Table Of Contents
show access-group mode interface
show arp access-list
show auto install status
show auto qos
show bootflash:
show bootvar
show class-map
show diagnostic content
show diagnostic result module
show diagnostic result module test 2
show diagnostic result module test 3
show dot1x
show environment
show errdisable detect
show errdisable recovery
show etherchannel
show flowcontrol
show idprom
show interfaces
show interfaces capabilities
show interfaces counters
show interfaces description
show interfaces link
show interfaces mtu
show interfaces private-vlan mapping
show interfaces status
show interfaces switchport
show interfaces transceiver
show interfaces trunk
show ip arp inspection
show ip arp inspection log
show ip cef vlan
show ip dhcp snooping
show ip dhcp snooping binding
show ip dhcp snooping database
show ip igmp interface
show ip igmp profile
show ip igmp snooping
show ip igmp snooping membership
show ip igmp snooping mrouter
show ip igmp snooping vlan
show ip mfib
show ip mfib fastdrop
show ip mroute
show ip source binding
show ip verify source
show ipc
show l2protocol-tunnel
show lacp
show mac access-group interface
show mac-address-table address
show mac-address-table aging-time
show mac-address-table count
show mac-address-table dynamic
show mac-address-table interface
show mac-address-table multicast
show mac-address-table protocol
show mac-address-table static
show mac-address-table vlan
show module
show monitor
show pagp
show policy-map
show policy-map interface
show port-security
show power
show qos
show qos aggregate policer
show qos dbl
show qos interface
show qos maps
show redundancy
show running-config
show slavebootflash:
show slaveslot0:
show slot0:
show spanning-tree
show spanning-tree mst
show storm-control
show system mtu
show tech-support
show udld
show vlan
show vlan access-map
show vlan counters
show vlan dot1q tag native
show vlan internal usage
show vlan mtu
show vlan private-vlan
show vlan remote-span
show vmps
show vtp
22
show access-group mode interface
To display the ACL configuration on a Layer 2 interface, use the show access-group mode interface command.
show access-group mode interface [interface interface-number]
Syntax Description
interface
|
(Optional) Interface type; valid values are ethernet, FastEthernet, GigabitEthernet, and port-channel.
|
interface-number
|
(Optional) Interface number.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The valid values for the port number depend on the chassis used.
Examples
This example shows how to display the ACL configuration on interface fast 6/1:
Switch# show access-group mode interface fast 6/1
Interface FastEthernet6/1:
Access group mode is: merge
Related Commands
access-group mode
show arp access-list
To display detailed information on an ARP access list, use the show arp command.
show arp access-list
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the ARP ACL information for a switch:
Switch# show arp access-list
permit ip 10.101.1.1 0.0.0.255 mac any
permit ip 20.3.1.0 0.0.0.255 mac any
Related Commands
access-group mode
arp access-list
ip arp inspection filter vlan
show auto install status
To display the status of an automatic installation, use the show auto install status command.
show auto install status
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(20)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the IP address of the TFTP server and to display whether or not the switch is currently acquiring the configuration file on the TFTP server:
Switch# show auto install status
Status : Downloading config file
Config File Fetched : Undetermined
The first IP address in the display indicates the server that is used for the automatic installation. The second IP address indicates the TFTP server that provided the configuration file.
show auto qos
To display the automatic quality of service (auto-QoS) configuration that is applied, use the show auto qos user EXEC command.
show auto qos [interface [interface-id]] [{begin | exclude | include} expression]
Syntax Description
interface interface-id
|
(Optional) Displays auto-QoS information for the specified interface or for all interfaces. Valid interfaces include physical ports.
|
begin
|
(Optional) Begins with the line that matches the expression.
|
exclude
|
(Optional) Excludes lines that match the expression.
|
include
|
(Optional) Includes lines that match the specified expression.
|
expression
|
(Optional) Expression in the output to use as a reference point.
|
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The show auto qos interface interface-id command displays the auto-QoS configuration; it does not display any user changes to the configuration that might be in effect.
To display information about the QoS configuration that might be affected by auto-QoS, use one of these commands:
•
show qos
•
show qos map
•
show qos interface interface-id
•
show running-config
Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.
