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Cisco IOS First Hop Redundancy Protocols Command Reference
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service-module ip redundancy through show vrrs summary
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Contents
service-module ip redundancy through show vrrs summaryservice-module ip redundancyTo link the primary HSRP interface status to that of the satellite interface, use the service-module ip redundancy command in satellite interface configuration mode. To remove the link between the primary HSRP interface status and the satellite interface status, use the no form of this command. Command History
Usage GuidelinesUse the service-module ip redundancy command only when you have two Cisco IP VSAT satellite WAN network modules (NM-1VSAT-GILAT) on separate HSRP-redundant routers that connect to the same outdoor unit (ODU). This command enables the satellite interface to spoof the line protocol UP state. ExamplesThe following example shows how to link the primary HSRP interface status to that of the satellite interface: Router (config-if)# service-module ip redundancy grp-hsrp
Related Commands
show glbpTo display Gateway Load Balancing Protocol (GLBP) information, use the show glbp command in privileged EXEC mode.
capability [interface-type interface-number]
| [[interface-type interface-number [group-number] [state] [brief] [detail] client-cache [age number] [forwarder number]] | mac-address address | [summary] ]
Syntax Description
Command History
Usage GuidelinesUse the show glbp command to display information about GLBP groups on a router. The brief keyword displays a single line of information about each virtual gateway or virtual forwarder. The client-cache keyword displays the client cache details and the capability keyword displays all GLBP-capable interfaces. ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show glbp command:
Router# show glbp
FastEthernet0/0 - Group 10
State is Active
2 state changes, last state change 23:50:33
Virtual IP address is 10.21.8.10
Hello time 5 sec, hold time 18 sec
Next hello sent in 4.300 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 7200 sec
Authentication MD5, key-string
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local
Standby is unknown
Priority 254 (configured)
Weighting 105 (configured 110), thresholds: lower 95, upper 105
Track object 2 state Down decrement 5
Load balancing: host-dependent
There is 1 forwarder (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 23:50:15
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (default)
Owner ID is 0005.0050.6c08
Redirection enabled
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local, weighting 105
The following is sample output from the show glbp command with the brief keyword specified:
Router# show glbp brief
Interface Grp Fwd Pri State Address Active router Standby router
Fa0/0 10 - 254 Active 10.21.8.10 local unknown
Fa0/0 10 1 7 Active 0007.b400.0101 local -
The following is sample output from the show glbp command that displays GLBP group 10:
Router# show glbp 10
FastEthernet0/0 - Group 10
State is Active
2 state changes, last state change 23:50:33
Virtual IP address is 10.21.8.10
Hello time 5 sec, hold time 18 sec
Next hello sent in 4.300 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 7200 sec
Authentication MD5, key-string
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local
Standby is unknown
Priority 254 (configured)
Weighting 105 (configured 110), thresholds: lower 95, upper 105
Track object 2 state Down decrement 5
Load balancing: host-dependent
There is 1 forwarder (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 23:50:15
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (default)
Owner ID is 0005.0050.6c08
Redirection enabled
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local, weighting 105
The following output shows that the redundancy name has been assigned to the "glbp1" group: Router# show glbp ethernet0/1 1 Ethernet0/1 - Group 1 State is Listen 64 state changes, last state change 00:00:54 Virtual IP address is 10.1.0.7 Hello time 50 msec, hold time 200 msec Next hello sent in 0.030 secs Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec Authentication text, string "authword" Preemption enabled, min delay 0 sec Active is 10.1.0.2, priority 105 (expires in 0.184 sec) Standby is 10.1.0.3, priority 100 (expires in 0.176 sec) Priority 96 (configured) Weighting 100 (configured 100), thresholds: lower 95, upper 100 Track object 1 state Up decrement 10 Load balancing: round-robin IP redundancy name is "glbp1" Group members: 0004.4d83.4801 (10.0.0.0) 0010.7b5a.fa41 (10.0.0.1) 00d0.bbd3.bc21 (10.0.0.2) local The following output shows GLBP support for SSO mode on an active RP:
Router# show glbp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Standby
1 state change, last state change 00:00:20
