Cisco 7600 Series Router Cisco IOS Command Reference, 12.1E
show ip cef to show mls asic

Table Of Contents

show ip cef epoch

show ip cef inconsistency

show ip cef summary

show ip cef vlan

show ip igmp interface

show ip igmp snooping mrouter

show ip mroute

show ip rpf events

show ip wccp

show ipc

show l2protocol-tunnel

show l3-mgr

show lacp

show mac-address-table

show mls asic


2

show ip cef epoch

To display the epoch information for the adjacency table and all FIB tables, use the show ip cef epoch command.

show ip cef epoch

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)EX

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Usage Guidelines

These show commands also display the epoch information for the following:

show ip cef summary—Displays the table epoch for a specific FIB table.

show ip cef detail—Displays the epoch value for each entry of a specific FIB table.

show adjacency summary—Displays the adjacency table epoch.

show adjacency detail—Displays the epoch value for each entry of the adjacency table.

Examples

This example shows how to display epoch information:

Router# show ip cef epoch
CEF epoch information:

Table:Default-table
  Table epoch:2 (164 entries at this epoch)

Adjacency table
  Table epoch:1 (33 entries at this epoch)

This example shows the output after you clear the epoch table and increment the epoch number:

Router# show ip cef epoch
CEF epoch information:

Table:Default-table
  Table epoch:2 (164 entries at this epoch)

Adjacency table
  Table epoch:1 (33 entries at this epoch)
Router# clear ip cef epoch full
Router# show ip cef epoch
CEF epoch information:

Table:Default-table
  Table epoch:3 (164 entries at this epoch)

Adjacency table
  Table epoch:2 (33 entries at this epoch)
Router# 

Related Commands

clear ip cef epoch full

show ip cef inconsistency

To display the CEF IP prefix inconsistencies, use the show ip cef inconsistency command.

show ip cef [vrf vrf-name] inconsistency [records [detail]]

Syntax Description

vrf vrf-name

(Optional) Specifies a VRF instance.

records

(Optional) Displays all recorded inconsistencies.

detail

(Optional) Displays the detailed information for each CEF table entry.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)EX

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Usage Guidelines

This command displays recorded CEF inconsistency records found by the lc-detect, scan-rp, scan-rib, and scan-lc detection mechanisms.

You can configure the CEF consistency detection mechanisms using the ip cef table consistency-check command.

Examples

This example shows how to display recorded CEF inconsistency records:

Router# show ip cef inconsistency
Table consistency checkers (settle time 65s)
 lc-detect:running
  0/0/0 queries sent/ignored/received
 scan-lc:running [100 prefixes checked every 60s]
  0/0/0 queries sent/ignored/received
 scan-rp:running [100 prefixes checked every 60s]
  0/0/0 queries sent/ignored/received
 scan-rib:running [1000 prefixes checked every 60s]
  0/0/0 queries sent/ignored/received
Inconsistencies:0 confirmed, 0/16 recorded

Table 2-33 describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 2-33 show ip cef inconsistency Field Descriptions

Field
Description

settle time

Time after a recorded inconsistency is confirmed.

lc-detect running

Consistency checker lc-detect is running.

0/0/0 queries

Number of queries sent, ignored, and received.

Inconsistencies:

Number of inconsistencies confirmed and recorded. The maximum number of inconsistency records to be recorded is 16.


Related Commands

clear ip cef inconsistency

show ip cef summary

To display a summary of the IP CEF table information, use the show ip cef summary command.

show ip cef summary

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords and arguments.

Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)EX

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Examples

This example shows how to display a summary of the IP CEF table information:

Router# show ip cef summary
IP Distributed CEF with switching (Table Version 25), flags=0x0
  21 routes, 0 reresolve, 0 unresolved (0 old, 0 new), peak 1
  21 leaves, 16 nodes, 19496 bytes, 36 inserts, 15 invalidations
  0 load sharing elements, 0 bytes, 0 references
  universal per-destination load sharing algorithm, id 5163EC15
  3(0) CEF resets, 0 revisions of existing leaves
  Resolution Timer: Exponential (currently 1s, peak 1s)
  0 in-place/0 aborted modifications
  refcounts:  4377 leaf, 4352 node

  Table epoch: 0 (21 entries at this epoch)

Adjacency Table has 9 adjacencies
Router#

show ip cef vlan

To display information about the IP CEF VLAN interface status, the configuration, and the prefixes for a specific interface, use the show ip cef vlan command.

show ip cef vlan vlan-id [detail]

Syntax Description

vlan-id

VLAN number; valid values are from 1 to 4094.

detail

(Optional) Displays the detailed information.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Usage Guidelines

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

Examples

This example shows how to display the prefixes for a specific VLAN:

Router> show ip cef vlan 1003
Prefix              Next Hop             Interface
0.0.0.0/0           172.20.52.1          FastEthernet3/3
0.0.0.0/32          receive
10.7.0.0/16         172.20.52.1          FastEthernet3/3
10.16.18.0/23       172.20.52.1          FastEthernet3/3
Router> 

This example shows how to display detailed IP CEF information for a specific VLAN:

Router> show ip cef vlan 1003 detail
IP Distributed CEF with switching (Table Version 2364), flags=0x0
  1383 routes, 0 reresolve, 0 unresolved (0 old, 0 new)
  1383 leaves, 201 nodes, 380532 bytes, 2372 inserts, 989 invalidations
  0 load sharing elements, 0 bytes, 0 references
  universal per-destination load sharing algorithm, id 9B6C9823
  3 CEF resets, 0 revisions of existing leaves
  refcounts:  54276 leaf, 51712 node

Adjacency Table has 5 adjacencies
Router>

show ip igmp interface

To display information about the IP IGMP interface status and configuration, use the show ip igmp interface command.

show ip igmp interface [{interface [interface-number]} | {null interface-number} | {vlan vlan-id}]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Interface type; possible valid values are ethernet, fastethernet, gigabitethernet, tengigabitethernet, pos, atm, and ge-wan.

interface-number

(Optional) Module and port number; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

null interface-number

Specifies the null interface; the valid value is 0.

vlan vlan-id

Specifies the VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 4094.


