
all modes
peer tunl-name |
Optional. Name of the GRE tunnel for which information displays. |
tunnel |
Optional. Specifies the display of GRE tunnel circuit information. |
Displays information for all GRE tunnels in the current context.
Use the show gre command to display a GRE tunnel or tunnel circuit information. Use the peer tunl-name construct to display detailed information for the specified GRE tunnel. Table 1 describes the output fields when you enter the peer tunl-name construct.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Name |
Name of the GRE tunnel as entered in the gre-peer command (in context configuration mode). |
Context |
Context in which the GRE tunnel was created. |
MTU |
Maximum transmission unit (MTU) of GRE tunnel. |
Local IP |
Local IP address of the GRE tunnel as entered in the gre-peer command (in context configuration mode). |
Remote IP |
Remote IP address of the GRE tunnel as entered in the gre-peer command (in context configuration mode). |
State |
You can use the following states:
|
Use the tunnel keyword to display detailed information for the tunnel circuits. Table 2 describes the output fields when you enter the tunnel keyword.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Tunnel/Context |
Name of the GRE tunnel and its context. |
Key |
Key identifier for the tunnel circuit as entered in the gre command (in tunnel configuration mode). |
Remote-IP |
Remote IP address of the GRE tunnel as entered in the peer-end-point command (in tunnel configuration mode). |
State |
|
Bound to |
Interface and context to which GRE tunnel circuit is bound as entered in the bind interface command (in tunnel configuration mode). |
The following example displays configuration information for the GRE tunnel, toBoston:
[local]Redback>show gre peer toBoston
Name Context MTU Local-IP Remote-IP State toBoston local 1468 172.16.1.1 172.16.1.2 Down Tunnels for this peer: 1, Up: 0, Down: 1, Shut: 0 Bound: 0
The following example displays configuration information for the GRE tunnel circuit with key 1:
[local]Redback>show gre tunnel
Tunnel/Context Key Remote-IP State Bound to toBoston@local 1 172.16.1.2 Down CorpA@VPNa
show gre counters [detail] [persistent]
Displays general counters and counters specific to Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnel circuits for all GRE tunnel circuits in the system.
all modes
detail |
Optional. Specifies that more details are displayed for each tunnel circuit. |
persistent |
Optional. If omitted, displays values since the counters were last cleared. If specified, displays values since the system was last reloaded. |
None
Use the show gre counters command to display general counters and counters specific to GRE tunnel circuits for all GRE tunnel circuits in the system.
Use the detail keyword to display detailed information about each tunnel circuit.
Use the persistent keyword to display values since the system was last reloaded.
Each tunnel circuit is identified by its key and the remote IP address of the tunnel for which the tunnel circuit is configured.
The following example displays GRE counters for all tunnel circuits:
[local]Redback>show gre counters
Circuit Packets/Bytes Sent Packets/Bytes Received GRE to 172.16.1.2 key 1 0 0 0 0 GRE to 172.16.1.2 key 2 0 0 0 0
show hardware [alarm-card |backplane | card slot | fantray] [detail]
Displays information about the system hardware.
all modes
alarm-card |
Optional. Displays information about the alarm card for a SmartEdge 400 chassis. This keyword is not available for the SmartEdge 100 or SmartEdge 800 chassis. |
backplane |
Optional. Displays information about the backplane. |
card slot |
Optional. Chassis slot number. Displays information about the card in the specified slot only. |
fantray |
Optional. Displays information about the fantray or the fan and alarm unit. This keyword is not available for the SmartEdge 100 chassis. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information. |
When used without any optional syntax, this command displays a summary of all the hardware in the system.
Use the show hardware command to display information about the system hardware. Use the optional syntax to widen or narrow the scope of the display.
Table 3 describes the output fields for the show hardware command without the detail keyword.
Field Name |
Field Data Reported and Data Descriptions |
---|---|
Fan Tray Status |
|
Fan(s) Status |
|
SmartEdge 100 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 100 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 400 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 400 with AC Power Supply:
SmartEdge 400 with DC Power Supply:
|
SmartEdge 800 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 800 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 1200 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 1200 chassis:
|
Active Alarms |
Alarm conditions for this unit:
For a complete list of conditions that can cause an alarm, see Alarms and Probable Causes. |
Slot |
|
Type |
Unit:
|
Mfg Date |
dd/mm/yyyy—Date unit was manufactured. |
Voltage |
|
Temperature |
|
Table 4 describes the output fields for the show hardware command with the detail keyword.
Field Name |
Field Data Reported and Data Descriptions |
---|---|
Active Alarms(1) |
Alarm conditions for this unit:
For a complete list of conditions that can cause an alarm, see Alarms and Probable Causes. |
Air filter date |
yyyy-mm—Date the air filter is due to be replaced (SmartEdge 400 and SmartEdge 800 chassis). |
Alarm Card Status |
|
Card Status |
For traffic cards only:
|
Chass Entitlement |
Type of chassis for which this card is intended:
|
Chassis Type |
Type of chassis in which the backplane is installed:
|
CLEI Code |
Common Language Equipment Identifier (CLEI) code for this SFP optical transceiver; blank if not applicable for this transceiver. |
Connector Type |
MIC port connector:
|
CPLD Version |
n—Version of the complex programmable logic device (CPLD) on the MIC. |
DimFpga rev DimFpga file rev |
Dim FPGA revision and file revision; N/A or not displayed if not applicable for this card. |
Disk |
SSE disk number; 1 or 2. |
EEPROM id/ver |
nnnn/n—Version of the unit EEPROM. |
EPPA memory |
nnn MB—Size of ingress and egress PPA memory. |
Fan Tray Status |
|
Fan(s) Status |
|
FlipFpga rev |
FLIP FPGA revision and file revision; N/A or not displayed if not applicable for this traffic card. |
Forte2Fpga rev |
Forte2 FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP3 only. This FPGA controls power on/reset for all devices. |
ForteFpga rev |
Forte FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP only. This FPGA controls power on/reset for all devices. |
Hardware Rev |
n—Hardware revision level for this unit; single digit. |
HubFpga rev HubFpga file rev |
Hub FPGA revision and file revision; N/A or not displayed if not applicable for this card. |
IPPA memory |
nnn MB—Size of ingress and egress PPA memory. |
ITU ch |
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) channel number (corresponds to the wavelength displayed in the Wavelength field); not displayed if not applicable for the transceiver installed in this port. |
LEDs |
State of Fail, Active, Standby, and Sync LEDs:
Sync LED is for controller cards only. |
LimFpga rev |
LIM FPGA revision and file revision; N/A or not displayed if not applicable for this traffic card. |
MAC Address |
nn:nn:nn:nn:nn:nn—Medium access control (MAC) address of the system (stored in the EEPROM); displayed using the backplane keyword only. |
Max2Fpga rev |
Max2 FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to the XCRP3 controller card only. This FPGA controls address translation. |
MaxFpga rev |
Max FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP controller card only. This FPGA controls access to the CPU bus. |
Memory |
Memory for which this controller card is entitled:
|
Mfg Date |
dd/mm/yyyy—Date this unit was manufactured. |
MIC n |
For each MIC slot n:
|
MinnowCPLD Ver |
Minnow CPLD revision; applicable to the SmartEdge 100 chassis slot 1 only. |
Model |
SSE disk model; vendor in parentheses. |
ODD Status |
Status of the on-demand diagnostics (ODD) tests:
|
Opus2Fpga rev |
Opus2 FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP3 only. This FPGA manages peripherals such as the front panel LEDs and the CRAFT ports. |
OpusFpga rev |
Opus FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP only. This FPGA manages peripherals such as the front panel LEDs and the CRAFT ports. |
POD Status |
Status of the power-on diagnostics (POD) tests:
|
Port |
n—Port number if hardware data is port specific; not displayed if not applicable for this card. |
Ports Configurable |
Number of ports on this traffic card that have been specified as software configurable (ATM DS-3 traffic card only). |
Ports Entitled |
List of ports that are entitled on this traffic card or MIC:
|
SmartEdge 100 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 100 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 400 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 400 with AC Power Supply:
SmartEdge 400 with DC Power Supply:
|
SmartEdge 800 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 800 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 1200 chassis:
|
SmartEdge 1200 chassis:
|
RedbackApproved |
State of transceiver testing for this SFP optical transceiver in SmartEdge router:s:
|
RxPwrMin[dbm](2) RxPwrMax[dbm] |
-nn.nn—Receiver sensitivity (minimum) and overload level (maximum) for the version of the SFP transceiver installed in this port. |
S3Fpga rev |
S3 FPGA revision and file revision; applicable to XCRP only. This FPGA manages the control and phase alignment of the Stratum-3 PLL. |
SAR Image Type |
ATM mode currently loaded; applicable to ATM DS-3 and second-generation ATM OC traffic cards only:(3)
|
SAR Image Version |
n.n.n.n—Version of the image. |
SARC memory |
nnn MB—Size of segmentation and reassembly controller (SARC) memory; applicable to ATM traffic cards only. |
SARC status |
Status of the segmentation and reassembly controller (SARC):
|
SCC id |
ID for the system communication controller (SCC) ASIC on a controller card; the SCC controls and communicates with the traffic cards. |
Serial No |
nnnnnnnnnnnnnn—Unique identifier for this unit; 14 alphanumeric characters. |
SFP / Media Type |
SFP transceivers—Ethernet traffic cards
SFP transceivers—SONET OC-n (OC-3c/STM-1c, OC-12c/STM-4c, and OC-48c/STM-16c) cards
|
SFP Serial No |
nnnnnnnnnn—Unique identifier for this transceiver; 10 alphanumeric characters. |
Slot |
|
SlipFpga file rev |
SLIP FPGA revision; applicable to the SmartEdge 100 I/O carrier card functions only (slot 1). |
Spec Capacity |
SSE disk hardware specification capacity. |
SpiFpga file rev |
System Packet Interface File revision. |
SpiFpga rev |
System Packet Interface Fpga. |
Start/Stop count |
Number of times the SSE disk has been started/stopped; maximum number of starts/stops in disk lifetime in parentheses. |
SXC id |
ID of the SONET cross-connect (SXC) ASIC on a controller card; the SXC cross-connects traffic between some traffic cards. |
SysFpga rev |
System FPGA revision and file revision; N/A or not displayed if not applicable for this traffic card. |
Temperature |
Temperature condition and actual temperature reading in degrees Celsius:
Table 5 lists the temperature ranges for each condition. |
TxPwrMin[dbm] (2) TxPwrMax[dbm] |
-nn.nn—Transmitter optical output power (minimum and maximum) for the version of the SFP transceiver installed in this port. |
Type |
Unit:
|
Voltage |
Readings for voltage sources 1.5V, 1.8V, 2.6V, 3.3V, 5V, and 12V along with the percentage over or under the nominal value. |
Wavelength (2) |
Center wavelength for the version of the SFP optical transceiver installed in this port:
See the Transceivers for SmartEdge and SM Family Traffic Cards document for wavelength data for each type of transceiver and its versions. |
XFP / Media Type |
10-Gbps SFP (XFP) transceivers—10-GE and SONET/SDH OC-192 traffic cards:
|
(1) Alarm severities conform to the definitions
provided in Generic Requirements, GR-474-CORE, Issue 1, December 1997, Network Maintenance: Alarm and Control for Network Elements.
(2) Measured or reported
values meet or exceed the transceiver specifications that are documented
in Transceivers for SmartEdge and SM Family Cards.
(3) The 8-port ATM OC-3c/STM-1c (atm-oc3e-8-port)
traffic card only supports the “vc-fair" and "hsvc-fair" atm
modes.
(4) Use part number XFP-OC192-LR when ordering the XFP transceivers
with 10GE ZR functionality.
(5) In Releases 6.1.4 and
6.1.5, DWDM XFP transceivers support only ITU channels 35,36,37,53,and
54.
See SmartEdge 100 MICs and Controller Card for the list of the MICs and controller carrier cards of the SmartEdge 100 router.
SmartEdge 400 and SmartEdge 800 Cards (continued) and SmartEdge 1200 Cards list the traffic, services, and controller card types for all other SmartEdge routers. The same traffic card type is also displayed for the low-density version of the traffic card. In the table, the IR abbreviation refers to Intermediate Reach.
Table 5 lists the definitions of the temperature range for each condition. The actual temperature reading in degrees Celsius displays with the detail keyword.
The temperature ranges listed in Table 5 can vary slightly, depending on the version of the controller or traffic card.
Condition |
Description |
---|---|
COLD |
Expected when the system first powers up in a cool or well air-conditioned environment. Typically this temperature is less than:
|
NORMAL |
Normal operating temperature. Typically this temperature is from:
|
HOT |
The card is running above normal operating temperature. The lifespan of the card will likely be reduced if this condition persists. The ambient temperature of the room could be too hot, or the chassis air filter or fans might need cleaning or replacing. Typically this temperature is from: |
EXTREME |
The card is running well above normal operating temperature(4). The lifespan of the card will be reduced if this condition persists. The ambient temperature of the room is likely too hot or the chassis air filter or fans might need cleaning or replacing. Typically this temperature is over 176°F (80°C) for either a controller card or traffic card, except the 1-port OC-192c/STM-64c. Extreme temperature for the 1-port OC-192c/STM-64c is from 203°F (95°C) to 221°F (105°C). |
(1) The system generates a minor alarm if the controller card
temperature is 167°F (75°C) for longer than five minutes;
if the condition persists longer than one hour, the system reloads.
(2) The system generates a minor alarm if the traffic
card temperature is 167°F (75°C) for longer than five minutes;
it generates a major alarm if the condition persists longer than one
hour, or the card reaches a temperature of 212°F (100°C).
(3) The system
generates a minor alarm if the traffic card temperature is 167°F
(75°C) for longer than five minutes; it generates a major alarm
if the condition persists longer than one hour, or the card reaches
a temperature of 212°F (100°C).
(4) The system reloads if the controller card temperature reaches 180°F
(82°C).