Examples
This example shows output from the show auto qos command when auto-QoS is enabled:
00:00:56:qos map cos 3 to dscp 26
00:00:57:qos map cos 5 to dscp 46
00:00:58:qos map dscp 16 to tx-queue 1
00:00:58:qos map dscp 32 to tx-queue 1
00:00:59:policy-map autoqos-voip-policy
00:00:59: class class-default
00:00:59:interface GigabitEthernet1/1
00:00:59: qos trust device cisco-phone
00:00:59: shape percent 70
00:00:59: service-policy output autoqos-voip-policyend
This example shows output from the show auto qos interface command when the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command is entered:
Switch# show auto qos interface
Initial configuration applied by AutoQoS:
interface GigabitEthernet1/1
qos trust device cisco-phone
service-policy output autoqos-voip-policy
interface GigabitEthernet1/2
qos trust device cisco-phone
service-policy output autoqos-voip-policy
This example shows output from the show auto qos interface gigabitethernet1/1 command when the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command is entered:
Switch# show auto qos interface gigabitethernet1/1
Initial configuration applied by AutoQoS:
interface GigabitEthernet1/1
qos trust device cisco-phone
service-policy output autoqos-voip-policy
This example shows output from the show auto qos command when auto-QoS is disabled:
Related Commands
auto qos voip
show bootflash:
To display information about the bootflash: file system, use the show bootflash: command.
show bootflash: [all | chips | filesys]
Syntax Description
all
|
(Optional) Displays all possible Flash information.
|
chips
|
(Optional) Displays Flash chip information.
|
filesys
|
(Optional) Displays file system information.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display file system status information:
Switch> show bootflash: filesys
-------- F I L E S Y S T E M S T A T U S --------
DEVICE INFO BLOCK: bootflash
Magic Number = 6887635 File System Vers = 10000 (1.0)
Length = 1000000 Sector Size = 40000
Programming Algorithm = 39 Erased State = FFFFFFFF
File System Offset = 40000 Length = F40000
MONLIB Offset = 100 Length = C628
Bad Sector Map Offset = 3FFF8 Length = 8
Squeeze Log Offset = F80000 Length = 40000
Squeeze Buffer Offset = FC0000 Length = 40000
Bytes Used = 917CE8 Bytes Available = 628318
Bad Sectors = 0 Spared Sectors = 0
OK Files = 2 Bytes = 917BE8
Deleted Files = 0 Bytes = 0
Files w/Errors = 0 Bytes = 0
This example shows how to display system image information:
-# - ED --type-- --crc--- -seek-- nlen -length- -----date/time------ name
1 .. image 8C5A393A 237E3C 14 2063804 Aug 23 1999 16:18:45 c4-boot-mz
2 .. image D86EE0AD 957CE8 9 7470636 Sep 20 1999 13:48:49 rp.halley
This example shows how to display all bootflash information:
Switch> show bootflash: all
-# - ED --type-- --crc--- -seek-- nlen -length- -----date/time------ name
1 .. image 8C5A393A 237E3C 14 2063804 Aug 23 1999 16:18:45 c4-boot-
2 .. image D86EE0AD 957CE8 9 7470636 Sep 20 1999 13:48:49 rp.halley
6456088 bytes available (9534696 bytes used)
-------- F I L E S Y S T E M S T A T U S --------
DEVICE INFO BLOCK: bootflash
Magic Number = 6887635 File System Vers = 10000 (1.0)
Length = 1000000 Sector Size = 40000
Programming Algorithm = 39 Erased State = FFFFFFFF
File System Offset = 40000 Length = F40000
MONLIB Offset = 100 Length = C628
Bad Sector Map Offset = 3FFF8 Length = 8
Squeeze Log Offset = F80000 Length = 40000
Squeeze Buffer Offset = FC0000 Length = 40000
Bytes Used = 917CE8 Bytes Available = 628318
Bad Sectors = 0 Spared Sectors = 0
OK Files = 2 Bytes = 917BE8
Deleted Files = 0 Bytes = 0
Files w/Errors = 0 Bytes = 0
show bootvar
To display BOOT environment variable information, use the show bootvar command.
show bootvar
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)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display BOOT environment variable information:
CONFIG_FILE variable does not exist
BOOTLDR variable does not exist
Configuration register is 0x0
show class-map
To display class map information, use the show class-map command.
show class-map class_name
Syntax Description
class_name
|
Name of the class map.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display class map information for all class maps:
Class Map match-any class-default (id 0)
Class Map match-any class-simple (id 2)
Class Map match-all ipp5 (id 1)
Class Map match-all agg-2 (id 3)
This example shows how to display class map information for a specific class map:
Switch# show class-map ipp5
Class Map match-all ipp5 (id 1)
Related Commands
class-map
show policy-map
show policy-map interface
show diagnostic content
To display test information about the test ID, test attributes, and supported coverage test levels for each test and for all modules, use the show diagnostic content command.