Defaults

If you do not specify a VLAN, information for VLAN 1 is shown.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(11b)E

This command was changed to include the ge-wan, atm, and pos keywords.

12.1(11b)EX

The command was changed to support extended-range VLANs.


Usage Guidelines

The interface-number argument designates the module and port number. Valid values for interface-number depend on the specified interface type and the chassis and module used. For example, if you specify a Gigabit Ethernet interface and have a 48-port 10/100BASE-T Ethernet module installed in a 13-slot chassis, valid values for the module number are from 2 to 13 and valid values for the port number are from 1 to 48.

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

If you omit the optional arguments, the show ip igmp interface command displays information about all interfaces.

Examples

This example shows how to display IGMP information for VLAN 1:

Router# show ip igmp interface vlan 5
Vlan5 is up, line protocol is up
Internet address is 100.45.3.1/24
IGMP is enabled on interface
Multicast routing is disabled on interface
Multicast TTL threshold is 0
No multicast groups joined
IGMP snooping is globally enabled
IGMP snooping is enabled on this interface 
IGMP snooping fast-leave is disabled on this interface 
IGMP snooping querier is disabled on this interface
Router# 

Related Commands

clear ip igmp group
show ip igmp snooping mrouter

show ip igmp snooping mrouter

To display information on dynamically learned and manually configured multicast router interfaces, use the show ip igmp snooping mrouter command.

show ip igmp snooping mrouter [{vlan vlan-id}]

Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specifies a VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 4094.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(11b)EX

The command was changed to support extended-range VLANs.


Usage Guidelines

You can also use the show mac-address-table command to display entries in the MAC address table for a VLAN that has IGMP snooping enabled.

You can display IGMP snooping information for VLAN interfaces by entering the show ip igmp interface vlan vlan-num command.

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

Examples

This example shows how to display snooping information for a specific VLAN:

Router# show ip igmp snooping mrouter interface 1
vlan            ports
-----+----------------------------------------
  1          Gi1/1,Gi2/1,Fa3/48,Router
Router#

Related Commands

ip igmp snooping mrouter
show ip igmp interface
show mac-address-table

show ip mroute

To display information about the IP multicast routing table, use the show ip mroute command.

show ip mroute [{interface interface-number} | {null interface-number} | {port-channel number} | {vlan vlan-id} | {{host-name | host-address} [source]} | {active [kbps | {interface-type num}]} | {count | pruned | static | summary}]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Interface type; possible valid values are ethernet, fastethernet, gigabitethernet, tengigabitethernet, pos, atm, and ge-wan.

interface-number

(Optional) Module and port number; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

null interface-number

Specifies the null interface; the valid value is 0.

port-channel number

Specifies the channel interface; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

vlan vlan-id

Specifies the VLAN; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

host-name | host-address

(Optional) Name or IP address as defined in the DNS hosts table.

source

(Optional) IP address or name of a multicast source.

active

(Optional) Displays the rate that active sources are sending to multicast groups.

kbps

(Optional) Minimum rate at which active sources are sending to multicast groups; active sources sending at this rate or greater will be displayed. Valid values are from 1 to 4294967295 kbps.

count

(Optional) Displays the route and packet count information.

pruned

(Optional) Displays the pruned routes.

static

(Optional) Displays the static multicast routes.

summary

(Optional) Displays a one-line, abbreviated summary of each entry in the IP multicast routing table.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(11b)E

This command was changed to include the ge-wan, atm, and pos keywords.

12.1(11b)EX

The command was changed to support extended-range VLANs.

12.1(13)E

Support for this command on the Cisco 7600 series routers was extended to the 12.1 E release. Valid values for port-channel number was increased to 282.


Usage Guidelines

The number of valid values for port-channel number depends on the software release. For releases prior to Release 12.1(3a)E3, valid values are from 1 to 256; for Releases 12.1(3a)E3, 12.1(3a)E4, and 12.1(4)E1, valid values are from 1 to 64. Release 12.1(5c)EX and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 256. Release 12.1(13)E and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 282; values 257 to 282 are supported on the CSM and FWSM.

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

If you omit all optional arguments and keywords, the show ip mroute command displays all entries in the IP multicast routing table.

The show ip mroute active kbps command displays all sources sending at a rate greater than or equal to kbps.

The interface-number argument designates the module and port number. Valid values for interface-number depend on the specified interface type and the chassis and module used. For example, if you specify a Gigabit Ethernet interface and have a 48-port 10/100BASE-T Ethernet module installed in a 13-slot chassis, valid values for the module number are from 2 to 13 and valid values for the port number are from 1 to 48.

The multicast routing table is populated by creating source, group (S,G) entries from star, group (*,G) entries. The star refers to all source addresses, the "S" refers to a single source address, and the "G" is the destination multicast group address. In creating (S,G) entries, the software uses the best path to that destination group found in the unicast routing table (that is, through RPF).