The following example displays output from the show hardware command for a SmartEdge 800 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware Fan Tray Status Present Fan(s) Status Normal Power Supply A Status Normal Power Supply B Status No Power Active Alarms NONE Slot Type Serial No Rev Ver Mfg Date Voltage Temp ---- -------------------- -------------- --- --- ----------- -------- ------- N/A backplane 9C2B4090100100 2 2 13-OCT-2001 N/A N/A N/A fan tray 9D034090100100 3 2 13-OCT-2001 N/A N/A 1 oc3-8-port 8J0O8040200063 15 4 30-APR-2002 Ok Normal 2 ch-ds3-12-port 8V0U8050200068 21 4 14-MAY-2002 Ok Normal 3 atm-ds3-12-port 7Q0E5060200025 5 4 01-JUL-2002 Ok Normal 4 atm-oc3-2-port 8F0P8070210270 16 4 07-AUG-2002 Ok Normal 5 ether-12-port 7UAA8070200197 27 4 30-JUL-2002 Ok Normal 7 xcrp3 6Y0O5060300038 15 4 09-APR-2003 N/A Normal 8 xcrp3 6Y0O5060300064 15 4 02-APR-2005 N/A Normal 10 ch-oc12ds1-1-port 8I018050200080 1 4 31-MAY-2002 Ok Normal 11 ds3-12-port 7P0F8050200058 6 4 29-MAY-2002 Ok Normal 14 gigaether-4-port 8K0X8050200139 24 4 16-MAY-2002 Ok Normal
The following example displays detailed output for the SFP/media type on a traffic card for the SmartEdge 800 chassis:
[local]Redback#show hardware card 10 detail Slot : 10 Type : ge-20-port Serial No : B10D5050500014 Hardware Rev : 4 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 21-MAY-2005 HubFpga rev : 0x3b HubFpga file rev : 0x3b SpiFpga rev : 0x6 SpiFpga file rev : 0x6 IPPA memory : 1024 MB EPPA memory : 1024 MB Voltage 1.5V : 1.523 (+2%) Voltage 1.8V : 1.813 (+1%) Voltage 2.6V : 2.480 (-1%) Voltage 3.3V : 3.304 (+0%) Temperature : NORMAL (52 C) SFP Card Status : HW initialized POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : N/A Chass Entitlement : SE400/SE800 Ports Entitled : All Active Alarms : NONE Port : 1 SFP / Media Type : CWDM / MM RedbackApproved : Y Wavelength : 1591.00[nm] CLEI code : RxPwrMin/Max[dbm] : 1995 / - 39 ITU ch : 7 TxPwrMin/Max[dbm] : 31622 / - 10000
The following example displays detailed output for the alarm card in a SmartEdge 400 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware alarm-card detail Slot : N/A Type : alarm card Serial No : 0D0B5060300017 Hardware Rev : 2 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 21-jun-2003 Air filter date : 2005-10 ODD Status : N/A Temperature : NORMAL (24 C)
The following example displays detailed output for a controller card in a SmartEdge 800 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware card 7 detail Slot : 7 Type : xcrp - T1 BITS Serial No : 8S018040200129 Hardware Rev : 1 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/2 Mfg Date : 09-APR-2002 OpusFpga Ver : 0x7 S3Fpga Ver : 0x7 MaxFpga Ver : 0x3 ForteFpga Ver : 0x6 SCC id : 0x0 SXC id : 0x1f Temperature : Normal (38 C) POD Status : Success ODD Status : N/A Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : Off Sync LED : Off Chass Entitlement : SE400/SE800 Memory : Max Active Alarms : NONE
The following example displays detailed output for an ATM DS-3 traffic card in a SmartEdge 800 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware card 5 detail Slot : 5 Type : atm-ds3-12-port Serial No : 7Q0E5060200025 Hardware Rev : 5 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 01-JUL-2002 SysFpga rev : 0x5 SysFpga file rev : N/A LimFpga rev : 0x3 LimFpga file rev : 0x3 IPPA memory : 256 MB EPPA memory : 256 MB SARC memory : 4 MB Voltage 1.5V : 1.509 (+1%) Voltage 1.8V : 1.782 (-1%) Voltage 2.6V : 2.612 (-0%) Voltage 3.3V : 3.389 (+3%) Temperature : Normal (43 C) Card Status : HW initialized POD Status : Success ODD Status : Passed Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : Off Chass Entitlement : SE400/SE800 Memory : Max Ports Entitled : All Ports Configurable: 4 SAR Image Type : Default SAR Image Version : 1.3.4.4 Active Alarms : NONE
The following example displays detailed output for the fan tray in a SmartEdge 400 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware fantray detail Slot : N/A Type : fan tray Serial No : 0D0A5040300002 Hardware Rev : 1 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 01-MAY-2003 Air filter date : 2005-10 ODD Status : N/A
The following example detailed output for a atm-oc3e-8-port card in a SmartEdge 800 chassis. Only the first of the eight ports of the card are shown in this example:
[local]Redback>show hardware card 3 detail Slot : 3 Type : atm-oc3e-8-port Serial No : 9X60D260721655 Hardware Rev : 60 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 29-JUN-2007 SysFpga rev : 0x7 SysFpga file rev : N/A LimFpga rev : 0x6 LimFpga file rev : 0x6 IPPA memory : 512 MB EPPA memory : 512 MB SARC memory : 16 MB Voltage 1.5V : 1.509 (+1%) Voltage 1.8V : 1.802 (+0%) Voltage 2.6V : 2.612 (-0%) Voltage 3.3V : 3.413 (+0%) Temperature : NORMAL (32 C) Card Status : HW initialized POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : Off Chass Entitlement : All (0x0) Ports Entitled : All SAR Image Type : vc-fair SAR Image Version : 1.7.144.4.0 Clock Source : local Active Alarms : NONE Port : 1 SFP / Media Type : OC-3 / IR-1 CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : P882GL2 Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -9.50 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 0.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -17.01 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 0.00
The following example detailed output for a ge4-20-port card in a SmartEdge 800 or SmartEdge 1200 chassis:
[local]Redback>show hardware card 2 detail Slot : 2 Type : ge4-20-port Serial No : F10R5230800040 Hardware Rev : 00R EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 22-JUN-2008 HubFpga rev : 0x5 HubFpga file rev : 0x5 SpiFpga rev : 0x0 SpiFpga file rev : N/A IPPA memory : N/A EPPA memory : N/A Voltage 1.200V : 1.201 (+0%) Voltage 1.200V : 1.206 (+1%) Voltage 1.200V : 1.201 (+0%) Voltage 1.250V : 1.245 (-0%) Temperature : NORMAL (53 C) Card Status : HW initialized POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : Invalid Chass Entitlement : All (0x0) Ports Entitled : All Active Alarms : NONE Port : 1 SFP / Media Type : FX / MM CLEI code : RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 3577343 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -19.03 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -14.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -32.22 RxPwrMax[dbm] : -14.00 Port : 2 SFP / Media Type : SX / MM CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : PCN2YTE Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -11.74 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -2.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -20.00 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 1.00 Port : 3 SFP / Media Type : SX / MM CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : PCN2ZK4 Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -11.74 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -2.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -20.00 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 1.00 Port : 4 SFP / Media Type : SX / MM CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : PCN2YUZ Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -11.74 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -2.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -20.00 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 1.00 Port : 5 SFP / Media Type : SX / MM CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : PDC22ZG Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -11.74 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -2.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -20.00 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 1.00 Port : 6 SFP / Media Type : SX / MM CLEI code : VAUIAAWEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : F721470200E5 Wavelength : 850.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -9.50 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -1.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -13.01 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 0.00 Port : 8 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200402 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -6.31 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 3.69 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -17.26 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 5.74 Port : 9 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 4755100006 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -7.05 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 2.95 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -13.60 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 7.58 Port : 10 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : P7D28AA Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -9.65 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 4.64 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -17.93 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 6.95 Port : 11 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200388 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -6.00 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 4.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -17.06 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 5.85 Port : 13 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200492 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -7.21 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 2.79 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -16.46 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 6.51 Port : 14 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 4756020020 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -5.84 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 4.16 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -13.66 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 7.01 Port : 15 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 75PT200042 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -8.59 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 1.41 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -16.72 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 6.07 Port : 16 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200488 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -6.16 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 3.84 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -16.72 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 6.20 Port : 17 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200062 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -6.74 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 3.26 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -16.99 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 6.01 Port : 18 SFP / Media Type : LX / SM CLEI code : VAUIAAXEAA RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 74VT200528 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -5.24 TxPwrMax[dbm] : 4.76 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -17.03 RxPwrMax[dbm] : 5.87 Port : 20 SFP / Media Type : FX / MM CLEI code : RedbackApproved : Yes SFP Serial No : 3577404 Wavelength : 1310.00[nm] TxPwrMin[dbm] : -19.03 TxPwrMax[dbm] : -14.00 RxPwrMin[dbm] : -32.22 RxPwrMax[dbm] : -14.00
The following example displays detailed output for an SSE card:
[local]Redback>show hardware card 3 detail Slot : 3 Type : sse Serial No : G30EF4208F000W Hardware Rev : 0001 EEPROM id/ver : 0x5a/4 Mfg Date : 27-OCT-2008 HubFpga rev : 0x1e HubFpga file rev : 0x1e SpiFpga rev : 0xa9 Voltage 1.000V : 1.000 (+0%) Voltage 1.200V : 1.198 (-0%) Voltage 1.800V : 1.798 (-0%) Voltage 2.500V : 2.502 (+0%) Voltage 3.300V : 3.300 (+0%) Voltage 12.000V : 11.710 (-2%) Temperature : NORMAL (53 C) Card Status : HW initialized POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Fail LED : Off Active LED : On Standby LED : Off Chass Entitlement : All (0x0) Active Alarms : NONE Disk : 1 Type : sse Hardware Rev : 11 Model : MBB2147RC(FUJITSU) Spec Capacity : 147GB RedbackApproved : Yes CLEI code : SOUCAJWTAA Serial No : G4111111111122 Mfg Date : NOV 2011 Start/Stop count : 1188 (max. 50000) Voltage 3.300V : 3.312 (+0%) Voltage 5.000V : 5.010 (+0%) Voltage 12.000V : 11.729 (-2%) Temperature : NORMAL (25 C) LED : Green POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Active Alarms : NONE Disk : 2 Type : sse Hardware Rev : 1 Model : MBB2147RC(FUJITSU) Spec Capacity : 147GB RedbackApproved : Yes CLEI code : SOUCAJWTAA Serial No : G4019100865437 Mfg Date : OCT 2008 Start/Stop count : 1106 (max. 50000) Voltage 3.300V : 3.312 (+0%) Voltage 5.000V : 4.998 (-0%) Voltage 12.000V : 11.729 (-2%) Temperature : NORMAL (24 C) LED : Green POD Status : Success ODD Status : Not Available Active Alarms : NONE
show history [configuration]
Displays the command history for the current session.
all modes
configuration |
Optional. Displays a list of configuration commands entered during the current session. This keyword is available only in exec mode. |
Displays a list of commands entered during the current session within the current mode group (exec or configuration).
Use the show history command to display the command history for the current session. The history log contains up to 40 commands. To restrict the history to only the configuration commands entered during the session, use the optional configuration keyword, which is only available in exec mode.
The following example displays output from the show history command (in global configuration mode):
[local]Redback(config)#show history config show clock
show http-redirect circuit
Displays HTTP redirect circuit information.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show http-redirect circuit command to display HTTP redirect circuit information.
The following example displays HTTP redirect circuit information:
[local]Redback>show http-redirect circuit Circuit Handle(internal User Name / URL Redir Count Drop Count 10/6 vlan-id 2 user@local 0 0 http://www.redback.com/user@local
show icmp statistics
Displays Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) statistics.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show icmp statistics command to display ICMP statistics.
The following example displays output from the show icmp statistics command:
[local]Redback>show icmp statistics
icmp: 857 calls to icmp_error 0 errors not generated because old message was icmp Output histogram: echo reply: 82 destination unreachable: 857 routing redirect: 5 0 messages with bad code fields 0 messages < minimum length 0 bad checksums 0 messages with bad length Input histogram: destination unreachable: 872 echo: 82 time exceeded: 6 82 message responses generated
show igmp bandwidth-profile [slot/port[:chan-num[:sub-chan-num]]]
Displays the configured Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) bandwidth profiles for ports.
all modes
slot |
Optional. Chassis slot number of the card with the port for which IGMP bandwidth profiles are displayed. |
port |
Optional. Card port number of the port for which IGMP bandwidth profiles are displayed. |
chan-num |
Optional. Channel number of the DS-3, E3, or E1 channel on the port for which IGMP bandwidth profiles are displayed. Required for a port on a channelized OC-12 or STM-1 card; omitted for a port on a DS-3, clear-channel E3, or channelized E1 card. If omitted, displays IGMP bandwidth profiles for all channels on the port. The range of values is 1 to 12 for a channelized OC-12 port and 1 to 63 for a channelized STM-1 port. |
sub-chan-num |
Optional. DS-1 channel number on the channelized DS-3 channel, or DS-0 channel group on the channelized E1 channel, for which IGMP bandwidth profiles are displayed. If omitted, displays IGMP bandwidth profiles for all sub-channels in the specified channel. |
None
Use the show igmp bandwidth-profile command to display the configured IGMP bandwidth profiles for ports.
The following example displays configured IGMP bandwidth profiles for ports:
[local]Redback>show igmp bandwidth-profile
IGMP bandwidth profile slot/port:channel:subchannel Bandwidth(in Kbps) Allowed/Used 1/9 100/40 1/10 100/0
show igmp circuit
Displays circuit-specific information for the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP).
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show igmp circuit command to display circuit-specific information for the IGMP.
The following example displays circuit-specific information for the IGMP:
[local]Redback>show igmp circuit
Number of circuits: 4 1/9:1023:63/1/1/5, fxp1, Up, recv permit/send permit/unsol permit 1/11:1023:63/1/1/13, fxp2, Up, recv permit/send permit/unsol permit 12/1:1:63/1/2/18, fxp3, Up, recv permit/send permit/unsol permit 12/1:1:63/1/2/19, fxp3, Up, recv permit/send permit/unsol permit
show igmp group [group-addr] [count | detail | subscriber sub-name [detail]]
Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP)-connected group membership information.
all modes
group-addr |
Optional. IP address of the IGMP group. |
count |
Optional. Displays IGMP group membership count. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed group membership information, including membership tracking and IGMP Version 3 (IGMPv3) source lists. |
subscriber sub-name |
Optional. Subscriber name. Displays groups joined by the specified subscriber. |
None
Use the show igmp group command to display IGMP-connected group membership information.
Use the group-addr argument to display IGMP-connected group membership information for only the specified group.
Use the detail keyword to enable the explicit tracking of IGMP group membership for all hosts in a multiaccess network. Group membership information is displayed for hosts running IGMP Version 3 (IGMPv2), and group membership and source list information is displayed for hosts running IGMPv3.
The following example displays output from the show igmp group command:
[local]Redback>show igmp group
IGMP Connected Group Membership FLAGS: C - Connected, L - Local Group Address Interface Uptime Expires Last Reporter Flags Circuit 224.121.121.1 fe410 00:01:08 never 10.100.1.2 L 4/10:2047:31/1/1/20 224.121.121.1 fe411 00:01:08 never 11.1.1.2 L 4/11:2047:31/1/1/22 224.121.121.1 fe412 00:01:08 never 12.1.1.2 L 4/12:2047:31/1/1/24 224.121.121.1 fe46 00:01:08 never 6.1.1.2 L 4/6:2047:31/1/1/12 224.121.121.1 fe47 00:01:08 never 7.1.1.2 L 4/7:2047:31/1/1/14 224.121.121.1 fe48 00:01:08 never 8.1.1.2 L 4/8:2047:31/1/1/16 224.121.121.1 fe49 00:01:08 never 9.1.1.2 L 4/9:2047:31/1/1/18 224.131.1.1 fxp8 00:00:04 00:04:15 81.1.1.2 C 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35 224.131.1.2 fxp8 00:00:04 00:04:15 81.1.1.2 C 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35 224.131.1.3 fxp8 00:00:04 00:04:15 81.1.1.2 C 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35 224.131.1.4 fxp8 00:00:04 00:04:15 81.1.1.2 C 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35
The following example shows the host running IGMPv3, 11.3.1.2, is interested in receiving traffic for group 225.1.1.1 from sources 192.18.1.1 and 192.18.1.2.. Information about both sources is included in IGMPv3 reports:
[local]Redback>show igmp group detail Group : 225.1.1.1 Interface : ---- Circuit : 255/22:1:26/1/2/4 Uptime : 00:01:08 Expires : 00:04:19 Last reporter : 11.3.1.2 Running version : v3 Host Count : 0 Filter mode : Include Source list : Source Address Uptime Expires Forwarding Reporter Sources in INCLUDE list: 192.18.1.1 00:00:00 00:03:12 Yes 11.3.1.2 193.18.1.2 00:00:00 00:03 Yes 11.3.1.2
The following example shows that the hosts running IGMPv3 (11.3.1.2 and 100.3.5.2) are interested in receiving traffic for group 225.1.1.1 from the source 192.18.1.1. In this example, source 192.18.1.1 is included in IGMPv3 reports, while source 193.18.1.2 is excluded in the IGMPv3 reports.
[local]Redback>show igmp group detail Group : 225.1.1.1 Interface : ---- Circuit : 255/22:1:26/1/2/4 Uptime : 00:00:53 Expires : 00:03:57 Last reporter : 100.3.5.2 Running version : v3 Host Count : 0 Filter mode : Exclude Source list : Source Address Uptime Expires Forwarding Reporter Sources in INCLUDE list: 192.18.1.1 00:00:03 00:04:17 Yes 11.3.1.2 Sources in EXCLUDE list: 193.18.1.2 00:00:53 stopped No 100.3.5.2
show igmp group-bandwidth [group-addr]
Displays bandwidth recommendations for multicast groups.
all modes
group-addr |
Optional. IP address of the multicast group for which information is to be displayed. |
None
Use the show igmp group-bandwidth command to display bandwidth recommendations for multicast groups.