show diagnostic content module {all | num}
Syntax Description
all
|
Displays all the modules on the chassis.
|
num
|
Module number
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(20)EWA
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the test suite, monitoring interval, and test attributes for all the modules of the chassis:
Switch# show diagnostic content module all
Diagnostics test suite attributes:
B/* - Basic ondemand test / NA
P/V/* - Per port test / Per device test / NA
D/N/* - Disruptive test / Non-disruptive test / NA
S/* - Only applicable to standby unit / NA
X/* - Not a health monitoring test / NA
F/* - Fixed monitoring interval test / NA
E/* - Always enabled monitoring test / NA
A/I - Monitoring is active / Monitoring is inactive
m/* - Mandatory bootup test, can't be bypassed / NA
o/* - Ongoing test, always active / NA
ID Test Name Attributes (day hh:mm:ss.ms)
==== ========================================== ============ =================
1) supervisor-bootup -----------------------> **D****I** not configured
2) packet-memory-bootup --------------------> **D****I** not configured
3) packet-memory-ongoing -------------------> **N****I*o not configured
Diagnostics test suite attributes:
B/* - Basic ondemand test / NA
P/V/* - Per port test / Per device test / NA
D/N/* - Disruptive test / Non-disruptive test / NA
S/* - Only applicable to standby unit / NA
X/* - Not a health monitoring test / NA
F/* - Fixed monitoring interval test / NA
E/* - Always enabled monitoring test / NA
A/I - Monitoring is active / Monitoring is inactive
m/* - Mandatory bootup test, can't be bypassed / NA
o/* - Ongoing test, always active / NA
ID Test Name Attributes (day hh:mm:ss.ms)
==== ========================================== ============ =================
1) linecard-online-diag --------------------> **D****I** not configured
Related Commands
show diagnostic result module
show diagnostic result module test 2
show diagnostic result module test 3
show diagnostic result module
To display the module-based diagnostic test results, use the show diagnostic result module command.
show diagnostic result module [slot-num | all] [test [test-id | test-id-range | all]] [detail]
Syntax Description
slot-num
|
(Optional) Specifies the slot on which diagnostics are displayed.
|
all
|
(Optional) Displays the diagnostics for all slots.
|
test
|
(Optional) Displays selected tests on the specified module.
|
test-id
|
(Optional) Specifies a single test ID.
|
test-id-range
|
(Optional) Specifies a range of test IDs.
|
all
|
(Optional) Displays the diagnostics for all tests.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Displays the complete test results.
|
Defaults
A summary of the test results for all modules in the chassis is displayed.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the summary results for all modules in the chassis:
Switch# show diagnostic result module
Current bootup diagnostic level: minimal
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Diagnostic level at card bootup: bypass
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
1) supervisor-bootup -----------------------> U
2) packet-memory-bootup --------------------> U
3) packet-memory-ongoing -------------------> U
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Diagnostic level at card bootup: minimal
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
1) linecard-online-diag --------------------> .
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Diagnostic level at card bootup: minimal
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
1) linecard-online-diag --------------------> .
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Diagnostic level at card bootup: minimal
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
1) linecard-online-diag --------------------> .
This example shows how to display the online diagnostics for module 1:
Switch# show diagnostic result module 1 detail
Current bootup diagnostic level: minimal
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Diagnostic level at card bootup: minimal
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
___________________________________________________________________________
1) supervisor-bootup -----------------------> .
Error code --------------------------> 0 (DIAG_SUCCESS)
Total run count ---------------------> 0
Last test execution time ------------> n/a
First test failure time -------------> n/a
Last test failure time --------------> n/a
Last test pass time -----------------> n/a
Total failure count -----------------> 0
Consecutive failure count -----------> 0
Power-On-Self-Test Results for ACTIVE Supervisor
Power-on-self-test for Module 1: WS-X4014
Port/Test Status: (. = Pass, F = Fail)
Reset Reason: PowerUp Software/User
Port Traffic: L2 Serdes Loopback ...
0: . 1: . 2: . 3: . 4: . 5: . 6: . 7: . 8: . 9: . 10: . 11: .
12: . 13: . 14: . 15: . 16: . 17: . 18: . 19: . 20: . 21: . 22: . 23: .
24: . 25: . 26: . 27: . 28: . 29: . 30: . 31: .