Examples

This example shows how to display all entries in the IP multicast routing table:

Router# show ip mroute

IP Multicast Routing Table
Flags:D - Dense, S - Sparse, s - SSM Group, C - Connected, L - Local,
       P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag, T - SPT-bit set,
       J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry, X - Proxy Join Timer Running
       A - Advertised via MSDP, U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host
           Report 
Outgoing interface flags:H - Hardware switched
Timers:Uptime/Expires
Interface state:Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode
(*, 230.13.13.1), 00:16:41/00:00:00, RP 10.15.1.20, flags:SJC
  Incoming interface:GigabitEthernet4/8, RPF nbr 10.15.1.20
  Outgoing interface list:
 GigabitEthernet4/9, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:16:41/00:00:00, H
(*, 230.13.13.2), 00:16:41/00:00:00, RP 10.15.1.20, flags:SJC
 Incoming interface:GigabitEthernet4/8, RPF nbr 10.15.1.20, RPF-MFD
  Outgoing interface list:
    GigabitEthernet4/9, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:16:41/00:00:00, H
(10.20.1.15, 230.13.13.1), 00:14:31/00:01:40, flags:CJT
 Incoming interface:GigabitEthernet4/8, RPF nbr 10.15.1.20, RPF-MFD
  Outgoing interface list:
    GigabitEthernet4/9, Forward/Sparse-Dense, 00:14:31/00:00:00, H
(132.206.72.28, 224.2.136.89), 00:14:31/00:01:40, flags:CJT
  Incoming interface:GigabitEthernet4/8, RPF nbr 10.15.1.20, RPF-MFD
 Outgoing interface list:Null
Router#

This example shows how to display the rate that active sources are sending to multicast groups and to display only active sources sending at greater than the default rate:

Router# show ip mroute active

Active IP Multicast Sources - sending >= 4 kbps

Group: 224.2.127.254, (sdr.cisco.com)
   Source: 146.137.28.69 (mbone.ipd.anl.gov)
     Rate: 1 pps/4 kbps(1sec), 4 kbps(last 1 secs), 4 kbps(life avg)

Group: 224.2.201.241, ACM 97
   Source: 130.129.52.160 (webcast3-e1.acm97.interop.net)
     Rate: 9 pps/93 kbps(1sec), 145 kbps(last 20 secs), 85 kbps(life avg)

Group: 224.2.207.215, ACM 97
   Source: 130.129.52.160 (webcast3-e1.acm97.interop.net)
     Rate: 3 pps/31 kbps(1sec), 63 kbps(last 19 secs), 65 kbps(life avg)
Router#

This example shows how to display information about the route and packet count:

Router# show ip mroute count
IP Multicast Statistics
56 routes using 28552 bytes of memory
13 groups, 3.30 average sources per group
Forwarding Counts:Pkt Count/Pkts per second/Avg Pkt Size/Kilobits per second
Other counts:Total/RPF failed/Other drops(OIF-null, rate-limit etc)
Group:224.2.136.89, Source count:1, Group pkt count:29051
  Source:132.206.72.28/32, Forwarding:29051/-278/1186/0, Other:85724/8/56665
Router#

This example shows how to display summary information:

Router# show ip mroute summary
IP Multicast Routing Table
Flags: D - Dense, S - Sparse, s - SSM Group, C - Connected, L - Local,
       P - Pruned, R - RP-bit set, F - Register flag, T - SPT-bit set,
       J - Join SPT, M - MSDP created entry, X - Proxy Join Timer Running
       A - Advertised via MSDP, U - URD, I - Received Source Specific Host
           Report
Outgoing interface flags: H - Hardware switched
Timers: Uptime/Expires
Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode
Router#

Table 2-34 explains the fields shown in the displays.

Table 2-34 show ip mroute Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Flags:

Information about the entry.

D - Dense

Entry is operating in dense mode.

S - Sparse

Entry is operating in sparse mode.

s - SSM Group

Entry is a member of an SSM group.

C - Connected

Member of the multicast group is present on the directly connected interface.

L - Local

Router itself is a member of the multicast group.

P - Pruned

Route has been pruned. This information is retained in case a downstream member wants to join the source.

R - Rp-bit set

Status of whether the (S,G) entry is pointing toward the RP. This is typically a prune state along the shared tree for a particular source.

F - Register flag

Status of whether the software is registering for a multicast source.

T - SPT-bit set

Status of whether the packets have been received on the shortest path source tree.

J - Join SPT

For (*, G) entries, indicates that the rate of traffic flowing down the shared tree is exceeding the SPT-Threshold set for the group. (The default SPT-Threshold setting is 0 kbps.) When the J - Join SPT flag is set, the next (S,G) packet received down the shared tree triggers an (S,G) join in the direction of the source causing the router to join the source tree.

For (S,G) entries, indicates that the entry was created because the SPT-Threshold for the group was exceeded. When the J - Join SPT flag is set for (S,G) entries, the router monitors the traffic rate on the source tree and attempts to switch back to the shared tree for this source if the traffic rate on the source tree falls below the group's SPT-Threshold for more than one minute.

The router measures the traffic rate on the shared tree and compares the measured rate to the group's SPT-Threshold once every second. If the traffic rate exceeds the SPT-Threshold, the J - Join SPT flag is set on the (*, G) entry until the next measurement of the traffic rate. The flag is cleared when the next packet arrives on the shared tree and a new measurement interval is started.

If the default SPT-Threshold value of 0 Kbps is used for the group, the J - Join SPT flag is always set on (*, G) entries and is never cleared. When the default SPT-Threshold value is used, the router immediately switches to the shortest-path tree when traffic from a new source is received.

Outgoing interface flags:

Information about the outgoing entry.