Specifying the group-addr argument displays bandwidth recommendations only for the specified group.
Use the igmp group-bandwidth command (in context configuration mode) to configure bandwidth recommendations for multicast groups.
The following example displays bandwidth recommendations for multicast groups:
[local]Redback>show igmp group-bandwidth
IGMP bandwidth mapping Group prefix Bandwidth (in Kbps) 224.1.1.0/24 20 224.121.121.0/24 100
show igmp interface [if-name] [brief]
Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) interface information.
all modes
if-name |
Optional. Name of the IGMP interface. |
brief |
Optional. Displays minimal IGMP interface information. |
None
Use the show igmp interface command to display IGMP interface information.
Use the if-name argument to display information for only the specified IGMP interface.
The following example displays information for the IGMP interface, fxp1:
[local]Redback>show igmp interface fxp1
Interface fxp1 IP addrss is 103.1.1.2 Multicast routing is enabled on the interface IGMP is enabled on the interface IGMP interface status is up IGMP configured version is 2 IGMP running version is 2 IGMP query interval is 125 seconds IGMP query response interval is 10 seconds IGMP last member query interval is 1000 milli-seconds Multicast designated router (DR) is 103.1.1.2 (this system) IGMP querier is 103.1.1.1 IGMP robust value is 2 Number of ccts bound: 1 <----- new No multicast groups joined
show igmp service-profile {prof-name [if-name] | circuit [if-name]}
Displays service profile information, or bandwidth usage for all circuits.
all modes
prof-name |
Service profile name. Specifies the service profile for which information is to be displayed. |
if-name |
Optional. Displays information only for the specified interface. |
circuit |
Displays bandwidth usage for all circuits. |
None
Use the show igmp service-profile command to display service profile information, or bandwidth usage for all circuits.
Use the optional if-name argument to display information only for the specified interface.
The following example displays information about the current state of the service profile, servpro1, and all interfaces that are members of that service profile:
[local]Redback>show igmp service-profile servpro1
Service Profile : servpro1 Bandwidth used: 80982 Interface Bandwidth Groups used (kbps) Joined fxp1 0 0 fxp2 80982 80982
The following example displays information for service profile, profile1, on the fxp4 interface:
[local]Redback>show igmp profile servpro2 fxp4
Service Profile : servpro2 Circuit (Interface) : 10/4:1023:63/1/1/8 (fxp4) Bandwidth used (kbps)/port percent : 0/0% Groups (Max Allowed/Joined/Sticky) : 0/0/0 Groups dropped Max count exceeded : 0 Bandwidth exceeded : 30 No bandwidth : 0
The following example displays bandwidth usage information for the fxp4 IGMP interface:
[local]Redback>show igmp profile circuit fxp4
Circuit (Interface) : 10/4:1023:63/1/1/8 (fxp4) Bandwidth used (kbps)/port percent : 0/0% Groups (Max Allowed/Joined/Sticky) : 0/0/0 Groups dropped Max count exceeded : 0 Bandwidth exceeded : 30 No bandwidth : 0
show igmp snooping access-group name group-name [detail]
Displays information about a specified access list that is associated with an Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping instance.
group-name |
Identifies an access group that is associated with an IGMP snooping instance. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information for the specified access group. |
None
Use the show igmp snooping access-group command to display information about a specified access list that is associated with an IGMP snooping instance.
The following example displays information for an access list called acl1:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping access-group name acl1 access list acl1 Hit Count: 0 seq 10 deny host 234.1.2.3 Hit Count: 16 seq 20 permit any
show igmp snooping bridge [bridge-name] [detail]
Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping information for a specific bridge interface or all bridge interfaces that are currently configured on the router.
bridge-name |
Identifies an IGMP snooping bridge interface. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information for the specified IGMP snooping bridge. |
Displays summary IGMP snooping information for all bridge interfaces that are currently configured on the router.
Use the show igmp snooping bridge command to display IGMP snooping information for a specific bridge interface or all bridge interfaces that are currently configured on the router.
The following example displays IGMP snooping information for all bridge interfaces currently configured on the router:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping bridge IGMP Snooping: Version Cct Snooping Bridge Cfg/Run Count Mode ---------------------------------------------------------- b2 2/2 0 snooping br1 2/2 0 passive proxy snooping igmp-blue-bridge 2/2 7 snooping test 3/3 4 snooping
The following example displays IGMP snooping information for a bridge interface called igmp-blue-bridge:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping bridge igmp-blue-bridge IGMP Snooping: Version Cct Snooping Bridge Cfg/Run Count Mode ---------------------------------------------------------- igmp-blue-bridge 2/2 7 snooping
The following example displays detailed IGMP snooping information for the bridge interface called igmp-blue-bridge:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping bridge igmp-blue-bridge detail IGMP Snooping: Bridge: igmp-blue-bridge (mfib_id 0x20000001) Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Snooping: enabled Proxy Mode: disabled Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Qry Resp Intvl: 10s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter count: 0 (*, G) count: 0 (S, G) count: 0 Packets sent/received/error: 0/0/0 Queries sent/received/error: 0/1/0 Reports sent/received/error: 0/0/0 Leaves sent/received/error: 0/0/0
show igmp snooping circuit [slot/port [vlan begin-range : end-range]] [counter | group | detail]
Displays IGMP snooping-related information about circuits that are bound to bridge interfaces that have IGMP snooping enabled.
slot/port |
Optional. Specifies a particular circuit whose IGMP snooping information you want to display. Replace the slot argument with the chassis slot number that hosts the circuit whose IGMP snooping output you want to display. Replace the port argument with the number that identifies the port whose IGMP snooping output you want to display. |
vlan begin-range : end-range |
Optional. Displays (*,G) and (S,G) information for a specified range of IGMP snooping VLAN circuits. |
counter |
Optional. Displays IGMP counters for a specified IGMP snooping circuit or all IGMP snooping circuits currently configured on the router. |
group |
Optional. Displays detailed group membership information for a specified IGMP snooping circuit or all IGMP snooping circuits currently configured on the router. |
detail |
Optional. Displays IGMP counters and detailed group membership information for a specified IGMP snooping circuit or all IGMP snooping circuits currently configured on the router. |
(1) To see a list of all IGMP snooping circuits currently configured
on the router, use the show igmp snooping circuit command without
any of the optional keywords or arguments.
Displays a list of all circuits that are bound to bridge interfaces that have IGMP snooping enabled.
Use the show igmp snooping circuit command to display IGMP snooping-related information about circuits that are bound to bridge interfaces that have IGMP snooping enabled.
The following example displays a list of all circuits that are bound to bridges that have IGMP snooping enabled:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping circuit Circuit Bridge Profile Flags ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/1:1023:63/1/1/4 igmp-test-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/16 igmp-test-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17 igmp-test-bridge mrouter 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18 igmp-test-bridge bar 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19 igmp-test-bridge bar 4/3:1023:63/1/2/20 igmp-test-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/21 igmp-test-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/22 test 4/3:1023:63/1/2/23 test 4/3:1023:63/1/2/24 test 4/3:1023:63/1/2/25 test mrouter
The following example displays IGMP snooping information for the circuit 1 on the card that is installed in slot 1 of the router:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping circuit 1/1 Circuit Bridge Profile Flags ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/1:1023:63/1/1/4 igmp-test-bridge
The following example displays IGMP counters and detailed group membership information for the IGMP snooping circuit 1 on the card installed in slot 1 of the router:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping circuit 1/1 detail IGMP Snooping Cct: Circuit: 1/1:1023:63/1/1/4 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: down Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms IGMP Snooping reports received/error: 0/0 IGMP Snooping queries received/error: 0/0 IGMP Snooping leaves received/error: 0/0 Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no
The following example displays IGMP counters for the IGMP snooping circuit 1 on the card installed in slot 1 of the router:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping circuit 1/1 counter IGMP Snooping Cct: Circuit: 1/1:1023:63/1/1/4 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: down Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms IGMP Snooping reports received/error: 0/0 IGMP Snooping queries received/error: 0/0 IGMP Snooping leaves received/error: 0/0 Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no
The following example displays detailed group membership information for the IGMP snooping circuit 4 on the card installed in slot 3 of the router:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping circuit 4/3 group IGMP Snooping Cct: Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/16 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: static Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Flags: S - static Groups State Uptime/Expires Flags (*, 233.1.1.1) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 234.1.1.3) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.5) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.2) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.6) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.4) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Flags: S - static Groups State Uptime/Expires Flags (*, 233.1.1.1) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 234.1.1.3) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.5) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.2) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.6) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S (*, 233.1.1.4) FORWARD 5d22h /00:00:00 S Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/20 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/21 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 2/2 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/22 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 3/3 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/23 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 3/3 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/24 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 3/3 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: enabled Attached: no Circuit: 4/3:1023:63/1/2/25 Snooping: enabled Version Cfg/Run: 3/3 Cct state: up Robust: 2 Qry Intvl: 125s Last Member Qry Intvl: 1000ms Mrouter Monitoring: static
show igmp snooping group [group-address [source source-address]] bridge bridge-name [count]
Displays a per-bridge list of IGMP groups and their associated circuits.
group-address |
Optional. IP address of the group whose configuration information you want to display. |
source source-address |
Optional. Source for a multicast group. Replace the argument with the IP address of a source as desired. |
bridge bridge-name |
IGMP snooping bridge interface. |
count |
Optional. Displays the number of circuits currently subscribed to the specified bridge group. |
None
Use the show igmp snooping group command to display a per-bridge list of IGMP groups and their associated circuits.
The following example displays information about the multicast state of the IGMP snooping bridge called igmp-green-bridge:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping group bridge igmp-green-bridge IGMP Snooping Groups on Bridge:(*, 234.1.1.3), 0x280002 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC (*, 233.1.1.2), 0x280005 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC (*, 233.1.1.1), 0x280001 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC (*, 233.1.1.6), 0x280006 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC (*, 233.1.1.5), 0x280004 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC (*, 233.1.1.4), 0x280003 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17, MROUTER 4/3:1023:63/1/2/18, STATIC, DYNAMIC 4/3:1023:63/1/2/19, STATIC
The following example displays the number of circuits currently subscribed to the bridge group called igmp-green-bridge:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping group bridge igmp-green-bridge count IGMP Snooping Groups on Bridge: Group Packets/Bytes Number of circuits (*, 234.1.1.3) 0/0 3 (*, 233.1.1.2) 0/0 3 (*, 233.1.1.1) 0/0 3 (*, 233.1.1.6) 0/0 3 (*, 233.1.1.5) 0/0 3 (*, 233.1.1.4) 0/0 3
show igmp snooping mrouter [bridge bridge-name]
Displays a per-bridge list of circuits that are facing multicast routers.
bridgebridge-name |
IGMP snooping bridge interface. |
None
Use the show igmp snooping mrouter command to display a per-bridge list of circuits that are facing multicast routers.
Enter the show igmp snooping mrouter command without the optional bridge bridge-name construct to display a list of all circuits that are currently facing multicast routers. Include the optional bridge bridge-name construct in the show igmp snooping mrouter command to display a list of multicast router-facing circuits that are bound to a specific bridge.
The following example displays mrouter information all bridges configured in the current context:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping mrouter FLAGS: S - Static Bridge Name Circuit Handle Timeout Flags ----------------------------------------------------------------- igmp-test-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17 S test 4/3:1023:63/1/2/25 S
The following example displays mrouter information for a bridge called igmp-red-bridge:
[local]Redback#show igmp snooping mrouter bridge igmp-red-bridge FLAGS: S - Static Bridge Name Circuit Handle Timeout Flags ----------------------------------------------------------------- igmp-red-bridge 4/3:1023:63/1/2/17 S
show igmp traffic
Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) traffic statistics.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show igmp traffic command to display IGMP traffic statistics.
The following example displays output from the show igmp traffic command:
[local]Redback>show igmp traffic
IGMP statistics: Sent: Total: 61 Query: 57 Report: 3 Leave: 1 Rcvd: Total: 25 Query: 15 Report: 8 Leave: 2 Error: Total: 0 Query: 0 Report: 0 Cksum: 0 System: 0 Tooshort: 0 Others: 0
show inverse-arp counters [all-contexts] [[slot/port] [vpi vpi [vci vci]]] [sum]
Displays inverse Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) counters.
all-contexts |
Optional. Displays inverse ARP counters for all contexts. This option is available only if you are a local administrator. If omitted, displays inverse ARP counters for the current context only. |
slot |
Optional. Chassis slot number. If omitted, displays inverse ARP counters for all ports on all traffic cards. |
port |
Optional. Traffic card port number; required when the slot argument is included. |
vpi vpi |
Optional. Virtual path identifier (VPI) for the Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) permanent virtual circuit (PVC) for which to display inverse ARP counters. The range of values is 0 to 255. If omitted, displays counters for all virtual paths (VPs) on the port. |
vci vci |
Optional. Virtual circuit identifier (VCI) for the ATM PVC for which to display inverse ARP counters. The range of values is 1 to 65,535. If omitted, displays counters for all ATM PVCs on the VP. |
sum |
Optional. Displays summary information for inverse ARP counters. |
When entered without any optional syntax, the show inverse-arp counters command displays inverse ARP counters for all ports on all traffic cards for the current context only.
Use the show inverse-arp counters command to display inverse ARP counters. Counters include total counts for received, dropped, and sent packets.Local administrators have privileges that are not available to other administrators.
The following example displays inverse ARP counters for ATM PVCs configured on port 1 on the traffic card in slot 4 in the current context:
[local]Redback>show inverse-arp counters 4/1 current time: Mon Jun 6 01:31:59 2005 Pkts Pkts Pkts Slot/Port VPI VCI Received Replied Dropped 4/1 100 32 306 0 306 Totals Packets Rcvd: 306 Packets Replied:0 Rcv Packets Dropped: 306
show ip access-list [{[summary] [acl-name] | first-match acl-name [protocol] {src-addr [port port]} [dest-addr [port port] [dscp dscp-value] [length length] [precedence prec-value] [tos tos-value]}]
Displays the status of configured IP access control lists (ACLs).
all modes
summary |
Optional. Excludes the ACL statements from the display. Optionally, you can follow this keyword with the acl-name argument, naming a particular ACL for which you want summary information displayed. |
acl-name |
Optional. Name of the ACL for which you want information displayed. To display summary information about a specific list, you must enter the summary keyword first, followed by the acl-name argument. |
first-match acl-name |
Optional. Name of the ACL for which you want to find the first statement matched by the criteria that follows the first-match acl-name construct. |
protocol |
Optional. Number indicating a protocol as specified in RFC 1700, Assigned Numbers. The range of values is 0 to 255. In place of the protocol argument, you can use any of the following keywords:
|
src-addr |
Source address to be included in the criteria for a match. An IP address in the form A.B.C.D. |
port port |
Optional. TCP or UDP port to be considered a match for either the source or destination IP address. This construct is only available if you specified TCP or UDP as the protocol. The range of values is 1 to 65,535. You can also substitute a keyword for the port argument as listed in Table 6 and Table 7 in the “Usage Guidelines” section for this command. |
dest-addr |
Optional. Destination address to be included in the criteria for a match. An IP address in the form A.B.C.D. |
dscp dscp-value |
Optional. Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) to be included in the criteria for a match. The range of values is 0 to 63. You can also substitute a keyword for the dscp-value argument as listed in Table 8 in the “Usage Guidelines” section for this command. |
length length |
Packet length. The length of the network-layer packet, beginning with the IP header. The range of values is 20 to 65,535. |
precedence prec-value |
Optional. Precedence value of packets to be included in the criteria for a match. The range of values is 0 to 7, 7 being the highest precedence. In place of the prec-value argument, you can enter any of the following keywords:
|
tos tos-value |
Optional. Type of service (ToS) to be included in the criteria for a match. The range of values is 0 to 15. In place of the tos-value argument, you can enter any of the following keywords:
To specify both a precedence and a ToS, you must enter the precedence prec-value construct first, followed by the tos tos-value construct. |
When entered without any optional syntax, the show ip access-list command displays information for all IP ACLs in the context, including the statements in each list.