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Next hello sent in 0.232 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Preemption disabled
Active is 172.24.1.2, priority 100 (expires in 7.472 sec)
Standby is local
Priority 100 (default)
Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100
Load balancing: round-robin
Group members:
aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local
aabb.cc00.0200 (172.24.1.2)
There are 2 forwarders (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Listen
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200
Time to live: 14397.472 sec (maximum 14400 sec)
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is 172.24.1.2 (primary), weighting 100 (expires in 9.540 sec)
Forwarder 2
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 00:00:28
MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is local, weighting 100
The following output shows GLBP support for SSO mode on a standby RP:
RouterRP-standby# show glbp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Standby)
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Preemption disabled
Active is unknown
Standby is unknown
Priority 100 (default)
Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100
Load balancing: round-robin
Group members:
aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local
aabb.cc00.0200 (172.24.1.2)
There are 2 forwarders (0 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Listen)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
Forwarder 2
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Active)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
GLBP support for Stateful Switchover (SSO) mode is enabled by default but may be disabled by the no glbp sso command. If GLBP support for SSO mode is disabled, the output of the show glbp command on the standby RP will display a warning: RouterRP-standby# show glbp Ethernet0/0 - Group 1 State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled) <------ GLBP SSO is disabled. Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254 Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec Preemption disabled Active is unknown Standby is unknown Priority 100 (default) Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100 Load balancing: round-robin Group members: aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local There are 2 forwarders (0 active) Forwarder 1 State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled) MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt) Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200 Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec Active is unknown Forwarder 2 State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled) MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default) Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100 Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec Active is unknown The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.
show standbyTo display Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP) information, use the show standby command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Syntax Description
Command History
ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show standby command:
Router# show standby
Ethernet0/1 - Group 1
State is Active
2 state changes, last state change 00:30:59
Virtual IP address is 10.1.0.20
Secondary virtual IP address 10.1.0.21
Active virtual MAC address is 0004.4d82.7981
Local virtual MAC address is 0004.4d82.7981 (bia)
Hello time 4 sec, hold time 12 sec
Next hello sent in 1.412 secs
Gratuitous ARP 14 sent, next in 7.412 secs
Preemption enabled, min delay 50 sec, sync delay 40 sec
Active router is local
Standby router is 10.1.0.6, priority 75 (expires in 9.184 sec)
Priority 95 (configured 120)
Tracking 2 objects, 0 up
Down Interface Ethernet0/2, pri 15
Down Interface Ethernet0/3
Group name is "HSRP1" (cfgd)
Follow by groups:
Et1/0.3 Grp 2 Active 10.0.0.254 0000.0c07.ac02 refresh 30 secs (next 19.666)
Et1/0.4 Grp 2 Active 10.0.0.254 0000.0c07.ac02 refresh 30 secs (next 19.491)
Group name is "HSRP1", advertisement interval is 34 sec
The following is sample output from the show standby command when HSRP version 2 is configured:
Router# show standby
Ethernet0/1 - Group 1 (version 2)
State is Speak
Virtual IP address is 10.21.0.10
Active virtual MAC address is unknown
Local virtual MAC address is 0000.0c9f.f001 (v2 default)
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Next hello sent in 1.804 secs
Preemption enabled
Active router is unknown
Standby router is unknown
Priority 20 (configured 20)
Group name is "hsrp-Et0/1-1" (default)
Ethernet0/2 - Group 1
State is Speak
Virtual IP address is 10.22.0.10
Active virtual MAC address is unknown
Local virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac01 (v1 default)
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Next hello sent in 1.804 secs
Preemption disabled
Active router is unknown
Standby router is unknown
Priority 90 (default 100)