Port Traffic: L2 Asic Loopback ...
0: . 1: . 2: . 3: . 4: . 5: . 6: . 7: . 8: . 9: . 10: . 11: .
12: . 13: . 14: . 15: . 16: . 17: . 18: . 19: . 20: . 21: . 22: . 23: .
24: . 25: . 26: . 27: . 28: . 29: . 30: . 31: .
Port Traffic: L3 Asic Loopback ...
0: . 1: . 2: . 3: . 4: . 5: . 6: . 7: . 8: . 9: . 10: . 11: .
12: . 13: . 14: . 15: . 16: . 17: . 18: . 19: . 20: . 21: . 22: . 23: .
24: . 25: . 26: . 27: . 28: . 29: . 30: . 31: . au: .
Switch Subsystem Memory ...
1: . 2: . 3: . 4: . 5: . 6: . 7: . 8: . 9: . 10: . 11: . 12: .
13: . 14: . 15: . 16: . 17: . 18: . 19: . 20: . 21: . 22: . 23: . 24: .
25: . 26: . 27: . 28: . 29: . 30: . 31: . 32: . 33: . 34: . 35: . 36: .
37: . 38: . 39: . 40: . 41: . 42: . 43: . 44: . 45: . 46: . 47: . 48: .
49: . 50: . 51: . 52: . 53: . 54: .
___________________________________________________________________________
2) packet-memory-bootup --------------------> .
Error code --------------------------> 0 (DIAG_SUCCESS)
Total run count ---------------------> 0
Last test execution time ------------> n/a
First test failure time -------------> n/a
Last test failure time --------------> n/a
Last test pass time -----------------> n/a
Total failure count -----------------> 0
Consecutive failure count -----------> 0
packet buffers on free list: 64557 bad: 0 used for ongoing tests: 979
Number of errors found: 0
Cells with hard errors (failed two or more tests): 0
Cells with soft errors (failed one test, includes hard): 0
Suspect bad cells (uses a block that tested bad): 0
good buffers: 65536 (100.0%)
___________________________________________________________________________
3) packet-memory-ongoing -------------------> U
Error code --------------------------> 0 (DIAG_SUCCESS)
Total run count ---------------------> 0
Last test execution time ------------> n/a
First test failure time -------------> n/a
Last test failure time --------------> n/a
Last test pass time -----------------> n/a
Total failure count -----------------> 0
Consecutive failure count -----------> 0
packet buffers on free list: 64557 bad: 0 used for ongoing tests: 979
Packet memory errors: 0 0
Current alert level: green
Per 5 seconds in the last minute:
Per minute in the last hour:
Per hour in the last day:
Per day in the last 30 days:
Direct memory test failures per minute in the last hour:
Potential false positives: 0 0
Ignored because of rx errors: 0 0
Ignored because of cdm fifo overrun: 0 0
Ignored because of oir: 0 0
Ignored because isl frames received: 0 0
Ignored after writing hw stats: 0 0
Ignored on high gigaport: 0
Ongoing diag action mode: Normal
Last 1000 Memory Test Failures:
Last 1000 Packet Memory errors:
First 1000 Packet Memory errors:
___________________________________________________________________________
show diagnostic result module test 2
To display the results of the bootup packet memory test, use the show diagnostic result module test 2 command. The output indicates whether the test passed, failed, or was not run.
show diagnostic result module N test 2 [detail]
Syntax Description
N
|
Specifies the module number.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Specifies the display of detailed information for analysis.
|
Defaults
Non-detailed results
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(18)EW
|
This command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The detail keyword is intended for use by Cisco support personnel when analyzing failures.
Examples
This example shows how to display the results of the bootup packet memory tests:
Switch# show diagnostic result module 1 test 2
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
2) packet-memory-bootup ------------> .
This example shows how to display detailed results from the bootup packet memory tests:
Switch# show diagnostic result module 2 test 2 detail
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
___________________________________________________________________________
2) packet-memory-bootup ------------> .