H - Hardware switched

Entry is hardware switched.

Timers:

Uptime/Expires.

Interface state:

Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode.

(*, 224.0.255.1)
(198.92.37.100/32, 224.0.255.1)

Entry in the IP multicast routing table. The entry consists of the IP address of the source router followed by the IP address of the multicast group. An asterisk (*) in place of the source router indicates all sources.

Entries in the first format are referred to as (*,G) or "star comma G" entries. Entries in the second format are referred to as (S,G) or "S comma G" entries. (*,G) entries are used to build (S,G) entries.

uptime

How long in hours, minutes, and seconds that the entry has been in the IP multicast routing table.

expires

How long in hours, minutes, and seconds until the entry is removed from the IP multicast routing table on the outgoing interface.

RP

Address of the RP router. For routers and access servers operating in sparse mode, this address is always 0.0.0.0.

flags:

Information about the entry.

Incoming interface:

Expected interface for a multicast packet from the source. If the packet is not received on this interface, it is discarded.

RPF neighbor

IP address of the upstream router to the source. "Tunneling" indicates that this router is sending data to the RP encapsulated in Register packets. The hexadecimal number in parentheses indicates to which RP it is registering. Each bit indicates a different RP if multiple RPs per group are used.

Dvmrp or Mroute

Status of whether the RPF information is obtained from the DVMRP routing table or the static mroutes configuration.

Outgoing interface list:

Interfaces through which packets are forwarded. When the ip pim nbma-mode command is enabled on the interface, the IP address of the PIM neighbor is also displayed.

Ethernet0

Name and number of the outgoing interface.

Next hop or VCD

Next hop specifies the downstream neighbor's IP address. VCD specifies the virtual circuit descriptor number. VCD0 means that the group is using the static-map virtual circuit.

Forward/Dense

Status of whether the packets are forwarded on the interface if there are no restrictions due to access lists or the TTL threshold. Following the slash (/), mode in which the interface is operating (dense or sparse).

Forward/Sparse

Sparse mode interface is in forward mode.

time/time
(uptime/expiration time)

Per interface, how long in hours, minutes, and seconds the entry has been in the IP multicast routing table. Following the slash (/), how long in hours, minutes, and seconds until the entry is removed from the IP multicast routing table.


Related Commands

ip multicast-routing (see Cisco IOS documentation)
ip pim (see Cisco IOS documentation)

show ip rpf events

To display the triggered RPF statistics, use the show ip rpf events command.

show ip rpf events

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11b)E

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Examples

This example shows how to display the triggered RPF statistics:

Router#  show ip rpf events 
Last 15 triggered multicast RPF check events
RPF backoff delay: 500 msec 
RPF maximum delay: 5 sec
DATE/TIME BACKOFF PROTOCOL EVENT RPF CHANGES 
Jan 1 00:00:55.643 500 msec EIGRP Route UP 0 
Jan 1 00:00:07.283 1000 sec Connected Route UP 0 
Jan 1 00:00:06.283 500 msec Connected Route UP 0
Router# 

Related Commands

ip multicast rpf backoff
ip multicast rpf interval

show ip wccp

To display WCCP statistics use the show ip wccp command.

show ip wccp [{service-number | web-cache} [detail | view]]

Syntax Description

service-number

(Optional) Identification number of the cache engine service group being controlled by a router; valid values are from 0 to 99.

web-cache

(Optional) Directs the router to display statistics for the web-cache service.

detail

(Optional) Displays information for the router and all cache engines in the currently configured cluster.

view

(Optional) Displays which other members of a particular service group have or have not been detected.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Usage Guidelines

Use the show ip wccp service-number command to provide the "Total Packets Redirected" count. The "Total Packets Redirected" count is the number of flows, or sessions, that are redirected.

Use the show ip wccp service-number detail command to provide the "Packets Redirected" count. The "Packets Redirected" count is the number of flows, or sessions, that are redirected.

Use the show ip wccp web-cache detail command to provide an indication of how many flows, rather than packets, are using Layer 2 redirection.

For cache-engine clusters using Cisco cache engines, the reverse proxy service-number is indicated by a value of 99.

Use the clear ip wccp command to reset the counter for the "Packets Redirected" information.

For additional information on the IP WCCP commands, refer to the "Configuring Web Cache Services Using WCCP" section in the Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

Examples

This example shows how to display the connected cache engine using Layer 2 redirection:

Router# show ip wccp web-cache detail
WCCP Cache-Engine information:
        IP Address:           10.11.1.1
        Protocol Version:     2.0
        State:                Usable
        Redirection:          L2
        Initial Hash Info:    FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
                               FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
        Assigned Hash Info:   FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
                               FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
        Hash Allotment:       256 (100.00%)
        Packets Redirected:   10273
        Connect Time:         17:05:44

Table 2-35 describes the fields that are shown in the example.

Table 2-35 show ip wccp web-cache detail Command Output Fields 

Field
Description

WCCP Cache-Engine information

Header for the area that contains fields for the IP address and version of WCCP that is associated with the router that is connected to the cache engine in the service group.

IP Address

IP address of the router that is connected to the cache engine in the service group.

Protocol Version

Version of WCCP that is used by the router in the service group.

WCCP Cache-Engine information

Fields for information on cache engines.

IP Address

IP address of the cache engine in the service group.

Protocol Version

Version of WCCP that is used by the cache engine in the service group.

State

Status of whether the cache engine is operating properly and can be contacted by a router and other cache engines in the service group.

Initial Hash Info

Initial state of the hash-bucket assignment.

Assigned Hash Info

Current state of the hash-bucket assignment.