Track interface Serial2/0 state Down decrement 10
Group name is "hsrp-Et0/2-1" (default)
The following is sample output from the show standby command with the brief keyword specified:
Router# show standby brief
Interface Grp Prio P State Active addr Standby addr Group addr
Et0 0 120 Init 10.0.0.1 unknown 10.0.0.12
The following is sample output from the show standby command when HSRP MD5 authentication is configured:
Router# show standby
Ethernet0/1 - Group 1
State is Active
5 state changes, last state change 00:17:27
Virtual IP address is 10.21.0.10
Active virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac01
Local virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac01 (default)
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Next hello sent in 2.276 secs
Authentication MD5, key-string, timeout 30 secs
Preemption enabled
Active router is local
Standby router is unknown
Priority 110 (configured 110)
Group name is "hsrp-Et0/1-1" (default)
The following is sample output from the show standby command when HSRP group shutdown is configured:
Router# show standby
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Init (tracking shutdown)
3 state changes, last state change 00:30:59
Track object 100 state Up
Track object 101 state Down
Track object 103 state Up
The following is sample output from the show standby command when HSRP BFD peering is enabled:
Router# show standby
Ethernet0/0 - Group 2
State is Listen
2 state changes, last state change 01:18:18
Virtual IP address is 10.0.0.1
Active virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac02
Local virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac02 (v1 default)
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Preemption enabled
Active router is 10.0.0.250, priority 120 (expires in 9.396 sec)
Standby router is 10.0.0.251, priority 110 (expires in 8.672 sec)
BFD enabled
Priority 90 (configured 90)
Group name is "hsrp-Et0/0-1" (default)
The following is sample output from the show standby command used to display the state of the standby RP:
Router# show standby
GigabitEthernet3/25 - Group 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Active)
Virtual IP address is 10.0.0.1
Active virtual MAC address is unknown
Local virtual MAC address is 0000.0c07.ac01 (v1 default)
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Preemption disabled
Active router is unknown
Standby router is unknown
Priority 100 (default 100)
Group name is "hsrp-Gi3/25-1" (default)
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.
Related Commands
show standby arp gratuitousTo display the number and configured interval of gratuitous Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) packets sent by Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP), use the show standby arp gratuitous command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC configuration mode. Usage GuidelinesThis command displays the interface to which HSRP sends gratuitous ARP packets, the interval (in seconds) and the number. Gratuitous ARP packets are sent only when an HSRP group transitions to the Active state. ExamplesThe following sample output displays information about HSRP gratuitous ARP packets:
Router# show standby arp gratuitous
HSRP Gratuitous ARP
Interface Interval Count
Ethernet0/0 3 2
Related Commands
show standby capabilityTo display the limitation on how many virtual MAC addresses that some interfaces can listen to, use the show standby capability command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Command History
Usage GuidelinesHSRP allows up to 256 groups to be configured on each interface, but it is possible that the MAC address filter of the interface does not support that many entries. For example, Versatile Interface Processor (VIP) interfaces only support 32 MAC addresses in their MAC address filter. If more HSRP groups are created than there are address filter entries, then it is likely that the router will stop listening to packets sent to the MAC address of an active HSRP group. ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show standby capability command:
Router# show standby capability
7206VXR * indicates hardware may support HSRP
|
Interface Type H Potential Max Groups
FastEthernet0/0 18 DEC21140A * 256 (0x60194B00,
0x60194BE8)
FastEthernet1/0 18 DEC21140A * 256 (0x60194B00,
0x60194BE8)
Ethernet2/0 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/1 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/2 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/3 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/4 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/5 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/6 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
Ethernet2/7 61 AmdP2 * 256 (0x601A252C,
0x601A25E4)
ATM3/0 74 ENHANCED ATM PA * 256 LAN emulation
TokenRing4/0 66 HAWKEYE * 3 HSRP TR functional
addresses (0x6076A590)
TokenRing4/1 66 HAWKEYE * 3 HSRP TR functional