Error code ------------------> 0 (DIAG_SUCCESS)
Total run count -------------> 0
Last test execution time ----> n/a
First test failure time -----> n/a
Last test failure time ------> n/a
Last test pass time ---------> n/a
Total failure count ---------> 0
Consecutive failure count ---> 0
packet buffers on free list: 64557 bad: 0 used for ongoing tests: 979
Number of errors found: 0
Cells with hard errors (failed two or more tests): 0
Cells with soft errors (failed one test, includes hard): 0
Suspect bad cells (uses a block that tested bad): 0
good buffers: 65536 (100.0%)
Related Commands
diagnostic monitor action
show diagnostic result module test 3
show diagnostic result module test 3
To display the results from the ongoing packet memory test, use the show diagnostic result module test 3 command. The output indicates whether the test passed, failed, or was not run.
show diagnostic result module N test 3 [detail]
Syntax Description
N
|
Module number.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Specifies the display of detailed information for analysis.
|
Defaults
Non-detailed results
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(18)EW
|
This command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The detail keyword is intended for use by Cisco support personnel when analyzing failures.
Examples
This example shows how to display the results from the ongoing packet memory tests:
Switch# show diagnostic result module 1 test 3
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
3) packet-memory-ongoing -----------> .
This example shows how to display the detailed results from the ongoing packet memory tests:
Switch# show diagnostic result module 1 test 3 detail
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
___________________________________________________________________________
3) packet-memory-ongoing -----------> .
Error code ------------------> 0 (DIAG_SUCCESS)
Total run count -------------> 0
Last test execution time ----> n/a
First test failure time -----> n/a
Last test failure time ------> n/a
Last test pass time ---------> n/a
Total failure count ---------> 0
Consecutive failure count ---> 0
packet buffers on free list: 64557 bad: 0 used for ongoing tests: 979
Packet memory errors: 0 0
Current alert level: green
Per 5 seconds in the last minute:
Per minute in the last hour:
Per hour in the last day:
Per day in the last 30 days:
Direct memory test failures per minute in the last hour:
Potential false positives: 0 0
Ignored because of rx errors: 0 0
Ignored because of cdm fifo overrun: 0 0
Ignored because of oir: 0 0
Ignored because isl frames received: 0 0
Ignored after writing hw stats: 0 0
Ignored on high gigaport: 0
Ongoing diag action mode: Normal
Last 1000 Memory Test Failures: v
Last 1000 Packet Memory errors:
First 1000 Packet Memory errors:
Related Commands
diagnostic monitor action
show diagnostic result module test 2
show dot1x
To display the 802.1X statistics and operational status for the entire switch or for a specified interface, use the show dot1x command.
show dot1x [interface interface-id] | [statistics [interface interface-id]] | [all]
Syntax Description
interface interface-id
|
(Optional) Displays the 802.1X status for the specified port.
|
statistics
|
(Optional) Displays 802.1X statistics for the switch or the specified interface.
|
all
|
(Optional) Displays per-interface 802.1X configuration information for all interfaces with a non-default 802.1X configuration.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Display enhanced to show the guest-VLAN value.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you do not specify an interface, the global parameters and a summary are displayed. If you specify an interface, the details for that interface are displayed.
If you specify the statistics keyword without the interface interface-id option, the statistics are displayed for all interfaces. If you specify the statistics keyword with the interface interface-id option, the statistics are displayed for the specified interface.
Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.
Examples
This is an example of output from the show dot1x privileged EXEC command:
Sysauthcontrol = Disabled
Dot1x Protocol Version = 1
Dot1x Oper Controlled Directions = Both
Dot1x Admin Controlled Directions = Both
This example shows how to display the 802.1X statististics for a specific port:
Switch# show dot1x interface fastethernet3/2
AuthSM State = AUTHENTICATED(GUEST_VLAN)
Re-authentication = Disabled
ReAuthPeriod = 3600 Seconds
ServerTimeout = 30 Seconds
Note
Table 2-12 provides a partial list of the displayed fields. The remaining fields in the display show internal state information. For a detailed description of these state machines and their settings, refer to the 802.1X specification.
Table 2-12 show dot1x interface Field Description
Field
|
Description
|
PortStatus
|
Status of the port (authorized or unauthorized). The status of a port is displayed as authorized if the dot1x port-control interface configuration command is set to auto and has successfully completed authentication.
|
Port Control
|
Setting of the dot1x port-control interface configuration command.
|
MultiHosts
|
Setting of the dot1x multiple-hosts interface configuration command (allowed or disallowed).
|
This is an example of output from the show dot1x statistics interface gigabitethernet1/1 command. Table 2-13 describes the fields in the display.