Hash Allotment

Percentage of buckets that is assigned to the current cache engine. Both a value and a percent figure are displayed.

Packets Redirected

Number of flows that have been redirected to the cache engine.

Connect Time

Amount of time that it takes for the cache engine to connect to the router.


Related Commands

clear ip wccp (refer to the Cisco IOS Release 12.1 Command Reference)
ip wccp (refer to the Cisco IOS Release 12.1 Command Reference)
ip wccp redirect exclude in
ip wccp web-cache accelerated
show ip interface
(refer to the Cisco IOS Release 12.1 Command Reference)

show ipc

To display IPC information, use the show ipc command.

show ipc {nodes | ports [open] | queue | status}

Syntax Description

nodes

Displays the participating nodes.

ports

Displays the local IPC ports.

open

(Optional) Displays the open ports only.

queue

Displays the contents of the IPC retransmission queue.

status

Displays the status of the local IPC server.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Examples

This example shows how to display participating nodes:

Router# show ipc nodes
There are 66 nodes in this IPC realm.
   ID     Type                 Name                       Last  Last
                                                          Sent  Heard
 2210000 Local      Card33                                0     0
 2000000 ICC        Card0                                 0     0
 2010000 ICC        Card1                                 0     0
 2020000 ICC        Card2                                 0     0
 2040000 ICC        Card4                                 0     0

<... output truncated ...>

 23E0000 ICC        Card62                                0     0
 23F0000 ICC        Card63                                0     0
   10000 ICC        IPC Master                            270   17070
Router#  

This example shows how to display local IPC ports:

Router# show ipc ports
There are 6 ports defined.

Port ID        Type       Name
 2210000.1     unicast    Card33:Zone
 2210000.2     unicast    Card33:Echo
 2210000.3     unicast    Card33:Control
 2210000.4     unicast    Remote TTY Server Port
   10000.3     unicast    IPC Master:Control
 2210000.5     unknown    Card33:Request
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 1158
     port_index = 1  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
Router# 

This example shows how to display open IPC ports:

Router# show ipc ports open
There are 4 ports defined.

Port ID        Type       Name
   10000.7     unicast    Unknown
     port_index = 0  last sent = 2     last heard = 0

   10000.8     unicast    Unknown
     port_index = 0  last sent = 0     last heard = 0

   10000.9     unicast    Unknown
     port_index = 0  last sent = 17753 last heard = 0
     port_index = 1  last sent = 0     last heard = 0
Router# 

This example shows how to display the contents of the IPC retransmission queue:

Router# show ipc queue
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for acknowledgement in the transmit queue.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for a response.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for additional fragments.
There are 2 messages currently in use by the system.
Router# 

This example shows how to display the status of the local IPC server:

Router# show ipc status
IPC System Status:

This processor is a slave server.

1000 IPC message headers in cache
377053 messages in, 293133 out, 210699 delivered to local port,
83655 acknowledgements received, 83870 sent,
0 NACKS received, 0 sent,
0 messages dropped on input, 0 messages dropped on output
0 no local port, 0 destination unknown, 0 no transport
0 missing callback or queue, 0 duplicate ACKs, 0 retries,
0 message timeouts.
0 ipc_output failures, 0 mtu failures,
0 msg alloc failed, 0 emer msg alloc failed, 0 no origs for RPC replies
0 pak alloc failed, 0 memd alloc failed
0 no hwq, 0 failed opens, 0 hardware errors
No regular dropping of IPC output packets for test purposes
Router#                 

show l2protocol-tunnel

To display the protocols that are tunneled on an interface or on all interfaces, use the show l2protocol-tunnel command.

show l2protocol-tunnel [{interface interface mod/port} | {vlan vlan-id} | summary]

Syntax Description

interface interface

(Optional) Specifies the interface type to display; possible valid values are ethernet, fastethernet, gigabitethernet, tengigabitethernet, pos, atm, and ge-wan.

mod/port

Module and port number.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specifies the VLAN to display; valid values are from 1 to 4094.

summary

(Optional) Displays a summary of a tunneled port.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11b)EX

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(13)E

Support for this command on the Cisco 7600 series routers was extended to the 12.1 E release. The output for this command was changed and the vlan vlan-id option was added.


Usage Guidelines

802.1Q tunneling is not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

802.1Q tunneling is supported on systems configured with the following modules, but is not supported on the modules themselves:

WS-X6548-GE-TX

WS-X6548V-GE-TX

WS-X6548-GE-TX

WS-X6148-GE-TX

WS-X6148V-GE-TX

The show l2protocol-tunnel command displays only ports that have protocol tunneling enabled.

The show l2protocol-tunnel summary command displays ports that have protocol tunneling enabled, regardless of whether the port is down or currently configured as a trunk.

Examples

This example shows how to display the protocols tunneled on all interfaces:

Router# show l2protocol-tunnel 
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Port    Protocol Shutdown    Drop    Encapsulation Decapsulation     Drop 
                 Threshold Threshold    Counter       Counter       Counter 
------- -------- --------- --------- ------------- ------------- ------------- 
Fa3/38  cdp      ----      3000      5             0             0 
        stp      ----      3000      2653          0             0 
                 ---       ----      ----          ----          ----
Router# 

This example shows how to display a summary of protocol tunnel ports:

Router# show l2protocol-tunnel summary 
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Port    Protocol      Shutdown          Drop         Status 
                      Threshold       Threshold 
                    (cdp/stp/vtp)   (cdp/stp/vtp) 
------- ----------- --------------- --------------- ---------- 
Fa3/38  cdp stp --- ----/----/----  3000/3000/3000
Router> 