addresses (0x6076A590)
TokenRing4/2 66 HAWKEYE * 3 HSRP TR functional
addresses (0x6076A590)
TokenRing4/3 66 HAWKEYE * 3 HSRP TR functional
addresses (0x6076A590)
Serial5/0 67 M4T -
Serial5/1 67 M4T -
Serial5/2 67 M4T -
Serial5/3 67 M4T -
FastEthernet6/0 18 DEC21140A * 256 (0x60194B00,
0x60194BE8)
VoIP-Null0 102 VoIP-Null -
The table below describes the significant fields in the display. show standby delayTo display Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP) information about delay periods, use the show standby delay command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Command History
show standby internalTo display Hot Standby Routing Protocol (HSRP) internal flags and conditions, use the show standby internal command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Syntax Description
Command History
Usage GuidelinesThe show standby internal interface-type interface-number summary command applies to both the main interface and subinterfaces. When the command is used for the main interface the display output does not include groups on subinterfaces. This command displays all configured and learned HSRP groups in various states on the specified interface or subinterface. The show standby internal interface-type interface-number summary all command applies only to the main interface, not to subinterfaces. It displays the total number of configured and learned HSRP groups in various states, including groups on all subinterfaces under the main interface. The show standby internal summary command displays all configured and learned HSRP groups in various states on all interfaces. ExamplesThe following example shows a configuration example and sample output from the show standby internal command for the configuration. The output shows internal flags and hardware and software information for Ethernet interface 2/0. The output shows that HSRP group 1 is configured for priority and preemption, and that the standby timers and standby-use bia commands have been configured. Router# show standby internal interface Ethernet2/0 ip address 10.0.0.254 255.255.0.0 standby use-bia standby version 2 standby 1 ip 10.0.0.1 standby 1 timers 2 6 standby 1 priority 110 standby 1 preempt Router# show standby internal Global Confg: 0000 Et2/0 If hw AmdP2, State 0x210040 Et2/0 If hw Confg: 0001, USEBIA Et2/0 If hw Flags: 0000 Et2/0 If sw Confg: 0040, VERSION Et2/0 If sw Flags: 0001, USEBIA Et2/0 Grp 1 Confg: 0072, IP_PRI, PRIORITY, PREEMPT, TIMERS Et2/0 Grp 1 Flags: 0000 The following sample output from the show standby internal ethernet0/1 summary all command shows 400 active configured groups and no active learned groups for Ethernet interface 0/1:
Router# show standby internal ethernet 0/1 summary all
Disable Init Learn Listen Speak Standby Active
Ethernet0/1
Configured 0 0 0 0 0 0 400
Learnt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
show standby neighborsTo display information about Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP) peer routers on an interface, use the show standby neighbors command in privileged EXEC mode. Usage GuidelinesUse this command to display information about HSRP peer neighbors. This command displays the HSRP groups for which each neighbor is acting as the active and standby router and whether Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) peering is enabled for each neighbor. ExamplesThe following example displays the HSRP neighbors on Ethernet interface 0/0. Neighbor 10.0.0.250 is active for group 2 and standby for groups 1 and 8, and is registered with BFD:
Router# show standby neighbors Ethernet0/0
HSRP neighbors on Ethernet0/0
10.0.0.250
Active groups: 2
Standby groups: 1, 8
BFD enabled
10.0.0.251
Active groups: 5, 8
Standby groups: 2
BFD enabled
10.0.0.253
No Active groups
No Standby groups
BFD enabled
The following example displays information for all HSRP neighbors:
Router# show standby neighbors
HSRP neighbors on FastEthernet2/0
10.0.0.2
No active groups
Standby groups: 1
BFD enabled
HSRP neighbors on FastEthernet2/0
10.0.0.1
Active groups: 1
No standby groups
BFD enabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays. Related Commands
show standby redirectTo display Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) redirect information on interfaces configured with the Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP), use the show standby redirect command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show standby direct command with no optional keywords:
Router# show standby redirect
Interface Redirects Unknown Adv Holddown
Ethernet0/2 enabled enabled 30 180
Ethernet0/3 enabled disabled 30 180
Active Hits Interface Group Virtual IP Virtual MAC
10.19.0.7 0 Ethernet0/2 3 10.19.0.13 0000.0c07.ac03
local 0 Ethernet0/3 1 10.20.0.11 0000.0c07.ac01
local 0 Ethernet0/3 2 10.20.0.12 0000.0c07.ac02
Passive Hits Interface Expires in
10.19.0.6 0 Ethernet0/2 151.800
The table below describes the significant fields in the display.