Use the show ip access-list command to display the status of configured IP ACLs.
Use the first-match acl-name construct to display the first statement in the ACL that is matched by the criteria that follows the first-match acl-name construct.
Table 6 lists the valid keyword substitutions for the port argument when the argument is used to specify a TCP port.
Keyword |
Definition |
Corresponding Port Number |
---|---|---|
bgp |
Border Gateway Protocol |
179 |
chargen |
Character generator |
19 |
cmd |
Remote commands (rcmd) |
514 |
daytime |
Daytime |
13 |
discard |
Discard |
9 |
domain |
Domain Name System |
53 |
echo |
Echo |
7 |
exec |
Exec (rsh) |
512 |
finger |
Finger |
79 |
ftp |
File Transfer Protocol |
21 |
ftp-data |
FTP data connections (used infrequently) |
20 |
gopher |
Gopher |
70 |
hostname |
Network interface card (NIC) hostname server |
101 |
ident |
Identification protocol |
113 |
irc |
Internet Relay Chat |
194 |
klogin |
Kerberos login |
543 |
kshell |
Kerberos Shell |
544 |
login |
Login (rlogin) |
513 |
lpd |
Printer service |
515 |
nntp |
Network News Transport Protocol |
119 |
pim-auto-rp |
Protocol Independent Multicast Auto-RP |
496 |
pop2 |
Post Office Protocol Version 2 |
109 |
pop3 |
Post Office Protocol Version 3 |
110 |
shell |
Remote Command Shell |
514 |
smtp |
Simple Mail Transport Protocol |
25 |
ssh |
Secure Shell |
22 |
sunrpc |
Sun Remote Procedure Call |
111 |
syslog |
Syslog |
514 |
tacacs |
Terminal Access Controller Access Control System |
49 |
talk |
Talk |
517 |
telnet |
Telnet |
23 |
time |
Time |
37 |
uucp |
Unix-to-Unix Copy Program |
540 |
whois |
Nickname |
43 |
www |
World Wide Web (HTTP) |
80 |
Table 7 lists the valid keyword substitutions for the port argument when the argument is used to specify a UDP port.
Keyword |
Definition |
Corresponding Port Number |
---|---|---|
biff |
Biff (Mail Notification, Comsat) |
512 |
bootpc |
Bootstrap Protocol client |
68 |
bootps |
Bootstrap Protocol server |
67 |
discard |
Discard |
9 |
dnsix |
DNSIX Security Protocol Auditing |
195 |
domain |
Domain Name System |
53 |
echo |
Echo |
7 |
isakmp |
Internet Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP) |
500 |
mobile-ip |
Mobile IP registration |
434 |
nameserver |
IEN116 Name Service (obsolete) |
42 |
netbios-dgm |
NetBIOS Datagram Service |
138 |
netbios-ns |
NetBIOS Name Service |
137 |
netbios-ss |
NetBIOS Session Service |
139 |
ntp |
Network Time Protocol |
123 |
pim-auto-rp |
Protocol Independent Multicast Auto-RP |
496 |
rip |
Router Information Protocol (router, in.routed) |
520 |
snmp |
Simple Network Management Protocol |
161 |
snmptrap |
SNMP traps |
162 |
sunrpc |
Sun Remote Procedure Call |
111 |
syslog |
System logger |
514 |
tacacs |
Terminal Access Controller Access Control System |
49 |
talk |
Talk |
517 |
tftp |
Trivial File Transfer Protocol |
69 |
time |
Time |
37 |
who |
Who Service (rwho) |
513 |
xdmcp |
X Display Manager Control Protocol |
177 |
Table 8 lists the valid keyword substitutions for the dscp-value argument.
Keyword |
Definition |
---|---|
af11 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 1/Drop Precedence 1 |
af12 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 1/Drop Precedence 2 |
af13 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 1/Drop Precedence 3 |
af21 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 2/Drop Precedence 1 |
af22 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 2/Drop Precedence 2 |
af23 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 2/Drop Precedence 3 |
af31 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 3/Drop Precedence 1 |
af32 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 3/Drop Precedence 2 |
af33 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 3/Drop Precedence 3 |
af41 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 4/Drop Precedence 1 |
af42 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 4/Drop Precedence 2 |
af43 |
Assured Forwarding—Class 4/Drop Precedence 3 |
cs0 |
Class Selector 0 |
cs1 |
Class Selector 1 |
cs2 |
Class Selector 2 |
cs3 |
Class Selector 3 |
cs4 |
Class Selector 4 |
cs5 |
Class Selector 5 |
cs6 |
Class Selector 6 |
cs7 |
Class Selector 7 |
df |
Default Forwarding (same as cs0) |
ef |
Expedited Forwarding |
The following example displays output from the show ip access-list command:
[local]Redback>show ip access-list ip access-list client1_list: count: 1, sequences: 10 - 10, client count: 0 modified: 01:36:56 (hh:mm:ss) ago counting: disabled, logging: disabled seq 10 permit ip any any ip access-list test_list: count: 4, sequences: 10 - 40, client count: 0 modified: 01:36:56 (hh:mm:ss) ago counting: disabled, logging: disabled description: test list seq 10 permit ip any any seq 20 deny ip any any seq 30 permit ip any any seq 40 permit ip any any ip access-list test2_list: count: 0, sequences: 0 - 0, client count: 0 modified: 01:36:56 (hh:mm:ss) ago counting: disabled, logging: disabled description: test 2 list total ip access lists: 3
The following example displays the statements and conditions configured for the policy ACL, ipacl_cond:
[local]Redback>show ip access-list ipacl_cond ip access-list ipacl_cond: count: 2, sequences: 10 - 20, client count: 1 modified: 00:10:21 (hh:mm:ss) ago, version: 14 condition 100 time-range absolute start 2005:01:01:01:00 end 2005:01:01:01:01 deny seq 10 permit tcp any any eq www condition 100 seq 20 deny ip any any
show ip host
Displays all static hostname-to-IP Version 4 (IPv4) address mappings stored in the local host table for the current context.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip host command to display all static hostname-to-IPv4 address mappings stored in the local host table for the current context.
The following example displays output from the show ip host command:
[local]Redback>show ip host Host Name IP Address Type TTL host1 172.2.3.1 static 0 host2 172.2.3.2 static 0 host3 172.2.3.3 static 0
show ip interface [if-name | all-context | brief | xcrp]
Displays information about interfaces, including the interface bound to the Ethernet management port on the controller card.
if-name |
Optional. Name of the interface to be displayed. |
all-context |
Optional. Displays interface information for all contexts. |
brief |
Optional. Displays the name, IP address, and other information (in brief) for all configured interfaces in the current context. |
xcrp |
Optional. Displays incoming and outgoing packets, errors, and collisions for the interface to which the Ethernet management port on the controller cards is bound, including incoming and outgoing packets, errors, dropped bytes, and collisions. |
Displays detailed information for all configured interfaces.
Use the show ip interface command to display information about all interfaces, including those on the controller card. Use this command without optional syntax to display detailed information on all configured interfaces. This command is also related to the ip tcp mss command.
An interface can be in any of the following states:
The following example displays output from the show ip interface command with the brief keyword.:
[local]Redback>show ip interface brief Mon Jun 27 06:38:05 2005 Name Address MTU State Bindings fe13/3 3.2.13.3/16 1500 Up ethernet 13/3 fe13/4 4.2.13.4/16 1500 Up ethernet 13/4 5/1 10.13.49.166/24 1500 Up ethernet 5/1 12/1 10.1.1.1/16 0 UnBound un1 (Un-numbered) 0 UnBound lo1 100.1.1.1/16 1500 Up (Loopback)
The following example displays information for the mss-test interface:
[local]Redback#show ip interface mss-test Intf name: mss2 Intf state: Up MTU: 800 IP address: 1.1.2.1 Prefix len: 24 Resoln type: Arp ARP timeout: 3600 ARP proxy: Disabled ARP secured: Disabled TCP MSS In: replace size: 1024 TCP MSS Out: replace size: 1024 Number of Bound Circuits (incl. dynamic) = 1 Bindings: (Total Bound Circuits 1) Encapsulation Circuit ethernet 2/2
The following example displays packet information for the interface to which the Ethernet management port is bound:
[local]Redback>show ip interface xcrp
Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Opkts Colls Ierrs Oerrs Drops fxp0 1500 <Link> 00:30:88:00:03:6f 62716 22871 0 2 0 0 fxp0 1500 10.13.49/24 10.13.49.166 62716 22871 0 2 0 0 ipc0 8192 <Link> 32078 26862 0 0 0 0 ipc0 8192 127 127.0.2.5 32078 26862 0 0 0 0 lo0 33228 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0 0 lo0 33228 127 127.0.0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 xcrp 65535 <Link> 0 0 0 0 0 0 lc12 65535 <Link> 2461 2452 0 0 0 0
The following example displays byte information for the interface to which the Ethernet management port is bound:
[local]Redback>show ip interface xcrp bytes
Name Mtu Network Address Ibytes Obytes fxp0 1500 <Link> 00:30:88:00:03:6f 55787738 2053859 fxp0 1500 10.13.49/24 10.13.49.166 55787738 2053859 ipc0 8192 <Link> 3665494016 77265152 ipc0 8192 127 127.0.2.5 3665494016 77265152 lo0 33228 <Link> 0 0 lo0 33228 127 12.0.0.1 0 0 xcrp 65535 <Link> 0 0 lc12 65535 <Link> 0 0
show ip mroute [group-addr [src-addr]] [count]
Displays the Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) routing table.
all modes
group-addr |
Optional. IP address of the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) group. |
src-addr |
Optional. IP address of the multicast source. |
count |
Optional. Displays statistics about the group and source, including number of packets, packets per second, average packet size, and bits per second. |
None
Use the show ip mroute command to display the PIM routing table.
The following example displays output from the show ip mroute command:
[local]Redback>show ip mroute 224.131.1.1
IP Multicast Routing Table Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, C(c) - Connected(RPF), P - Pruned, L(l) - Local(RPF), R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag, T - SPT-bit set, J - Join SPT, M - MSDP learned, H - Static, AW - Assert Winner, AL - Assert Loser . - No forwarding activity Timers: Uptime/Expires Interface state: Interface, State, Timers, flags Table version: 11137 (*, 224.131.1.1), 00:01:33/00:01:56, RP: 10.200.1.1, Flags: SC Incoming interface: fxp1, RPF neighbor: 13.1.1.1, Next join: 00:00:49 Incoming circuit: 12/1:2047:31/1/1/28 Outgoing interface list: fxp8, 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35, Forward, 00:01:33/00:01:56 (61.1.1.2, 224.131.1.1), 00:00:11/00:03:18, Flags: SC Incoming interface: fxp2, RPF neighbor: 104.1.1.1 Incoming circuit: 12/2:2047:31/1/1/6 Outgoing interface list: fxp8, 12/8:2047:31/1/1/35, Forward, 00:00:11/00:01:56
show ip pool [name] [context summary] [falling-threshold]
Displays the status of the IP addresses in the specified IP pool, in all IP pools in the specified interface, or in all IP pools in the current context or range.
name |
Optional. Name of the IP pool or interface for which the status of its IP addresses displays. |
context summary |
Optional. Summary information for all context level IP pool thresholds for the named context. |
falling-threshold |
Optional. Displays IP pool threshold data for all interfaces in the current context or for the specified interface only. |
None
Use the show ip pool command to display the status of the IP addresses in the specified IP pool, in all IP pools in the specified interface, or in all IP pools in the current context. The status of the IP addresses includes the number of addresses in use, available, and reserved. Reserved addresses include those used by an interface or the all ones or all zeros address for the interface.
The following example displays status for all IP address pools in the ip-dial context, including a range of IP addresses for the isp1.net interface:
[local]Redback>context ip-dial [ip-dial]Redback>show ip pool
Interface "subscribers-am": 192.168.1.48 255.255.255.248 0 in use, 5 free, 3 reserved. Interface "subscribers-mr": 10.142.119.80 255.255.255.240 0 in use, 13 free, 3 reserved. Interface "subscribers-sz": 192.168.2.0 255.255.255.0 0 in use, 253 free, 3 reserved.
Interface "isp1.net":
10.1.1.2 10.1.1.100 0 in use, 99 free, 0 reserved
The following example displays the falling threshold data for all IP address pools in the ip-dial context:
[ip-dial]Redback>show ip pool falling-threshold
Context "ip-dial": falling-threshold 17 trap log Interface "subscribers-am": 192.168.1.48 255.255.255.248 falling-threshold 3 trap Interface "subscribers-mr": 10.142.119.80 255.255.255.240 falling-threshold 5 trap log Interface "subscribers-sz": 192.168.2.0 255.255.255.0 falling-threshold 33 log
The following example displays the status of the IP addresses in the ip-pool pool for the isp1.net context:
[local]Redback>context isp1.net [isp1.net]Redback>show ip pool ip-pool Interface "isp1.net": 10.1.1.0 /24 ip-pool 0 in use, 253 free, 3 reserved
The following example displays a summary of all contexts in the IP pool for the isp1.net context:
[local]Redback>show ip pool context summary falling-threshold absolute 1 759 trap log falling-threshold percentage 1 98 trap falling-threshold percentage 2 97 trap log 9 in use, 750 free, 9 reserved 768 total, 97 available percentage
show ip prefix-list [pl-name | first-match pl-name ip-addr/prefix-length | summary [pl-name]]
Displays information about configured IP prefix lists.
all modes
pl-name |
Optional. IP prefix list name. |
first-match |
Optional. Searches for the line in the IP prefix list specified by the pl-name argument. |
ip-addr/prefix-length |
Specifies the IP address, in the form A.B.C.D, and the prefix length, separated by the slash (/) character. The range of values for the prefix-length argument is 0 to 32. |
summary |
Optional. Displays summary information for all configured IP prefix lists. |
None
Use the show ip prefix-list command to display information about configured IP prefix lists.
The following example displays output from the show ip prefix-list command:
[local]Redback>show ip prefix-list
ip prefix-list slash9: count: 1, sequences: 10 - 10, client count: 1 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 permit 17.0.0.0/9 (hit count: 6) ip prefix-list slash18: count: 1, sequences: 10 - 10, client count: 1 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 permit 192.28.0.0/18 (hit count: 11) ip prefix-list /15-deny: count: 2, sequences: 10 - 20, client count: 1 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 deny 0.0.0.0/0 eq 15 (hit count: 2171) seq 20 permit 0.0.0.0/0 le 32 (hit count: 699090) ip prefix-list 2.0.0.0/8: count: 1, sequences: 10 - 10, client count: 1 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 permit 2.0.0.0/8 (hit count: 0) ip prefix-list /22-permit: count: 1, sequences: 10 - 10, client count: 1 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 permit 0.0.0.0/0 eq 22 (hit count: 46181) ip prefix-list deny-slash-13: count: 2, sequences: 10 - 20, client count: 0 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 deny 139.112.0.0/13 (hit count: 0) seq 20 permit 0.0.0.0/0 le 32 (hit count: 0) ip prefix-list deny-slash-14: count: 2, sequences: 10 - 20, client count: 0 modified: 2 day(s), 6 hour(s) ago seq 10 deny 141.40.0.0/14 (hit count: 0) seq 20 permit 0.0.0.0/0 ge 1 (hit count: 0) total ip prefix lists: 7
show ip route [ip-addr [/prefix-length [longer-prefixes | shorter-prefixes]] [detail]
Displays information about all IP routes or routes for only the specified IP address or IP prefix.
all modes
ip-addr |
Optional. IP address, in the form A.B.C.D, of the route to be displayed. |
prefix-length |
Optional. Prefix length. The range of values is 0 to 32. |
longer-prefixes |
Optional. Displays the route and more-specific routes. |
shorter-prefixes |
Optional. Displays the route and less-specific routes. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information. |
When entered with no keywords or arguments, this command displays all IP routes.
Use the show ip route command to display information about all IP routes or for only the specified IP address or IP prefix.