Related Commands

l2protocol-tunnel
l2protocol-tunnel drop-threshold
l2protocol-tunnel shutdown-threshold

show l3-mgr

To display Layer 3 manager information, use the show l3-mgr command.

show l3-mgr status

show l3-mgr {interface {{interface interface-number} | {null interface-number} | {port-channel number} | {vlan vlan-id} | status}}

Syntax Description

status

Displays the global information.

interface

Displays the interface detailed Layer 3 manager information.

interface

Interface type; possible valid values are ethernet, fastethernet, gigabitethernet, tengigabitethernet, pos, atm, and ge-wan.

interface-number

Module and port number; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

null interface-number

Specifies the null interface; the valid value is 0.

port-channel number

Specifies the channel interface; valid values are a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 282.

vlan vlan-id

Specifies the VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 4094.

status

Specifies the Layer 3 manager status information.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(11b)E

This command was changed to include the ge-wan, atm, and pos keywords.

12.1(11b)EX

The command was changed to support extended-range VLANs.


Usage Guidelines

The interface-number argument designates the module and port number. Valid values for interface-number depend on the specified interface type and the chassis and module used. For example, if you specify a Gigabit Ethernet interface and have a 48-port 10/100BASE-T Ethernet module installed in a 13-slot chassis, valid values for the module number are from 2 to 13 and valid values for the port number are from 1 to 48.

The number of valid values for port-channel number depends on the software release. For releases prior to Release 12.1(3a)E3, valid values are from 1 to 256; for Releases 12.1(3a)E3, 12.1(3a)E4, and 12.1(4)E1, valid values are from 1 to 64. Release 12.1(5c)EX and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 256. Release 12.1(13)E and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 282; values 257 to 282 are supported on the CSM and FWSM.

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

Examples

This example shows how to display Layer 3 manager status information:

Router# show l3-mgr status
l3_mgr_state:         2
l3_mgr_req_q.count:   0
l3_mgr_req_q.head:    0
l3_mgr_req_q.tail:    0
l3_mgr_max_queue_count:  1060
l3_mgr_shrunk_count:  0
l3_mgr_req_q.ip_inv_count:    303
l3_mgr_req_q.ipx_inv_count:   0
l3_mgr_outpak_count:  18871
l3_mgr_inpak_count:   18871

l3_mgr_max_pending_pak: 4
l3_mgr_pending_pak_count: 0

nde enable statue:    0
current nde addr:     0.0.0.0

Router#   
                                  

This example shows how to display Layer 3 manager information for a specific interface:

Router# show l3-mgr interface fastethernet 5/40
vlan:                0
ip_enabled:        1
ipx_enabled:       1
bg_state:          0 0 0 0
hsrp_enabled:      0
hsrp_mac:          0000.0000.0000
state:             0
up:                0
Router# 

show lacp

To display LACP information, use the show lacp command.

show lacp [channel-group] {counters | internal [detail] | neighbors [detail] | sys-id}

Syntax Description

channel-group

(Optional) Number of the channel group; valid values are from 1 to 282.

counters

Displays the LACP statistical information.

internal

Displays LACP internal information.

detail

(Optional) Displays detailed information.

neighbors

Displays the neighbor information.

sys-id

Displays the LACP system identification.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11b)EX

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(13)E

Support for this command on the Cisco 7600 series routers was extended to the 12.1 E release.

12.1(19)E

This command was changed to include the following information:

The show lacp neighbor command output includes a summary of the LACP state.

The show lacp neighbors detail command output includes a bit-by-bit decode of the LACP Port State Flags.

The show lacp internal detail command output includes LACP internal information for the local (Actor) system and a decode of the LACP Port State Flags.


Usage Guidelines

This command is not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

If you do not specify a channel-group, all channel groups are displayed.

You can enter the optional channel-group to specify a channel group for all keywords, except the sys-id keyword.

The number of valid values for port-channel number depends on the software release. For releases prior to Release 12.1(3a)E3, valid values are from 1 to 256; for Releases 12.1(3a)E3, 12.1(3a)E4, and 12.1(4)E1, valid values are from 1 to 64. Release 12.1(5c)EX and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 256. Release 12.1(13)E and later support a maximum of 64 values ranging from 1 to 282; values 257 to 282 are supported on the CSM and FWSM.

The show lacp counters command output displays the following information:

The LACPDUs Sent and Recv columns display the LACPDUs sent and received on each specific interface.

The LACPDUs Pkts and Err columns display the marker protocol packets.

Examples

This example shows how to display LACP statistical information for a specific channel group:

Router# show lacp 1 counters
              LACPDUs         Marker       LACPDUs
Port       Sent   Recv     Sent   Recv     Pkts Err
---------------------------------------------------
Channel group: 1
  Fa4/1    8      15       0      0         3    0
  Fa4/2    14     18       0      0         3    0
  Fa4/3    14     18       0      0         0
  Fa4/4    13     18       0      0         0

This example shows how to display internal information for the interfaces belonging to a specific channel:

Router# show lacp 1 internal
Flags:  S - Device sends PDUs at slow rate. F - Device sends PDUs at fast rate.
        A - Device is in Active mode.       P - Device is in Passive mode. 

Channel group 1
                            LACPDUs     LACP Port    Admin   Oper    Port     Port
Port      Flags    State    Interval    Priority     Key     Key     Number   State
Fa4/1     saC      bndl     30s         32768        100     100     0xc1     0x75
Fa4/2     saC      bndl     30s         32768        100     100     0xc2     0x75
Fa4/3     saC      bndl     30s         32768        100     100     0xc3     0x75
Fa4/4     saC      bndl     30s         32768        100     100     0xc4     0x75
Router# 

Table 2-36 lists the output field definitions.