The following is sample output from the show standby redirect command with a specific interface Ethernet 0/3:
Router# show standby redirect e0/3
Interface Redirects Unknown Adv Holddown
Ethernet0/3 enabled disabled 30 180
Active Hits Interface Group Virtual IP Virtual MAC
local 0 Ethernet0/3 1 10.20.0.11 0000.0c07.ac01
local 0 Ethernet0/3 2 10.20.0.12 0000.0c07.ac02
The following is sample output from the show standby redirect command showing all active routers on interface Ethernet 0/3:
Router# show standby redirect e0/3 active
Active Hits Interface Group Virtual IP Virtual MAC
local 0 Ethernet0/3 1 10.20.0.11 0000.0c07.ac01
local 0 Ethernet0/3 2 10.20.0.12 0000.0c07.ac02
The following is sample output from the show standby redirect ip-address command, where the IP address is the real IP address of the router:
Router# show standby redirect 10.19.0.7
Active Hits Interface Group Virtual IP Virtual MAC
10.19.0.7 0 Ethernet0/2 3 10.19.0.13 0000.0c07.ac03
show vrrpTo display a brief or detailed status of one or all configured Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) groups on the router, use the show vrrp command in privileged EXEC mode. Command History
ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show vrrp command:
Router# show vrrp
Ethernet1/0 - Group 1
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.2.0.10
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0101
Advertisement interval is 3.000 sec
Preemption is enabled
min delay is 0.000 sec
Priority 100
Track object 1 state down decrement 15
Master Router is 10.2.0.1 (local), priority is 100
Master Advertisement interval is 3.000 sec
Master Down interval is 9.609 sec
Ethernet1/0 - Group 2
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.0.0.20
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0102
Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Preemption is enabled
min delay is 0.000 sec
Priority 95
Master Router is 10.0.0.1 (local), priority is 95
Master Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Master Down interval is 3.628 sec
The following sample output shows the MD5 authentication for a VRRP group using a key string:
Router# show vrrp
Ethernet0/1 - Group 1
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.21.0.10
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0101
Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Preemption is enabled
min delay is 0.000 sec
Priority is 100
Authentication MD5, key-string
Master Router is 10.21.0.1 (local), priority is 100
Master Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Master Down interval is 3.609 sec
The following is sample output from the show vrrp command in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC or later releases, displaying peer RP state information:
Router# show vrrp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Master)
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.1
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0101
Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Preemption enabled
Priority is 255
Master Router is 172.24.1.1 (local), priority is 255
Master Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Master Down interval is 3.003 sec
The following sample output displays information about a configured VRRS group name:
Router# show vrrp
Gige0/0/0 - Group 1
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.0.0.7
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0101
Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Preemption enabled
Priority is 100
VRRS Group name CLUSTER1 ! Configured VRRS Group Name
Master Router is 10.0.0.1 (local), priority is 100
Master Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Master Down interval is 3.609 sec
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.
The following is sample output from the show vrrp command with the brief keyword:
Router# show vrrp brief
Interface Grp Prio Time Own Pre State Master addr Group addr
Ethernet1/0 1 100 3609 P Master 10.0.0.4 10.0.0.10
Ethernet1/0 2 105 3589 P Master 10.0.0.4 10.0.0.20
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
show vrrp interfaceTo display the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) groups and their status on a specified interface, use the show vrrp interface command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Command History
ExamplesThe following is sample output from the show vrrp interfacecommand:
Router# show vrrp interface ethernet 1/0
Ethernet1/0 - Group 1
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.2.0.10
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0101
Advertisement interval is 3.000 sec
Preemption enabled, delay min 4 secs
Priority is 100
Master Router is 10.2.0.1 (local), priority is 100
Master Advertisement interval is 3.000 sec
Master Down interval is 9.609 sec
Ethernet1/0 - Group 2
State is Master
Virtual IP address is 10.0.0.20
Virtual MAC address is 0000.5e00.0102
Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Preemption enabled, delay min 2 sec