The following example displays output from the show ip route command:
[local]Redback>show ip route
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Gateway of last resort is 155.53.39.254 to network 0.0.0.0 Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > S dv 0.0.0.0/0 155.53.39.254 1 0 00:00:36 op-net-lan > S dv 100.100.0.0/16 155.53.39.254 1 0 00:00:31 op-net-lan > C 155.53.32.0/21 0 0 00:01:09 op-net-lan > S 200.200.0.0/16 255 0 1d02h null0
The following example displays information for the IP route, 4.4.4.0/24:
[local]Redback>show ip route 4.4.4.0/24
Best match Routing entry for 4.4.4.0/24 is 4.4.4.0/24 , version 8 Route Uptime 01:19:17 Paths: total 1, best path count 1 Route has been downloaded to following slots 04/0 Path information : Active path : Known via bgp 2, type-External BGP, distance 20, metric 0, Tag 0, Originating AS # : 1, Next-hop 20.1.1.1, NH-ID 0x31100003, Interface eth42 Circuit 4/2:2047:31/1/2/6 dscp ef
show ip route all
Displays information about all IP routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route all command to display information about all IP routes.
The following example displays output from the show ip route all command:
[local]Redback>show ip route all
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > S 0.0.0.0/0 10.13.49.254 1 0 00:00:20 mgmt > R 1.1.1.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:00:03 five > R 1.1.2.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:00:03 five > R 1.1.3.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:00:03 five > R 1.1.4.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:00:03 five > R 1.1.5.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:00:03 five > S 5.6.7.8/32 211 0 00:00:20 null0 > C 10.1.7.0/24 0 0 00:00:20 seven > C H 10.1.7.0/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > C H 10.1.7.255/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > C 10.1.10.0/24 0 0 00:00:20 ten > C H 10.1.10.0/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > C H 10.1.10.255/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > C 10.13.49.0/24 0 0 00:00:20 mgmt > C H 10.13.49.0/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > C H 10.13.49.158/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > A H 10.13.49.254/3 10.13.49.254 254 0 00:00:20 mgmt > C H 10.13.49.255/32 0 0 00:00:20 Local host > A H 100.1.1.1/32 100.1.1.1 254 0 00:00:03 five
show ip route bgp
Displays information about Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route bgp command to display information about BGP routes.
The following example displays information about BGP routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route bgp
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > e B 3.0.0.0/8 155.53.1.235 20 0 1d14h > e B 4.0.0.0/8 155.53.1.235 20 0 22:17:18 > e B 4.21.132.0/23 155.53.0.1 20 0 22:21:03 > e B 6.1.0.0/16 155.53.1.235 20 0 1w1d > e B 6.2.0.0/22 155.53.0.1 20 0 22:21:03 > e B 6.3.0.0/18 155.53.1.235 20 0 1w1d
show ip route client [client-id]
Displays information about Routing Information Base (RIB) clients.
all modes
client-id |
Optional. Client ID for which RIB client information is displayed. The range of values is 0 to 256. |
None
Use the show ip route client command to display information about RIB clients.
The following example displays information about RIB clients:
[local]Redback>show ip route client
Rt Tbl Version: 1820518, Nh Tbl Version: 9453 Protocol(ids) Tot Routes InQ OutQ Redist Ver State Ref connected (1/0) 11 0 0 0 Reg UP 0 adjacency (2/0) 0 0 0 0 Reg UP 0 static (3/0) 14 0 0 0 Reg UP 0 isis A2-wtn (4/0) 45 0 0 0 Reg UP 0 isis new (5/0) 0 0 0 0 Reg UP 0 bgp 64001 (6/0) 101560 0 0 0 Reg UP 0
show ip route connected
Displays information about IP routes from directly connected networks.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route connected command to display information about IP routes from directly connected networks.
The following example displays information about IP routes from directly connected networks:
[local]Redback>show ip route connected
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C 10.12.208.0/21 0 0 1w4d redback > C H 10.12.208.0/32 0 0 1w4d Local host > C H 10.12.208.79/32 0 0 1w4d Local host > C H 10.12.215.255/32 0 0 1w4d Local host > C 10.100.1.5/32 0 0 1w4d lo1 > C 10.100.11.8/29 0 0 1w4d 1/1
show ip route fib-client [client-id]
Displays information about Forwarding Information Base (FIB) clients.
all modes
client-id |
Optional. Client ID for which FIB client information is displayed. The range of values is 0 to 256. |
None
Use the show ip route fib-client command to display information about FIB clients.
The following example displays information about FIB clients:
[local]Redback>show ip route fib-client
Route table version 27113/778 Total route for FIB 19937 Slot Name State OutQ MsgSent Version FIB SLOT 02/0(0) Up 0 1612 27113/778 FIB SLOT 02/1(1) Up 0 1 0/778 FIB SLOT 10/0(2) Up 0 1612 27113/778 FIB SLOT 10/1(3) Up 0 184 0/778
show ip route hidden
Displays information about hidden IP routes; that is, routes that are added internally.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route hidden command to display information about hidden IP routes.
The following example displays information about hidden IP routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route hidden
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C H 10.12.192.0/32 0 0 05:23:19 Local host > A H 10.12.192.1/32 10.12.192.1 254 0 05:25:44 mgmt > C H 10.12.192.73/32 0 0 05:23:19 Local host > C H 10.12.199.255/32 0 0 05:23:19 Local host > C H 10.12.208.0/32 0 0 05:25:56 Local host > A H 10.12.208.1/32 10.12.208.1 254 0 05:25:44 lab
show ip route isis
Displays information about Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route isis command to display information about IS-IS routes.
The following example displays information about IS-IS routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route isis
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > i L1 10.100.1.3/32 10.100.11.25 115 12 1w1d 2/1 > i L1 10.100.1.5/32 10.100.11.27 115 13 20:46:52 2/1 > i L1 10.100.1.102/32 10.100.11.25 115 40 20:46:52 2/1 > 10.100.11.27 2/1 > i L1 10.100.11.8/29 10.100.11.27 115 22 20:46:52 2/1 > i L1 10.100.11.32/29 10.100.11.25 115 39 1w1d 2/1
show ip route martian
Displays information about IP martian routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route martian command to display information about IP martian routes.
The following example displays information about IP martian routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route martian
0.0.0.0/8 orlonger -- disallowed 127.0.0.0/8 orlonger -- disallowed
show ip route mobile-ip [foreign-agent | home-agent]
Displays IP routes for mobile nodes for an foreign-agent (FA) instance or home-agent (HA) instance.
foreign-agent |
Displays IP route information for an FA instance. |
home-agent |
Displays IP route information for a HA instance. |
None
Use the show ip route mobile-ip command to display IP routes for an foreign-agent (FA) instance or home-agent (HA) instance.
To see a summary of IP routes, use the show ip route command (in any mode) with the summary keyword.
The following example shows how to display IP routes for an HA instance:
[local]Redback>show ip route mobile-ip home-agent Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static MIP F - Mobile-IP Foreign Agent, MIP H - Mobile-IP Home Agent A - Derived Default, MH - Media Nexthop > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface SUB A 16.1.1.1/32 16.1.1.1 15 0 02:51:03 mip1
show ip route multicast [ip-addr[/prefix-length]] [bgp] [isis] [martian] [next-hop] [static] [summary]
Displays all unicast-dependent multicast routing table information.
all modes
ip-addr |
Optional. IP address, in the form A.B.C.D, of the route to be displayed. |
prefix-length |
Optional. Prefix length. The range of values is 0 to 32. |
bgp |
Optional. Displays Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routing information. |
isis |
Optional. Displays Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) routing information. |
martian |
Optional. Displays configured Martian Networks information. |
next-hop |
Optional. Displays next-hop information. |
static |
Optional. Displays static route information. |
summary |
Optional. Displays summary information for all routes. |
None
Use the show ip route multicast command to display all unicast-dependent multicast routing table information.
The following example displays output from the show ip route multicast command issued on a router configured with three BGP multicast routes and two mstatic routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route multicast
Codes: e MB - Multicast EBGP, i MB - Multicast IBGP, S - mstatic > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > S 1.1.1.1/32 10.200.1.1 1 0 00:07:46 > e B 11.1.1.0/24 10.200.1.1 20 0 00:03:46 > i B 103.1.1.0/24 10.200.1.3 200 0 00:08:52 > i B 105.1.1.0/24 10.200.1.3 200 0 00:08:52 > S 192.64.1.0/24 10.200.1.1 1 0 00:07:46
show ip route next-hop [next-hop-id | next-hop-ip-addr] [detail]
Displays information about IP route next hops.
all modes
next-hop-id |
Optional. Next-hop ID in hexadecimal format. The range of values is 0x0 to 0xffffffff. |
next-hop-ip-addr |
Optional. Next-hop IP address. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information. |
None
Use the show ip route next-hop command to display information about IP route next hops.
The following example displays summary information about all IP route next hops:
[local]Redback>show ip route next-hop
** = Via interface Next Hop Tbl Version : 778 Current Next Hops : 41 NH-ID Ref Cnt NH-IP Via-NH Interface 0x30D00002 47/0 Local host 0x31100001 1/0 test 0x31100002 1/0 lab 0x31100003 1/0 10.12.208.81 lab 0x31100004 1/0 10.12.210.27 lab 0x31100005 2/2 10.12.208.1 lab 0x31100006 2/0 10.12.192.1 mgmt 0x31100007 1/0 10.12.208.170 lab
The following example displays detailed information about the IP route next hop, 0x31100001:
[local]Redback>show ip route next-hop 0x31100001 detail ** = Via interface Next Hop Tbl Version : 5 Current Next Hops : 4 NH-ID Ref Cnt NH-IP Via-NH Interface 0x31100001 1/0 test Adj-id : 0xFF400008 Info-Version : 5 Node-Version : 5 Fib Card bits : 0x100010 Nh Client bits : 0x0 Info flags : 0x1 Lsp ifgrid : 0x0 Spg-id : 0x1 IF-GRID : 0x10000001 Circuit id : 255/22:1:26/1/1/4 Next-hop has been downloaded to following slots 05/0, 05/1
show ip route ospf
Displays information about Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route ospf command to display information about OSPF routes.
The following example displays information about OSPF routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route ospf
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > O 10.100.1.102/32 10.100.11.50 110 2 1w4d fa3/1 O 10.100.11.8/29 10.100.11.10 110 1 1/1 O 10.100.11.24/29 10.100.11.27 110 1 2/1 > O 10.100.11.32/29 10.100.11.50 110 2 1w4d fa3/1 O 10.100.11.48/29 10.100.11.49 110 1 fa3/1
show ip route registered {next-hop | prefix}
Displays next-hop or prefix information registered in the Routing Information Base (RIB).
all modes
next-hop |
Displays RIB-registered next-hop information. |
prefix |
Displays RIB-registered prefix information. |
None
Use the show ip route registered command to display next-hop or prefix information registered in the RIB.
The following example displays next-hop information registered in the RIB:
[local]Redback>show ip route registered next-hop Next-hop: Registered Client(s): 1.1.1.2 bgp 1 BFD Clients : bgp Query flags : 0x40 Version : 0x0 Adj-id : 0xFFFFFFFF Conn Adj-id : 0xFFFFFFFF NH Magic : 0x1000400 Default flag : 0x0 Protocol : 0x1 IGP Metric : 0 Conn IF-GRID : 0x10000001 Conn cct id : 255/11:1023:63/1/2/5 IGP IF-GRID : 0x10000001 IGP cct id : 255/11:1023:63/1/2/5 Reslov cntxt : 0x40080001 IGP MTU : 1500 IGP first hop : 0.0.0.0 IGP next hop : 0.0.0.0 slot 1: 2 constituent circuits
The following example displays prefix information registered in the RIB:
[local]Redback>show ip route registered prefix Prefix: Registered Client(s): 1.1.1.0/24 ldp Verion : 0x1 Lookup type : 0x2 Return pfx ver : 0x1C Return pfx : 1.1.1.0/24 Default flag : 0x0 10.12.49.0/24 ldp Verion : 0x2 Lookup type : 0x2 Return pfx ver : 0x1 Return pfx : 10.12.49.0/24 Default flag : 0x0
show ip route rip
Displays information about Routing Information Protocol (RIP) routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route rip command to display information about RIP routes.
The following example displays information about RIP routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route rip
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Start loop Old index =0xa4 Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > R 1.1.1.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:21:58 five > R 1.1.2.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:21:58 five > R 1.1.3.0/24 100.1.1.1 1 0 00:21:58 five
show ip route static
Displays information about static IP routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route static command to display information about static IP routes.
The following example displays information about static IP routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route static
Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > S 10.89.0.0/16 1 0 05:28:55 null0 > S 10.89.89.0/24 1 0 05:28:55 null0 > S 155.53.0.0/16 10.12.208.1 1 0 05:28:43 lab > S 155.53.32.55/32 10.12.192.1 1 0 05:28:43 mgmt > S dv 100.100.0.0/16 155.53.39.254 1 0 05:27:56 op-net-lan
show ip route subscriber [address | static]
Displays information about all subscriber routes.
all modes
address |
Optional. Displays only subscriber address route information. |
static |
Optional. Displays only subscriber static route information. |
When entered with no keywords, this command displays all subscriber routes.
Use the show ip route subscriber command to display information about all subscriber routes.
The following example displays output from the show ip route subscriber command:
[local]Redback>show ip route subscriber Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > SUB A 20.1.1.2/32 20.1.1.2 15 0 00:01:08 to-dhcpclient > SUB S 30.1.1.0/24 20.1.1.2 17 0 00:01:08 to-dhcpclient
The following example displays output from the show ip route subscriber address command:
[local]Redback>show ip route subscriber address Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > SUB A 20.1.1.2/32 20.1.1.2 15 0 00:01:40 to-dhcpclient
The following example displays output from the show ip route subscriber static command:
[local]Redback>show ip route subscriber static Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area, N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1 N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2, E1 - OSPF external type 1 E2 - OSPF external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2 IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > SUB S 30.1.1.0/24 20.1.1.2 17 0 00:02:01 to-dhcpclient
show ip route summary
Displays summary information for all IP routes.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route summary command to display summary information for all IP routes.
The following example displays summary information for all IP routes:
[local]Redback>show ip route summary
Rt Tbl Version: 27144, Nh Tbl Version: 786 FIB Rt Tbl Version: 27144 Route Source Tot-Routes Act-Routes Max Ever Reached Connected 43 43 43 Static 4 4 4
show ip route summary all-context
Displays summary information for IP routes in all contexts.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route summary all-context command to display summary information for IP routes in all contexts.
The following example displays summary information for all IP routes in the local and new contexts:
[local]Redback>show ip route summary all-context
Context: local Context id: 0x40080001 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Rt Tbl Version: 9, Nh Tbl Version: 5 FIB Rt Tbl Version: 9 Route Source Tot-Routes Act-Routes Max Ever Reached Connected 2 2 2 Static 2 2 2 Context: new Context id: 0x40080002 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Rt Tbl Version: 0, Nh Tbl Version: 0 FIB Rt Tbl Version: 0 No routes in Table
show ip route xcrp
Displays IP route information for the controller card.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip route xcrp command to display IP route information for the controller card.
The following example displays output from the show ip route xcrp command:
[local]Redback>show ip route xcrp
Routing tables Internet: Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Cntxt Interface default 10.12.208.1 UG1 4 17882 1 fxp0 3 155.53.1.235 UG1 0 0 1 fxp0 4 155.53.1.236 UG1 0 0 1 fxp0 4.21.132/23 155.53.1.236 UG1 0 0 1 fxp0 6.1/16 155.53.1.235 UG1 0 0 1 fxp0 6.2/22 155.53.1.236 UG1 0 0 1 fxp0
show ip statistics xcrp
Displays IP traffic statistics on the active controller card.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ip statistics xcrp command to display IP traffic statistics on the active controller card. The IP traffic statistics display does not include statistics for forwarded traffic. The display shows only traffic whose destination or source addresses are on the system itself.