Table 2-36 show lacp internal Command Output Fields 

Field
Description

State

State of the specific port at the current moment is displayed; allowed values are as follows:

bndl—Port is attached to an aggregator and bundled with other ports.

susp—Port is in a suspended state; it is not attached to any aggregator.

indep—Port is in an independent state (not bundled but able to switch data traffic. In this case, LACP is not running on the partner port).

hot-sby—Port is in a Hot-standby state.

down—Port is down.

LACPDUs Interval

Interval setting.

LACP Port Priority

Port priority setting.

Admin Key

Administrative key.

Oper Key

Operator key.

Port Number

Port number.

Port State

State variables for the port encoded as individual bits within a single octet with the following meaning [1]:

bit0: LACP_Activity

bit1: LACP_Timeout

bit2: Aggregation

bit3: Synchronization

bit4: Collecting

bit5: Distributing

bit6: Defaulted

bit7: Expired


This example shows how to display LACP neighbors information for a specific port channel:

Router# show lacp 1 neighbor
Flags:  S - Device sends PDUs at slow rate. F - Device sends PDUs at fast rate.
        A - Device is in Active mode.       P - Device is in Passive mode.

Channel group 1 neighbors
          Partner                 Partner 
Port      System ID               Port Number     Age     Flags
Fa4/1     8000,00b0.c23e.d84e     0x81            29s     P
Fa4/2     8000,00b0.c23e.d84e     0x82            0s      P
Fa4/3     8000,00b0.c23e.d84e     0x83            0s      P 
Fa4/4     8000,00b0.c23e.d84e     0x84            0s      P

          Port          Admin     Oper      Port
          Priority      Key       Key       State
Fa4/1     32768         200       200       0x81
Fa4/2     32768         200       200       0x81
Fa4/3     32768         200       200       0x81
Fa4/4     32768         200       200       0x81
Router# 

In the case where no PDUs have been received, the default administrative information is displayed in braces.

This example shows how to display the LACP system identification:

Router> show lacp sys-id
8000,AC-12-34-56-78-90

The system identification is made up of the system priority and the system MAC address. The first two bytes are the system priority, and the last six bytes are the globally administered individual MAC address associated to the system.

Related Commands

clear lacp counters
lacp port-priority
lacp system-priority

show mac-address-table

To display information about the MAC address table, use the show mac-address-table command.

show mac-address-table

show mac-address-table {address mac-addr} [all | {interface interface interface-number} | {module num} | {vlan vlan-id}]

show mac-address-table aging-time [vlan vlan-id]

show mac-address-table count [vlan vlan-id]

show mac-address-table dynamic [{address mac-addr} | {interface interface interface-number} | {module num} | {vlan vlan-id}]

show mac-address-table {interface interface interface-number}

show mac-address-table {module num}

show mac-address-table multicast [count | {igmp-snooping [count]} | {user [count]} | {vlan vlan-id}]

show mac-address-table static [{address mac-addr} | detail | {interface interface interface-number} | {vlan vlan-id} | {module num}]

show mac-address-table vlan vlan-id [module num]

Syntax Description

address mac-addr

Displays information about the MAC address table for a specific MAC address; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for format guidelines.

all

(Optional) Displays every instance of the specified MAC address in the forwarding table.

interface interface

(Optional) Displays information about a specific interface type; possible valid values are ethernet, fastethernet, gigabitethernet, tengigabitethernet, pos, atm, and ge-wan.

interface-number

(Optional) Module and port number; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for valid values.

module num

(Optional) Displays information about the MAC address table for a specific DFC module.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Displays information for a specific VLAN only; valid values are from 1 to 4094.

aging-time

Displays information about the MAC address aging time.

count

Displays the number of entries currently in the MAC address table.

dynamic

Displays information about the dynamic MAC address table entries only.

multicast

Displays information about the multicast MAC address table entries only.

igmp-snooping

Displays addresses learned by IGMP snooping.

user

Displays manually-entered (static) addresses.

static

Displays information about the static MAC address table entries only.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.

12.1(11b)E

This command was changed to include the ge-wan, atm, and pos keywords.

12.1(11b)EX

The command was changed to support extended-range VLANs.

12.1(13)E

The output was changed to include the Learn field.

12.1(19)E

The command was changed to unicast flood protection information.


Usage Guidelines

The mac-addr is a 48-bit MAC address and the valid format is H.H.H.

The all keyword is supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 2 but not on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 1005. If your system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, valid values for vlan-id are from 1 to 4094. Extended-range VLANs are not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1.

The interface-number argument designates the module and port number. Valid values for interface-number depend on the specified interface type and the chassis and module used. For example, if you specify a Gigabit Ethernet interface and have a 48-port 10/100BASE-T Ethernet module installed in a 13-slot chassis, valid values for the module number are from 2 to 13 and valid values for the port number are from 1 to 48.

If you enter a valid Ethernet multicast address, but without IETF OUI, a message is displayed informing you that it is not an IETF multicast address. The multicast MAC address is entered using this format, 0100.5eXX.XXXX.

The module num keyword and argument is not supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1 and is only supported on DFC modules. The module num option designates the module number.

Valid values for mac-group-address are from 1 to 9.

The count keyword displays the number of multicast entries.

The show mac-address-table protocol {assigned | ip | ipx | other} syntax is supported on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1 but not on systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 2.