Priority is 95
Authentication MD5, key-string
Master Router is 10.0.0.1 (local), priority is 95
Master Advertisement interval is 1.000 sec
Master Down interval is 3.628 sec
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
show vrrs clientsTo display a list of Virtual Router Redundancy Service (VRRS) clients, use the show vrrs clients command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Usage GuidelinesUse the show vrrs clients command to display a list of VRRS clients currently active on the router. The display contains the client IDs, client priority, whether the client is interested in all VRRS groups, and the client name. The client ID is a dynamic integer value assigned to the client when it registers with VRRS. If the client ID for a particular client is different between two versions of a Cisco IOS XE image, it means there is a change in initialization order in the two images. The client priority is a priority that the client chooses during registration with VRRS. The client priority dictates the order in which clients receive server notifications. ExamplesThe following example displays a list VRRS clients:
Router# show vrrs clients
ID Priority All-groups Name
------------------------------
1 High No VRRS-Plugins
2 Low Yes VRRS-Accounting
3 Normal No PPPOE-VRRS-CLIENT
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display. Related Commands
show vrrs groupTo display information about Virtual Router Redundancy Service (VRRS) groups, use the show vrrs group command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Usage GuidelinesUse the show vrrs group command to display details of a VRRS redundancy group, if a group name is specified. If no group name is specified, details of all VRRS groups configured or added by clients on the router are displayed. ExamplesThe following example displays information about all currently configured VRRS groups:
Router# show vrrs group
DT-CLUSTER-3
Server Not configured, state INIT, old state INIT, reason Protocol
Address family IPv4, Virtual address 0.0.0.0, Virtual mac 0000.0000.0000
Active interface address 0.0.0.0, standby interface address 0.0.0.0
Client 5 VRRS TEST CLIENT, priority Low
DT-CLUSTER-2
Server VRRP, state BACKUP, old state INIT, reason HA SSO
Address family IPv4, Virtual address 10.1.1.1, Virtual mac 0000.5e00.0102
Active interface address 10.1.1.3, standby interface address 10.1.1.2
Client 1 VRRS-Plugins, priority High
Client 2 VRRS-Accounting, priority Low
Client 3 PPPOE-VRRS-CLIENT, priority Normal
DT-CLUSTER-1
Server VRRP, state ACTIVE, old state INIT, reason HA SSO
Address family IPv4, Virtual address 10.1.1.1, Virtual mac 0000.5e00.0101
Active interface address 10.1.1.2, standby interface address 10.0.0.0
Client 1 VRRS-Plugins, priority High
Client 2 VRRS-Accounting, priority Low
Client 3 PPPOE-VRRS-CLIENT, priority Normal
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Related Commands
show vrrs plugin databaseTo display details about the internal Virtual Router Redundancy Service (VRRS) plug-in database, use the show vrrs plugin database command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode. Usage GuidelinesUse the show vrrs plugin database command to display details of the internal VRRS plug-in database. This command maps an interface-specific configuration with a VRRS redundancy group. The output display includes; name, server connection status, VRRS State (simple), MAC address, test control indicator, VRRS client handle, and the plug-in interface list. ExamplesThe following example displays information about the internal VRRS plug-in database:
Router# show vrrs plugin database
VRRS Plugin Database
------------------------------------------------
Name = VRRS_NAME_1
Server connection = Live
State = Disabled
MAC addr = 0000.5e00.0101
Test Control = False
Client Handle = 3741319170
Interface list =
gige0/0/0.2
gige0/0/0.3
------------------------------------------------
Name = VRRS_NAME_2
Server connection = Diconnected
State = Disabled
MAC addr = 0000.0000.0000
Test Control = False
Client Handle = 603979779
Interface list =
gige0/0/0.4
------------------------------------------------
show vrrs summaryTo display a summary of all Virtual Router Redundancy Service (VRRS) groups, use the show vrrs summary command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC configuration mode. Usage GuidelinesUse the show vrrs summary command to display a summary of VRRS groups either configured on a router or added by a client. The display includes the following group information: name, server, state, and virtual address. ExamplesThe following example displays a summary of VRRS groups:
Router# show vrrs summary
Group Server State Virtual-address ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ DT-CLUSTER-3 UNKNOW INIT 0.0.0.0
DT-CLUSTER-2 VRRP BACKUP 10.1.1.1
DT-CLUSTER-1 VRRP ACTIVE 10.1.1.2
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display. Related Commands
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