The following example displays all IP traffic destined to or source by transmit or receive addresses in to, or sourced by, the system:
[local]Redback>show ip statistics xcrp
ip: 331718 total packets received 0 bad header checksums 0 with size smaller than minimum 0 with data size < data length 0 with length > max ip packet size 0 with header length < data size 0 with data length < header length 0 with bad options 0 with incorrect version number 0 fragments received 0 fragments dropped (dup or out of space) 0 malformed fragments dropped 0 fragments dropped after timeout 0 packets reassembled ok 314961 packets for this host 11722 packets for unknown/unsupported protocol 6 packets forwarded (0 packets fast forwarded) 5129 packets not forwardable 5 redirects sent 88051 packets sent from this host 17 packets sent with fabricated ip header 0 output packets dropped due to no bufs, etc. 0 output packets discarded due to no route 0 output datagrams fragmented 0 fragments created 0 datagrams that can't be fragmented
show iv6p host
Displays all static hostname-to-IP Version 6 (IPv6) address mappings stored in the local host table for the current context.
all modes
This command has no keywords or arguments.
None
Use the show ipv6 host command to display all static hostname-to-IPv6 address mappings stored in the local host table for the current context.
The following example displays output from the show ipv6 host command:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 host Host Name IP Address Type TTL host1 172.2.3.1 static 0 host2 172.2.3.2 static 0 host3 172.2.3.3 static 0
show ipv6 interface [{if-name | brief}]
Displays information about IP Version 6 (IPv6) interfaces, including the interface bound to the Ethernet management port on the controller card.
if-name |
Optional. Name of the IPv6 interface to be displayed. |
brief |
Optional. Displays the name, IPv6 address, and other information (in brief) for all configured IPv6 interfaces in the current context. |
Displays detailed information for all configured IPv6 interfaces.
Use the show ipv6 interface command to display information about all IPv6 interfaces, including those on the controller card. Use this command without optional syntax to display detailed information on all configured IPv6 interfaces.
An interface can be in any of the following states:
The following example displays output from the show ipv6 interface command with the brief keyword:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 interface brief:
Mon Jun 27 06:38:05 2005 Name Address MTU State Bindings fe13/3 3.2.13.3/16 1500 Up ethernet 13/3 fe13/4 4.2.13.4/16 1500 Up ethernet 13/4 5/1 10.13.49.166/24 1500 Up ethernet 5/1 12/1 10.1.1.1/16 0 UnBound un1 (Un-numbered) 0 UnBound lo1 100.1.1.1/16 1500 Up (Loopback)
The following example displays information for the fe13/4 interface:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 interface fe13/4
Intf name: fe13/4 Intf state: Up MTU: 1500 IP address: 4.2.13.4 Prefix len: 16 ISIS Tag: 1 Levels: level-1-2 ISIS Metric: 10 Authentication: none OSPF instance: 1 OSPF net type: broadcast OSPF cost: 1 OSPF state BDR Resoln type: Arp ARP timeout 3600 ARP Proxy: Enabled Bindings: Encapsulation Circuit ethernet 13/4
show ipv6 prefix-list [pl-name | first-match pl-name ipv6-addr/prefix-length | summary [pl-name]]
Displays information about configured IP Version 6 (IPv6) prefix lists.
all modes
pl-name |
Optional. IPv6 prefix list name. |
first-match |
Optional. Searches for the line in the IPv6 prefix list specified by the pl-name argument. |
ipv6-addr/prefix-length |
Specifies the IPv6 address, in the form A:B:C:D:E:F:G:H, and the prefix length, separated by the slash (/) character. The range of values for the prefix-length argument is 0 to 128. |
summary |
Optional. Displays summary information for all configured IPv6 prefix lists. |
None
Use the show ipv6 prefix-list command to display information about configured IPv6 prefix lists.
The following example displays output from the show ipv6 prefix-list command:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 prefix-list ipv6 prefix-list list1: count: 2, sequences: 10 - 20, client count: 0 modified: 00:00:13 (hh:mm:ss) ago seq 10 permit a001::/64 ge 64 le 128 (hit count: 0) seq 20 permit b002::/48 ge 48 le 128 (hit count: 0)
show ipv6 route [ipv6-addr [/prefix-length [longer-prefixes | shorter-prefixes | detail]] | all | bgp | connected | hidden | multicast [ip-addr[/prefix-length]] [bgp] [next-hop] [rip] [static] [summary] | next-hop | registered | rip | static | summary | xcrp]
Displays information about IP Version 6 (IPv6) routes.
all modes
ipv6-addr |
Optional. IPv6 address, in the form A:B:C:D:E:E:F:G, of the route to be displayed. |
prefix-length |
Optional. Prefix length. The range of values is 0 to 128. |
longer-prefixes |
Optional. Displays the route and more-specific routes. |
shorter-prefixes |
Optional. Displays the route and less-specific routes. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed information. |
all |
Optional. Displays information about all IPv6 routes. |
bgp |
Optional. Displays Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) route information. |
connected |
Optional. Displays information about IPv6 routes from directly connected networks. |
hidden |
Optional. Displays information about hidden IPv6 routes; that is, routes that are added internally. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays unicast-dependent multicast routing table information. |
next-hop |
Optional. Displays next-hop information. |
rip |
Optional. Displays next Routing Information Protocol (RIP) route information. |
static |
Optional. Displays static route information. |
summary |
Optional. Displays summary route information. |
registered |
Optional. Displays registered IPv6 route information. |
xcrp |
Optional. Displays IPv6 route information for the controller card. |
When entered with no keywords or arguments, this command displays all IP routes.
Use the show ipv6 route command to display information about IPv6 routes.
The following example displays output from the show ipv6 route command:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C 4001::/64 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/64 0 0 1d02h to-core > S 6001:aaaa:bbbb:cccc::/64 4001::2 1 0 05:11:09 to-peer > C 7001::/112 0 0 00:17:47 to-nbor > S 7001:dddd:eeee:ffff:1::/112 1 0 05:11:09 to-core > C 8001::1/128 0 0 00:15:39 lo > R 8001::2/128 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 120 1 00:08:09 to-nbor > e B 9001::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:01:51 to-nbor > e B 9002::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:01:51 to-nbor > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1104/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1105/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1109/128 0 0 00:17:47 to-nbor
The following example displays information for the IPv6 route, 8001::2/128:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route 8001::2/128 Best match Routing entry for 8001::2/128 is 8001::2/128 , version 21 Route Uptime 00:08:45 Paths: total 1, best path count 1 Route has been downloaded to following slots 03/0 Path information : Active path : Known via rip 1, distance 120, metric 1, Tag 0, Next-hop fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294, NH-ID 0x31100005, Adj ID: 0x2000 001, Lsp ifgrid: 0x201FFFF, Interface to-nbor Circuit 3/6:1023:63/1/1/11
The following example displays information for all IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route all Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C 4001::/64 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C H 4001::/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C H 4001::1/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > A H 4001::2/128 4001::2 254 0 05:11:58 to-peer > C 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/64 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::fe/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > S 6001:aaaa:bbbb:cccc::/64 4001::2 1 0 05:11:58 to-peer > C 7001::/112 0 0 00:18:36 to-nbor > C H 7001::/128 0 0 00:18:36 to-nbor > C H 7001::1/128 0 0 00:18:36 to-nbor > A H 7001::ff/128 7001::ff 254 0 00:11:36 to-nbor > S 7001:dddd:eeee:ffff:1::/112 1 0 05:11:58 to-core > C 8001::1/128 0 0 00:16:28 lo > R 8001::2/128 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 120 1 00:08:58 to-nbor > e B 9001::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:02:40 to-nbor > e B 9002::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:02:40 to-nbor > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1104/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1105/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1109/128 0 0 00:18:36 to-nbor > A H fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294/128 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 254 0 00:11:36 to-nbor
The following example displays information for the BGP routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route bgp Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > e B 9001::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:02:59 to-nbor > e B 9002::/64 7001::ff 20 0 00:02:59 to-nbor
The following example displays information for the connected IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route connected Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C 4001::/64 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C H 4001::/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C H 4001::1/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/64 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::fe/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C 7001::/112 0 0 00:19:06 to-nbor > C H 7001::/128 0 0 00:19:06 to-nbor > C H 7001::1/128 0 0 00:19:06 to-nbor > C 8001::1/128 0 0 00:16:58 lo > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1104/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1105/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C fe80::230:88ff:fe00:1109/128 0 0 00:19:06 to-nbor
The following example displays information for the hidden IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route hidden Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > C H 4001::/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > C H 4001::1/128 0 0 1d02h to-peer > A H 4001::2/128 4001::2 254 0 05:12:43 to-peer > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 5001:2201:ff31:9900::fe/128 0 0 1d02h to-core > C H 7001::/128 0 0 00:19:21 to-nbor > C H 7001::1/128 0 0 00:19:21 to-nbor > A H 7001::ff/128 7001::ff 254 0 00:12:21 to-nbor > A H fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294/128 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 254 0 00:12:21 to-nbor
The following example displays information about next-hop IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route next-hop ** = Via interface Next Hop Tbl Version : 14 Current Next Hops : 7 NH-ID Ref Cnt NH-IP Via-NH Interface 0x30D00003 10/0 Local host 0x31100001 1/0 to-peer 0x31100002 2/0 to-core 0x31100003 2/0 4001::2 to-peer 0x31100004 1/0 to-nbor 0x31100005 2/0 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 to-nbor 0x31100006 3/0 7001::ff to-nbor
The following example displays information for registered next-hop IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route registered next-hop Next-hop: Registered Client(s): 4001::2 static Query flags : 0x40 Version : 0x1 Adj-id : 0x2000000 Conn Adj-id : 0x2000008 NH Magic : 0x1000000 Default flag : 0x0 Protocol : 0x1 IGP Metric : 0 Conn IF-GRID : 0x10000001 Conn cct id : 3/1:1023:63/1/1/5 IGP IF-GRID : 0x10000001 IGP cct id : 3/1:1023:63/1/1/5 Reslov cntxt : 0x40080001 IGP MTU : 1500 IGP first hop : 0.0.0.0 IGP next hop : 0.0.0.0 5001::1 static Query flags : 0x0 Version : 0x0 Adj-id : 0xFFFFFFFF Conn Adj-id : 0xFFFFFFFF NH Magic : 0x0 Default flag : 0x0 Protocol : 0x0 IGP Metric : -1 Conn IF-GRID : 0x0 Conn cct id : Cct invalid IGP IF-GRID : 0x0 IGP cct id : Cct invalid Reslov cntxt : 0x40080001 IGP MTU : 0 IGP first hop : 0.0.0.0 IGP next hop : 0.0.0.0 7001::ff bgp 100 Query flags : 0x40 Version : 0x0 Adj-id : 0x2000002 Conn Adj-id : 0x200000A NH Magic : 0x1000000 Default flag : 0x0 Protocol : 0x1 IGP Metric : 0 Conn IF-GRID : 0x10000003 Conn cct id : 3/6:1023:63/1/1/11 IGP IF-GRID : 0x10000003 IGP cct id : 3/6:1023:63/1/1/11 Reslov cntxt : 0x40080001 IGP MTU : 1500 IGP first hop : 0.0.0.0 IGP next hop : 0.0.0.0
The following example displays information about RIP routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route rip Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > R 8001::2/128 fe80::230:88ff:fe00:3294 120 1 00:11:24 to-nbor
The following example displays information for the static IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route static Codes: C - connected, S - static, S dv - dvsr, R - RIP, e B - EBGP, i B - IBGP A,H - derived hidden O - OSPF, O3 - OSPFv3, IA - OSPF(v3) inter-area, N1 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF(v3) NSSA external type 2 E1 - OSPF(v3) external type 1, E2 - OSPF(v3) external type 2 i - IS-IS, L1 - IS-IS level-1, L2 - IS-IS level-2, N - NAT IPH - IP Host, SUB A - Subscriber address, SUB S - Subscriber static A - Derived Default > - Active Route, * - LSP Type Network Next Hop Dist Metric UpTime Interface > S 6001:aaaa:bbbb:cccc::/64 4001::2 1 0 05:14:38 to-peer > S 7001:dddd:eeee:ffff:1::/112 1 0 05:14:38 to-core
The following example displays summary information for the IPv6 routes:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route summary Rt Tbl Version: 23, Nh Tbl Version: 14 FIB Rt Tbl Version: 23 Route Source Tot-Routes Act-Routes Max Ever Reached Connected 7 7 7 Static 2 2 2 Rip 1 1 1 EBGP 2 2 2
The following example displays IPv6 route information for the controller card:
[local]Redback>show ipv6 route xcrp Routing tables Internet6: Destination Gateway Flags Refs Use Cntxt Interface default link#10 UL1 1 27 1 xcrp ::1 ::1 UH 0 0 1 lo0 fe80::%fxp0/64 link#1 UC 0 0 1 fxp0 fe80::%lo0/64 fe80::1%lo0 U 0 0 1 lo0 fe80::%xcrp/64 link#10 UC 0 0 1 xcrp ff01::/32 ::1 U 0 0 1 lo0 ff02::%fxp0/32 link#1 UC 0 0 1 fxp0 ff02::%lo0/32 fe80::1%lo0 UC 0 0 1 lo0 ff02::%xcrp/32 link#10 UC 0 0 1 xcrp
show isis [instance-name] [multicast] adjacency [detail]
Displays information about Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) neighbors.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays information only about neighbors for the specified instance. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays multitopology IS-IS (M-ISIS) information. I don’t see this keyword in the code’s help...is it still there? |
detail |
Optional. Displays additional information about IS-IS neighbors. |
Displays information for all IS-IS neighbors.
Use the show isis adjacency command to display information about IS-IS neighbors.
Table 9 describes the output fields for the show isis adjacency command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
SystemId |
ID of an IS-IS in an area. |
Interface |
Interface advertising the IS-IS. |
L |
Level 1 routing only (1), level 2 routing only (2), or levels 1 and 2 (3) routing. Point-to-point adjacency is indicated with the letter p; for example, a level 2 routing with point-to-point adjacency displays as 2p. |
MT |
Multi-Topology. Indicates whether each IS-IS instance performs unicast (U), multicast (M), or unicast and multicast (UM) topology-based routing. Displays no value when the default routing topology, unicast, is used. |
Stat |
IS-IS adjacency state. |
Hold |
Time, in seconds, before an adjacency timeout occurs. |
SNPA |
Subnetwork Point of Attachment (SNPA) or the data-link address of the remote system. |
Uptime |
Time that the adjacency has been up. |
The following example displays output from the show isis adjacency command:
[local]Redback>show isis adjacency IS-IS Adjacenc(ies) for tag 6: SystemId Interface L MT Stat Hold SNPA Uptime dtse 5 1 U Up 28 0030.8800.1115 03:44:46 Area Address(es): 47.0001 IP Address(es): 11.1.1.1 IPv6 Address: fe80::290:69ff:fea1:dc00 BFD state N/A adj nh-id 6, neighbor sent re-start tlv Total IS-IS Adjacenc(ies): 1
The following example displays output from the show isis adjacency detail command:
[local]Redback>show isis adjacency detail IS-IS Adjacenc(ies) for tag 1: SystemId Interface L MT Stat Hold SNPA Uptime dtse p2p 3p U Up 24 1111.1111.1111 01d23h17 Area Address(es): 47.0001 IP Address(es): 13.13.13.1 BFD state N/A neighbor IIH current seq 17085, total iih pkt miss 0 adj nh-id 7 GR enabled state fresh Total IS-IS Adjacenc(ies): 3
show isis [instance-name] adj-log [interface if-name | is sys-id]
Displays adjacency logs.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Only adjacency logs for the specified instance are displayed. |
interface if-name |
Optional. Interface name. Only adjacency logs for the specified interface are displayed. |
is sys-id |
Optional. System ID. Only adjacency logs for the specified system are displayed. The sys-id argument is either specified in xxxx.xxxx.xxxx format or as the hostname. |
Displays the last adjacency event for all IS-IS interfaces.
Use the show isis adj-log command to display adjacency logs.