The keyword definitions for the protocol argument are as follows:

assigned specifies assigned protocol entries.

ip specifies IP protocol.

ipx specifies IPX protocols.

other specifies other protocol entries.


Note In systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 1, the Protocol field is displayed. In systems configured with a Supervisor Engine 2, the Protocol field is replaced by the Learn field. The Learn field indicates whether or not the hardware is allowed to update the "ports" field of an entry if or when the MAC address is seen on another port. This field applies to static entries.


Examples

This example shows how to display MAC address table information for a specific MAC address (the system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1):

Router# show mac-address-table address 0050.3e8d.6400
vlan   mac address     type    protocol  qos             ports
-----+---------------+--------+---------+---+--------------------------------
 200  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
*100  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   5  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   4  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
   1  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
   1  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   4  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   5  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
*100  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
 200  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
*100  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
 200  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
   5  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
   4  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Router
   1  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Route
   1  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
   4  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
   5  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Router
 200  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Router
*100  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Router
Router#                                                      
 

Note In a distributed EARL switch, the asterisk indicates a MAC address learned on a port associated with this EARL.


This example shows how to display MAC address table information for a specific MAC address (the system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2):

Router# show mac-address-table address 001.6441.60ca
Codes: * - primary entry

  vlan   mac address     type    learn qos            ports
------+----------------+--------+-----+---+--------------------------
Supervisor:
*  ---  0001.6441.60ca    static  No    --  Router
Router#

This example shows how to display currently configured aging time for all VLANs:

Router# show mac-address-table aging-time 
Vlan    Aging Time
----    ----------
*100     300
200     1000

Router# 

This example shows how to display the entry count for a specific slot:

Router# show mac-address-table count slot 1
MAC Entries on slot 1 :
Dynamic Address Count:                4
Static Address (User-defined) Count:  25
Total MAC Addresses In Use:           29
Total MAC Addresses Available:        131072
Router#                                      

This example shows how to display all dynamic MAC address entries:

Router# show mac-address-table dynamic
  vlan   mac address     type    learn qos            ports
------+----------------+--------+-----+---+--------------------------
 200  0010.0d40.37ff   dynamic     yes  --  5/8
   1  0060.704c.73ff   dynamic     yes  --  5/9
Router# 

This example shows how to display information about the MAC address table for a specific interface:

Router# show mac-address-table interface fastethernet 5/7
Codes: * - primary entry

  vlan   mac address     type    learn qos            ports
------+----------------+--------+-----+---+--------------------------
*100  0000.0000.0101  dynamic      yes --  Gi1/1
Router#              

Note A leading asterisk indicates entries whose MAC address was learned from a packet coming from an outside device to a specific module.


This example shows how to display information about the multicast MAC address table for a specific VLAN (this system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 1):

Router# show mac-address-table multicast vlan 100
vlan   mac address     type    protocol  qos             ports
-----+---------------+--------+---------+---+--------------------------------
 100  0100.5e00.0001  static         ip  --  Fa5/9,Switch
Router#

This example shows how to display MAC address table entries that have a specific protocol type (in this case, assigned):

Router# show mac-address-table protocol assigned
vlan   mac address     type    protocol  qos             ports
-----+---------------+--------+---------+---+--------------------------------
 200  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
 100  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   5  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
4092  0000.0000.0000  dynamic  assigned  --  Router
   1  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
   4  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
4092  0050.f0ac.3058  static   assigned  --  Router
4092  0050.f0ac.3059  dynamic  assigned  --  Router
   1  0010.7b3b.0978  dynamic  assigned  --  Fa5/9
Router#
                                                         

This example shows how to display all the static MAC address entries (this system is configured with a Supervisor Engine 2):

Router# show mac-address-table static
Codes: * - primary entry

  vlan   mac address     type    learn qos            ports
------+----------------+--------+-----+---+--------------------------
*  ---  0001.6441.60ca    static  No    --  Router

Router#

This example shows how to display information about the MAC address table for a specific VLAN:

Router# show mac-address-table vlan 100
vlan   mac address     type    protocol  qos             ports
-----+---------------+--------+---------+---+--------------------------------
 100  0050.3e8d.6400  static   assigned  --  Router
 100  0050.7312.0cff  dynamic        ip  --  Fa5/9
 100  0080.1c93.8040  dynamic        ip  --  Fa5/9
 100  0050.3e8d.6400  static        ipx  --  Router
 100  0050.3e8d.6400  static      other  --  Router
 100  0100.0cdd.dddd  static      other  --  Fa5/9,Router,Switch
 100  00d0.5870.a4ff  dynamic        ip  --  Fa5/9
 100  00e0.4fac.b400  dynamic        ip  --  Fa5/9
 100  0100.5e00.0001  static         ip  --  Fa5/9,Switch
 100  0050.3e8d.6400  static         ip  --  Router
Router#  

This example shows how to display unicast flood protection information:

Router # show mac-address-table unicast-flood
Unicast Flood Protection status: enabled

Configuration:
 vlan      Kfps         action       timeout
------+----------+-----------------+----------
  100          3             filter         5

Mac filters:
 No.   vlan   souce mac addr.           installed on           time left (mm:ss)
-----+------+-----------------+------------------------------+------------------

Router#

Related Commands

mac-address-table aging-time
mac-address-table static
mac-address-table unicast-flood

show mls asic

To display the ASIC version, use the show mls asic command.

show mls asic

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(8a)E3

Support for this command was introduced on the Cisco 7600 series routers.


Examples

This example shows how to display ASIC versions:

Router# show mls asic
  Cafe version: 2
  Centauri version: 1
  Perseus version: 0/0
  Titan version: 1
Router#