Table 10 describes the output fields for the show isis adj-log command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Interface |
Name of the interface to which the adjacency log belongs. |
Type |
Type of interface (LAN or point-to-point). |
State |
Interface state when the event occurred (up or down). |
Adjs |
Number of adjacencies when the event occurred. |
Neighbor ID |
System ID or the dynamic hostname of the neighbor system. |
L |
Level of the IS-IS adjacency (level 1, level 2, or levels 1 and 2). |
Time |
Amount of time that passed since the adjacency event. |
MT |
Multi-Topology. Indicates whether each IS-IS instance performs unicast (U), multicast (M), or unicast and multicast (UM) topology-based routing. Displays no value when the default routing topology, unicast, is used. |
Action |
Reason for the adjacency event. |
The following example displays adjacency logs for the gre0 interface:
[local]Redback>show isis adj-log interface gre0
IS-IS tag test Adjacency log of events on interface gre0: Interface Type State Adjs NeighborID L Time MT Action gre0 p2p Up 1 ns--edge 2 00:19:06 adj cleared Up 1 ns--edge 2 00:26:33 adj is up Up 1 ns--edge 3 01:25:27 adj is up Up 0 0 01:25:37 interface created
show isis [instance-name] database [detail | extensive] [level-1 | level-2] {lsp-id | sys-id}
Displays information about the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) link-state database.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays database information only for the specified instance. |
detail |
Optional. Displays the content of each link-state protocol data unit (LSP). |
extensive |
Optional. Displays the context of each LSP and traffic engineering (TE) sub type-length-value (TLV) object for extended IS reachability TLVs. |
level-1 |
Optional. Displays the link-state database for level 1 only. |
level-2 |
Optional. Displays the link-state database for level 2 only. |
lsp-id |
LSP ID in the format nnnn.nnnn.nnnn.xx-yy. Displays only information pertaining to the specified LSP. |
sys-id |
IS-IS system ID in the format nnnn.nnnn.nnnn. Displays only information pertaining to all LSP IDs for the specified IS-IS system. |
Displays information for the LSP database.
Use the show isis database command to display information about the IS-IS link-state database.
The output from the show isis database detail command displays the greater than (>) symbol next to the extended IS reachability TLV when it has traffic engineering information for the interface. Use the show isis database extensive command (in any mode) to see the detail traffic engineering information.
The following example displays output from the show isis database command:
[local]Redback>show isis database
S-IS level 1 link-state database for tag 1: LSPID Sequence Checksum Holdtime AT/OL Len samedi.00-00* 0x62c 0x2ee7 1196 1/0 139 Total IS-IS LSP(s) for tag 1 in Level-1: 1 IS-IS level 2 link-state database for tag 1: LSPID Sequence Checksum Holdtime AT/OL Len m5-4.00-00 0x791f 0x45a3 1058 0/0 216 samedi.00-00* 0x503 0x3485 1195 0/0 583 samedi.02-00* 0xcac 0x15bb 399 0/0 55 Total IS-IS LSP(s) for tag 1 in Level-2: 3
The following example displays output from the show isis database detail command for IS-IS level-1 routing:
[local]Redback>show isis database detail level-1
LSPID Sequence Checksum Holdtime AT/OL Len dtse.00-00 0x9d 0x5ca1 439 0/0 297 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP Hostname: dtse Router ID: 10.14.100.1 IP Address: 11.11.11.1 M-Topology: Metric: 10 IS-Extended sierra.01 > Metric: 13 IS-Extended samedi.01 > Metric: 10 IS-Extended sierra.02 > Metric: 10 IP 11.11.11.0/24 Metric: 13 IP 5.5.5.0/24 Metric: 10 IP 12.12.12.0/24 sierra.00-00 0x88 0x37bf 952 0/0 240 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP Hostname: sierra Router ID: 10.14.200.1 IP Address: 11.11.11.2 M-Topology: Metric: 10 IS-Extended sierra.01 > Metric: 10 IS-Extended sierra.02 > Metric: 10 IP 11.11.11.0/24 Metric: 10 IP 12.12.12.0/24 Metric: 10 IP 100.1.1.0/24 Metric: 10 IP 200.1.1.0/24 sierra.01-00 0x6f 0xfd4e 952 0/0 53 Metric: 0 IS-Extended sierra.00 Metric: 0 IS-Extended dtse.00 sierra.02-00 0x6c 0xfc51 952 0/0 53 Metric: 0 IS-Extended sierra.00 Metric: 0 IS-Extended dtse.00 samedi.00-00* 0xdd 0xadf7 599 0/0 141 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP Hostname: samedi Router ID: 6.6.6.6 IP Address: 5.5.5.6 M-Topology: Metric: 20 IS-Extended samedi.01 > Metric: 20 IP 5.5.5.0/24 samedi.01-00* 0x84 0x6d96 599 0/0 53 Metric: 0 IS-Extended samedi.00 Metric: 0 IS-Extended dtse.00 Total IS-IS LSP(s) for tag 6 in Level-1: 6
The following example displays output from the show isis database extensive command:
[local]Redback#show isis database extensive
IS-IS level 1 link-state database for tag 1: LSPID Sequence Checksum Holdtime AT/OL Len samedi.00-00* 0x62d 0x2ce8 1192 1/0 139 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP IPv6 Hostname: samedi IP Address: 1.1.1.1 M-Topology: ucast mcast v6ucast v6mcast Local Interface IPv6 Address: 200:2003::2 Metric: 10 IP 13.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 1 IP 1.1.1.1 255.255.255.255 Metric: 10 IP 12.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 10 Ucast-IPv6 2000:2002::/64 Total IS-IS LSP(s) for tag 1 in Level-1: 1 IS-IS level 2 link-state database for tag 1: LSPID Sequence Checksum Holdtime AT/OL Len m5-4.00-00 0x791f 0x45a3 946 0/0 216 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP IPv6 M-Topology: ucast mcast v6ucast Hostname: m5-4 Metric: 10 IS samedi.02 Metric: 10 IS-v6ucast samedi.02 Metric: 10 IS-Mcast samedi.02 Metric: 0 IP 10.14.200.10 255.255.255.255 Metric: 10 IP 11.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 9000:9001::1/128 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 8000:8001::1/128 Metric: 15 Ucast-IPv6-Ext 123:123::/64 Metric: 10 Ucast-IPv6 50:1:1::/64 Metric: 10 Ucast-IPv6 fe00::/102 samedi.00-00* 0x504 0x3286 1184 0/0 583 Area Address: 47.0001 NLPID: IP IPv6 Hostname: samedi IP Address: 1.1.1.1 M-Topology: ucast mcast v6ucast v6mcast Local Interface IPv6 Address: 2000:2001::2 Metric: 63 IS samedi.02 Metric: 2000 IS-Mcast samedi.02 Metric: 1999 IS-v6ucast samedi.02 Metric: 63 IP 11.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 10 IP 13.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 1 IP 1.1.1.1 255.255.255.255 Metric: 10 IP 12.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 2000 MCast-IP 11.1.0.0/16 Metric: 0 IP-External 9.9.9.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.1.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.2.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.3.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.4.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.5.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.6.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 0 IP-External 99.99.99.0 255.255.255.0 Metric: 1 IP 1.1.1.1 255.255.255.255 Metric: 10 IP 12.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 10 IP 13.1.0.0 255.255.0.0 Metric: 1999 Ucast-IPv6 2000:2001::/64 Metric: 10 Ucast-IPv6 2000:2002::/64 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 555:555::/100 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 666:666::/100 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 777:777::/100 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 888:888::/100 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 50:1:1::/64 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 123:123::/64 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 2000:2001::/64 Metric: 10 Ucast-IPv6 2000:2002::/64 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 8000:8001::1/128 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 9000:9001::1/128 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 fe00::/102 Metric: 0 Ucast-IPv6 999:999::/64 samedi.02-00* 0xcad 0x13bc 1184 0/0 55 Metric: 0 IS samedi.00 Metric: 0 IS m5-4.00 Total IS-IS LSP(s) for tag 1 in Level-2: 3
show isis [instance-name] debug-setting
Displays all enabled debugging settings.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) instance name. Displays only debug setting information for the specified instance. |
When entered without specifying an IS-IS instance, this command displays debug settings for all configured IS-IS instances.
Use the show isis debug-setting command to display all enabled debugging settings.
The following example displays output from the show isis debug-setting command:
[local]Redback>show isis debug-setting
debug isis adjacency debug isis policy debug isis protocol-errors debug isis routes debug isis spf-events
show isis [instance-name] dynamic-hostname
Displays Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) dynamic hostname and system ID mapping.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays dynamic hostname and system ID mapping information for the only specified instance. |
When entered without specifying an IS-IS instance, this command displays dynamic hostname and system ID mapping information for all configured IS-IS instances.
Use the show isis dynamic-hostname command to display IS-IS dynamic hostname and system ID mapping.
Table 11 describes the output fields for the show isis dynamic-hostname command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
System ID |
A 6-byte value that identifies an IS-IS system in the domain. The plus (+) symbol denotes the locally defined mapping. |
Level |
The level of the IS-IS routing domain. |
Updated |
The last time the dynamic hostname type-length-value (TLV) was presented in a link-state protocol data unit (LSP) of the system. |
Hostname |
The symbolic name advertised by the system. |
The following example displays output from the show isis dynamic-hostname command:
[local]Redback>show isis dynamic-hostname
System ID Level Updated Hostname 02aa.0002.0002 2 00:00:14 nyc-border3 02aa.0a00.0001+ 2 00:00:22 wtn-core1 Total IS-IS Dynamic Hostname entries: 2
show isis [instance-name] [multicast] interfaces [if-name] [intercontext [group-id]] [all] [detail] [extensive]
Displays information about Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) interfaces.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays information about interfaces for only the specified instance. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays multitopology IS-IS (M-ISIS) information. |
if-name |
Optional. Interface name. Displays information only for the specified interface. |
intercontext |
Optional. Displays IS-IS intercontext interfaces. |
group-id |
Optional. Group ID. If the group-id argument is specified, then only the IS-IS intercontext interfaces that belong to the intercontext group ID are displayed. |
all |
Optional. Displays IS-IS interface information for all contexts. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed IS-IS interface information. |
extensive |
Optional. Displays information about Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)-Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) synchronization states. |
Provides summary information if no options are specified.
Use the show isis interfaces command to display information about IS-IS interfaces.
The states displayed for LDP-IGP synchronization are as follows:
The display may show more than one state line.
Table 12 describes the output fields for the show isis interface command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Interface |
Interface advertising the IS-IS. |
L |
Level 1 routing only (1), level 2 routing only (2), or levels 1 and 2 (3) routing. |
MT |
Multi-topology. Indicates whether each IS-IS instance performs unicast (U), multicast (M), or unicast and multicast (UM) topology-based routing. Displays no value when the default routing topology, unicast, is used. |
State |
IS-IS adjacency state. |
Level-1-DR |
IS-IS level 1 designated router (DR) for the interface. |
Level-2-DR |
IS-IS level 1 designated router (DR) for the interface. |
Metric |
Routing metric. A value inside the brackets is a multicast metric, and a value without brackets, or outside the brackets, is a unicast metric. |
The following example displays output from the show isis interfaces command:
[local]Redback>show isis interfaces IS-IS interface(s) for tag testbed: Interface L MT State Level-1-DR Level-2-DR Metric lo 3 Up passive 1 to-foo-10/ 1p UM Up up 10 to_dopey_1 3p Up 10 to_dopey_4 3p Up up 10 to_pc6_7/2 3 UM Up sierra.01 sierra.01 10 to_pc7_7/2 3 Up sierra.02 sierra.02 10
The following example displays output from the show isis interfaces detail command:
[local]Redback>show isis interfaces detail IS-IS interface(s) for tag 1: p2p Up, level: 3, Ckt Id: 2, p2p, Ucast IP address: 13.13.13.2/24 mtu: 1500, speed 100000, Grid: 0x10000003, nh-id: 3, ckt 10/11 metrics[L1/L2]: v4 ucast[10/10] GR Normal Level Adjs Priority Hello Hold Auth Blocked Metric 3 1 64 2 30 10 Total IS-IS Interface(s): 2
The following example displays the IS-IS inter-context interfaces with group 30 in all contexts. The greater than symbol (>) indicates that the interface is an intercontext type:
[local]Redback>show isis int intercontext 30 all
Context :local Context id : 0x40080001 ------------------------------------------------------------------ IS-IS interface(s) for tag test: Interface L MT State Level-1-DR Level-2-DR Metric blue 2 > Up foo-target1.01 10 Total IS-IS Interface(s): 1 Context :foo Context id : 0x40080002 ------------------------------------------------------------------ IS-IS interface(s) for tag testfoo: Interface L MT State Level-1-DR Level-2-DR Metric bluefoo 2 > Up foo-target1.01 10 Total IS-IS Interface(s): 1
show isis [instance-name] protocol-summary [l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2]
Displays Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol summary information.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays protocol summary information for only the specified instance. |
l1 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 1 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
l2 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 2 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
level-1 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 1 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
level-2 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 2 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
Provides protocol summary information for all IS-IS instances on all levels.
Use the show isis protocol-summary command to display IS-IS protocol summary information.
An autonomous system (AS) running IS-IS can be partitioned into multiple level 1 areas and a level 2 subset that interconnects all of the level 1 areas. Within each level 1 area, all routers exchange link-state information. Level 2 routers also exchange level 2 link-state information to compute routes between areas. You can use the l1 or level-1 keyword to show only level 1 information, or you can use the l2 or level-2 keyword to show only level 2 information.
The following example displays output from the show isis protocol-summary command for the ip-trans IS-IS instance on the dynamic host (router), opt-core2:
[local]Redback>show isis ip-trans protocol-summary
--- ISIS Instance: ip-trans / systemID: 1010.1010.c1c1(opt-core2) --- Area 21.2425.2627.2829.3031.3233, level-1-2, metric short-wide, distance 115 Lsp L1 total 14, pnode 7. local lsp total 1, pnode 0 L2 total 26, pnode 10. local lsp total 2, pnode 0 Route isis total 104. level-1 87, level-2 17, interface route 23 L2 redist route 0, leak route 87, summary route 0 SPF L1 holddown 10, interval 5 last time 00:01:25, duration 4, nodes 14, routes 87 L2 holddown 10, interval 5 last time 00:01:13, duration 10, nodes 21, routes 17 Adj total 62, L1-LAN 20, L2-LAN 24, p2p 18 last uptime 00:02:29, on intf to-edge1, neighbor 1010.1010.d1d1(opt-edge1) Intf total 24(down 1), LAN 4, p2p 20(down 1), passive 2 Time router uptime 01d16h07, instance uptime 00:32:07
The previous example shows that the router has the following characteristics:
The router runs level 1 and level 2 with both short and wide metric style. The router has 14 level 1 link-state protocol data units (LSPs), and 26 level 2 LSPs. The router has 104 IS-IS routes: 87 level 1 routes and 17 level 2 routes. 87 routes are leaked from level 1 into level 2 without summary information. The last Shortest Path First (SPF) calculation on level 1 was run one minute 25 seconds ago, with a duration of 4 milliseconds. There are 14 nodes in the level 1 area. The last level 2 SPF duration was 10 milliseconds, with 21 nodes and 17 routes. The router has 62 adjacencies: 20 level 1 LAN adjacencies, 24 level 2 LAN adjacencies, and 18 point-to-point adjacencies. The last “UP” adjacency was 2 minutes and 29 seconds ago on the interface named to-edge1 from neighbor opt-edge1. The router has 24 IS-IS interfaces: 4 LAN interfaces and 20 point-to-point interfaces. The router has been up for 1 day 16 hours 7 minutes, and the IS-IS instance has been up for 32 minutes 7 seconds.
The following example displays output from the show isis protocol-summary command for the new-net IS-IS instance on the dynamic host (router), opt-core2:
[local]Redback>show isis new-net protocol-summary
--- ISIS Instance: new-net / systemID: 0008.0008.0008(opt-core2) --- Area 47.0008, level-1-2, metric wide-only, distance 115 Lsp L1 total 1, pnode 0. local lsp total 1, pnode 0 L2 total 4, pnode 1. local lsp total 2, pnode 1 Route isis total 4. level-1 1, level-2 3, interface route 1 L2 redist route 0, leak route 1, summary route 0 SPF L1 holddown 4, interval 2 last time 00:02:14(periodic), duration 0, nodes 1, routes 1 L2 holddown 4, interval 2 last time 00:01:14(periodic), duration 0, nodes 3, routes 3 Adj total 1, L1-LAN 0, L2-LAN 1, p2p 0 last uptime 01d10h10, on intf to-e2, neighbor 1111.2222.3333(vpn-e2) Intf total 1, LAN 1, p2p 0 GR Enabled Time router uptime 11d03h12, instance uptime 12:42:22
This example shows that the router has the following characteristics:
The router runs level 1 and level 2 with wide metric style only. The router has one level 1 LSP and four level 2 LSPs. The router has four IS-IS routes. The last level 1 SPF calculation was run two minutes and 14 seconds ago and was a periodic SPF. The last level 2 SPF calculation was run one minute and 14 seconds ago and was a periodic SPF. The router has one level 2 LAN adjacency that was up one day and 10 hours ago on interface to-e2 with neighbor vpn-e2. The router has only one IS-IS interface on LAN. The router has IS-IS graceful restart enabled. The router has been up for 11 days 3 hours 12 minutes, and the IS-IS instance has been up for 12 hours 42 minutes 22 seconds.
show isis [instance-name] [ipv4 {unicast | multicast} | ipv6 unicast] routes [[l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2] | ip-addr | ip-addr/prefix-length | redistribute [l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2] | summary]
Displays Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) routes.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays information about routes for only the specified instance. |
ipv4 |
Optional. Displays information about IP Version 4 (IPv4) routes. |
unicast |
Optional. Displays information about unicast routes. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays information about multicast routes. Not available with the ipv6 keyword. |
ipv6 |
Optional. Displays information about IP Version 6 (IPv6) routes. |
l1 |
Optional. When used with the routes keyword, displays only IS-IS level 1 routes. When used with the redistribute keyword, displays only IS-IS level 1 routes redistributed from other routing protocols into the IS-IS domain, or leaked from other IS-IS levels. |
l2 |
Optional. When used with the routes keyword, displays only IS-IS level 2 routes. When used with the redistribute keyword, displays only IS-IS level 2 routes redistributed from other routing protocols into the IS-IS domain, or leaked from other IS-IS levels. |
level-1 |
Optional. When used with the routes keyword, displays only IS-IS level 1 routes. When used with the redistribute keyword, displays only IS-IS level 1 routes redistributed from other routing protocols into the IS-IS domain, or leaked from other IS-IS levels. |
level-2 |
Optional. When used with the routes keyword, displays only IS-IS level 2 routes. When used with the redistribute keyword, displays only IS-IS level 2 routes redistributed from other routing protocols into the IS-IS domain, or leaked from other IS-IS levels. |
ip-addr |
Optional. Longest matched IS-IS route for the IP address. The IP address is specified in the form A.B.C.D. |
ip-addr/prefix-length |
Prefix length. Exactly matched IS-IS route for the IP address and prefix length. The IP address is specified in the form A.B.C.D. The range of values for the prefix length is 0 to 32. |
redistribute |
Optional. Displays IS-IS routes redistributed from other routing protocols into the IS-IS domain, or leaked from other IS-IS levels. |
summary |
Optional. Displays the number of routes that are summarized. |
Provides summary information about all IPv4 unicast routes if no options are specified.
Use the show isis routes command to display IS-IS routes. If entered without any optional keywords, this command displays IPv4 unicast routes only.
Table 13 describes the output fields for the show isis routes command using the ip-addr/prefix-length construct.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Prefix |
IP prefix. |
Level |
IS-IS level. |
Metric |
Metric used to reach this prefix. |
Interface |
Interface used to reach this prefix. |
Nexthop |
IP nexthop used to reach this prefix. |
LSP ID |
Link state protocol data unit (LSP) ID that advertised this prefix. |
Seq # |
Sequence number of the LSP. |
System Name |
Router that advertised the LSP and prefix. |
Arrive |
Last time the system received this LSP. |
Interface |
Interface from which the last LSP arrived. |
Table 14 describes the output fields for the show isis routes summary command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Route Type |
Route type. The route type can be IS-IS, redistributed, interarea, or summary. |
Level-1 |
Number of routes, per route type, in level 1 area. |
Level-2 |
Number of routes, per route type, in level 2 domain. |
Summarize (L1/L2) |
Number of routes, per route type, that are summarized in each level. The x/y output (for example, 0/1) indicates number of routes summarized in Level 1/ number of routes summarized in Level 2. |
L2-to-L1 Leak |
Number of IS-IS routes distributed from level 2 to level 1. These routes are not leaded on this system, but are leaked from level 2 into level 1 from other systems. |
The following example displays output from the show isis routes command:
[local]Redback>show isis routes
IS-IS IP route(s) for tag 1 Prefix L Metric Interface Nexthop Context 1.1.1.1/32 1 1 lo1 0.0.0.0 9.9.9.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 10.14.200.10/32 2 63 2 11.1.1.1 11.1.0.0/16 2 63 0.0.0.0 12.1.0.0/16 1 10 to_vendridi 0.0.0.0 13.1.0.0/16 1 10 ix 0.0.0.0 99.99.1.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.2.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.3.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.4.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.5.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.6.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 99.99.99.0/24 2 0 0.0.0.0 Total IS-IS Route(s) for tag 1: 13
The following example displays output from the show isis ipv6 unicast routes command:
[local]Redback(config-ctx)#show isis ipv6 unicast routes IS-IS ipv6 IP route(s) for tag 1 Prefix L Metric Interface Nexthop Context 50:1:1::/64 2 1999 2 fe80::290:69ff: 123:123::/64 2 1999 2 fe80::290:69ff: 555:555::/100 2 0 :: 666:666::/100 2 0 :: 777:777::/100 2 0 :: 888:888::/100 2 0 :: 999:999::/64 2 0 :: 2000:2001::/64 2 0 :: 2000:2002::/64 1 0 :: 8000:8001::1/128 2 1999 2 fe80::290:69ff: 9000:9001::1/128 2 1999 2 fe80::290:69ff: fe00::/102 2 1999 2 fe80::290:69ff: Total IS-IS Route(s) for tag 1: 12
The following example displays output from the show isis ipv4 multicast routes command:
[local]Redback(config-ctx)#show isis ipv4 multicast routes IS-IS multicast IP route(s) for tag 1 Prefix L Metric Interface Nexthop Context 11.1.0.0/16 2 2000 2 0.0.0.0 Total IS-IS Route(s) (multicast) for tag 1: 1
The following example displays output from the show isis routes redistribute command:
[local]Redback>show isis routes redistribute
IS-IS Redistributed route(s) for tag A2-wtn, on Level-2 Prefix L Type Source Metric M-Type Summarized 23.4.5.6/32 2 Ext static 4 Int 44.1.1.0/24 2 Ext static 4 Int Total IS-IS Redistributed Routes in level-2: 2
The following example displays output from the show isis routes command using the ip-addr/prefix-length construct:
[local]Redback>show isis routes 11.11.11.4/30
IS-IS prefix for tag test: Prefix Level Metric Interface Nexthop 11.11.11.4/30 2 20 redback 192.168.1.5 Is sourced from LSP(s): LSP ID Seq # System Name Arrive(ago) Interface(from) 1111.2222.3333.00-01 0x4 ns-c1100 00:00:50 redback
The IP prefix 11.11.11.4/30 is a level 2 domain with a metric of 20. The next hop for this prefix is the redback interface and the IP address is 192.168.1.5. This prefix is advertised by system ns-c1100 in LSP 1111.2222.3333.00-01. This LSP has the sequence number of 0x4 and it arrived 50 seconds ago on the redback interface:
The following example displays output from the show isis routes command using the summary keyword:
[local]Redback>show isis routes summary
IS-IS route(s) summary for tag 1: Route Type Level-1 Level-2 Summarize(L1/L2) L2-to-L1 Leak IS-IS Route 3 10 - 0 Redistribute 0 8 0/0 Inter-area 0 3 0/0 Summary Address 0 0 0/0 IS-IS interface routes: 3 Redistributed protocols: ospf static static
show isis [instance-name] [ipv4 {unicast | multicast} | ipv6 unicast] spf-log [l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2]
Displays a history of the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) Shortest Path First (SPF) calculation results.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays SPF information for only the specified instance. |
ipv4 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for IP Version 4 (IPv4) routing. |
unicast |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for unicast topologies. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for multicast topologies. Not available with the ipv6 keyword. |
ipv6 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for IP Version 6 (IPv6) routing. |
l1 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for level 1 only. |
l2 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for level 2 only. |
level-1 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for level 1 only. |
level-2 |
Optional. Displays the SPF events for level 2 only. |
Provides summary information about IS-IS SPF calculation results for both levels and all configured instances of IS-IS.
Use the show isis spf-log command to display a history of the IS-IS SPF calculation results.
Table 15 describes the output fields for the show isis spf-log command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
When |
Time elapsed since the last SPF calculation took place. |
Duration |
Duration, in milliseconds, of an SPF calculation. |
Nodes |
Number of nodes involved in an SPF calculation. |
Count |
Number of times an SPF calculation was initiated. |
Routes |
Number of routes involved in an SPF calculation. |
Last Trigger LSP |
LSP ID that initiated the last SPF calculation. |
Reasons |
Reason for the last SPF calculation; see Table 16 for a list of explanations. |
Table 16 describes the reasons and explanations for the show isis spf-log SPF recalculation.
Reason ID |
Explanation |
---|---|
ADMINDIST |
The administrative distance was reconfigured. |
AREASET |
A set of areas was changed. |
ATTACHFLAG |
A Level 2 attachment has changed. |
DISELECT |
Designated IS (DIS) election was rerun. |
IPRTLEAK |
Routes were leaked between levels. |
LOSTADJ |
Adjacency has been lost. |
LSPHEADER |
An LSP header has changed. |
NEWADJ |
A new neighbor has come up. |
NEWAREA |
A new area has come up. |
NEWLSP |
A new LSP has arrived. |
NEWMETRIC |
A metric has changed. |
OVLD |
Overload. |
PERIODIC REDIST |
An internal LSP has been regenerated. |
PREFIX |
An SPF prefix has changed. |
PURGELSP |
An LSP was purged. |
REDIST |
A route was redistributed. |
RTCLEARED |
Routes were manually cleared. |
TLVCONTENT |
The content of an LSP changed. |
TLVROUTES |
An LSP route changed. |
ADJNEXTHOP |
A new next hop was added. |
USERTRIG |
The SPD recalculation was triggered by the user. |
TOPOCHG |
The network topology changed. |
SYSCHG |
The system ID changed. |
show isis [instance-name] statistics [detail]
Displays Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) traffic information.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays traffic information for only the specified instance. |
detail |
Optional. Displays detailed traffic information. |
Provides summary information if no options are specified.
Use the show isis statistics command to display IS-IS traffic information.
The following example displays output from the show isis statistics command:
[local]Redback>show isis statistics
IS-IS Router: ip-backbone System Id: 0003.0003.0003 Type: Level-1 SPF runs: 16 PDU Type Received Processed Drops Sent LSP 25 18 7 16 IIH 1290 1216 74 721 CSNP 17 0 17 442 PSNP 0 0 0 0 Total 1332 1234 98 1179 Type: Level-2 SPF runs: 16 PDU Type Received Processed Drops Sent LSP 10 10 0 18 IIH 629 629 0 726 CSNP 0 0 0 453 PSNP 0 0 0 0 Total 639 639 0 1197 Total Received: 1971; Total Sent: 2376
show isis [instance-name] [{ipv4 {unicast | multicast} | ipv6 unicast}] summary-address [l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2]
Displays information about Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) IP summary addresses.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays information about summary addresses for only the specified instance. |
ipv4 |
Optional. Displays information for IP Version 4 (IPv4) summary addresses. |
unicast |
Optional. Displays information for unicast summary addresses. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays information for multicast summary addresses. |
ipv6 unicast |
Optional. Displays information for IP Version 6 (IPv6) unicast summary addresses. |
l1 |
Optional. Displays only information about level 1 summary addresses. |
l2 |
Optional. Displays only information about level 2 summary addresses. |
level-1 |
Optional. Displays only information about level 1 summary addresses. |
level-2 |
Optional. Displays only information about level 2 summary addresses. |
Provides summary information if no options are specified.
Use the show isis summary-address command to display information about IS-IS IP summary addresses.
Table 17 describes the output fields for the show isis summary-address command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
Prefix |
Summary address. |
Level |
IS-IS level to which the summary address is applied. |
Metric |
Metric used for the summary address. |
Num-Routes |
Number of more-specific routes that are suppressed by the summary address. |
Active |
Status flag that indicates whether the summary address is being used. |
The following example displays output from the show isis summary-address command. In level 2, two summary addresses are displayed. The summary address 64.0.0.0/16 is not active. The summary address 44.1.0.0/23 is active and one route has an IS-IS metric of 3:
[local]Redback>show isis summary-address
Total IS-IS Summary Addresses in level-1: 0 IS-IS Summary Addresses, on Level-2 Prefix Level Metric Num-Routes Active 64.0.0.0/16 2 0 44.1.0.0/23 2 3 1 Y Total IS-IS-Summary Addresses in Level 2: 2
show isis [instance-name] [{ipv4 {unicast | multicast} | ipv6 unicast}] topology [l1 | l2 | level-1 | level-2]
Displays the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) topology information.
all modes
instance-name |
Optional. IS-IS instance name. Displays topology information for only the specified instance. |
ipv4 |
Optional. Displays information for IP Version 4 (IPv4) topologies. |
unicast |
Optional. Displays information for unicast topologies. |
multicast |
Optional. Displays information for multicast topologies. Not available with the ipv6 keyword. |
ipv6 unicast |
Optional. Displays information for IP Version 6 (IPv6) unicast topologies. |
l1 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 1 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
l2 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 2 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
level-1 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 1 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
level-2 |
Optional. Displays only IS-IS level 2 protocol summary information; see the “Usage Guidelines” section for more information on IS-IS levels. |
None
Use the show isis topology command to display IS-IS topology information.
An autonomous system (AS) running IS-IS can be partitioned into multiple level 1 areas, and a level 2 subset that interconnects all of the level 1 areas. Within each level 1 area, all routers exchange link-state information. Level 2 routers also exchange level 2 link-state information to compute routes between areas. You can use the l1 or level-1 keyword to show only level 1 information, or you can use the l2 or level-2 keyword to show only level 2 information.
Table 18 describes the output fields for the show isis topology command.
Field |
Description |
---|---|
System |
System ID or dynamic hostname. |
Distance |
IS-IS metric to reach the system. |
Routes |
Number of IP prefixes advertised by the system. |
IS |
Number of IS neighbors advertised by the system. |
Next-Hop |
Next-hop router to reach the system. |
Interface |
Interface used to reach the system. |
IP-Gateway |
IP next-hop address used to reach the system. |
The following example displays output from the show isis topology command:
[local]Redback>show isis topology
IS-IS ipv4 unicast topology for tag 1: System Distance Route IS Next-Hop Interface IP-Gateway samedi 0 6 0 Total level-1 IS-IS systems: 1 IS-IS ipv4 unicast topology for tag 1: System Distance Route IS Next-Hop Interface IP-Gateway m5-4 63 2 0 m5-4 2 11.1.1.1 samedi 0 17 1 Total level-2 IS-IS systems: 2
The following example displays output from the show isis topology command with the ipv4 keyword:
[local]Redback>show isis ipv4 unicast topology
IS-IS ipv4 unicast topology for tag 6: System Distance Route IS Next-Hop Interface IP-Gateway dtse 20 3 2 dtse 5 5.5.5.1 sierra 30 4 0 dtse 5 5.5.5.1 samedi 0 2 1 Total level-1 IS-IS systems: 3