Switch# show dot1x statistics interface gigabitethernet1/1
PortStatistics Parameters for Dot1x
--------------------------------------------
TxReqId = 0 TxReq = 0 TxTotal = 0
RxStart = 0 RxLogoff = 0 RxRespId = 0 RxResp = 0
RxInvalid = 0 RxLenErr = 0 RxTotal= 0
RxVersion = 0 LastRxSrcMac 0000.0000.0000
Table 2-13 show dot1x statistics Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
TxReq/TxReqId
|
Number of EAP-request/identity frames that have been sent.
|
TxTotal
|
Number of EAPOL frames of any type that have been sent.
|
RxStart
|
Number of valid EAPOL-start frames that have been received.
|
RxLogoff
|
Number of EAPOL-logoff frames that have been received.
|
RxRespId
|
Number of EAP-response/identity frames that have been received.
|
RxResp
|
Number of valid EAP-response frames (other than response/identity frames) that have been received.
|
RxInvalid
|
Number of EAPOL frames that have been received and have an unrecognized frame type.
|
RxLenError
|
Number of EAPOL frames that have been received in which the packet body length field is invalid.
|
RxTotal
|
Number of valid EAPOL frames of any type that have been received.
|
RxVersion
|
Protocol version number carried in the most recently received EAPOL frame.
|
LastRxSrcMac
|
Source MAC address carried in the most recently received EAPOL frame.
|
Related Commands
dot1x guest-vlan
dot1x max-reauth-req
dot1x port-control
show environment
To display the environment alarm, operational status, and current reading for the chassis, use the show environment command.
show environment [alarm] | [status [chassis | fantray | powersupply | supervisor]] |
[temperature]
Syntax Description
alarm
|
(Optional) Specifies the alarm status of the chassis.
|
status
|
(Optional) Specifies the operational status information.
|
chassis
|
(Optional) Specifies the operational status of the chassis.
|
fantray
|
(Optional) Specifies the status of the fan tray, and shows fan tray power consumption.
|
powersupply
|
(Optional) Specifies the status of the power supply.
|
supervisor
|
(Optional) Specifies the status of the supervisor engine.
|
temperature
|
(Optional) Specifies the current chassis temperature readings.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for the ability to display generic environment information with the show environment command was added.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display information about the environment alarms, operational status, and current temperature readings for the chassis:
Chassis Temperature = 32 degrees Celsius
Chassis Over Temperature Threshold = 75 degrees Celsius
Chassis Critical Temperature Threshold = 95 degrees Celsius
Supply Model No Type Status Sensor
------ --------------- --------- ----------- ------
PS1 PWR-C45-1400AC AC 1400W good good
Power Supply Max Min Max Min Absolute
(Nos in Watts) Inline Inline System System Maximum
-------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ --------
Power supplies needed by system : 1
Supervisor Led Color : Green
Power consumed by Fantray : 50 Watts
This example shows how to display information about the environment alarms:
Switch# show environment alarm
This example shows how to display information about the power supplies, chassis type, and fan trays:
Switch# show environment status
Supply Model No Type Status Sensor
------ --------------- --------- ----------- ------
PS1 PWR-C45-1400AC AC 1400W good good
Power Supply Max Min Max Min Absolute
(Nos in Watts) Inline Inline System System Maximum
-------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ --------
Power supplies needed by system : 1
Supervisor Led Color : Green
Power consumed by Fantray : 50 Watts
This example shows how to display information about the chassis:
Switch# show environment status chassis
This example shows how to display information about the fan tray:
Switch# show environment status fantray
Power consumed by Fantray : 50 Watts
This example shows how to display information about the power supply:
Switch# show environment status powersupply
Supply Model No Type Status Sensor
------ --------------- --------- ------- ------
PS1 WS-X4008 AC 400W good good
PS2 WS-X4008 AC 400W good good
This example shows how to display information about the supervisor engine:
Switch# show environment status supervisor
Supervisor Led Color :Green
This example shows how to display information about the temperature of the chassis:
Switch# show environment temperature
Chassis Temperature = 32 degrees Celsius
Chassis Over Temperature Threshold = 75 degrees Celsius
Chassis Critical Temperature Threshold = 95 degrees Celsius
show errdisable detect
To display the error disable detection status, use the show errdisable detect command.
show errdisable detect
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)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Display includes the status of storm control.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the error disable detection status:
Switch# show errdisable detect
ErrDisable Reason Detection status
----------------- ----------------
security-violatio Enabled
channel-misconfig Disabled
psecure-violation Enabled
Related Commands
errdisable detect
errdisable recovery
show interfaces status
show errdisable recovery
To display error disable recovery timer information, use the show errdisable recovery command.
show errdisable recovery
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)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Display includes the status of storm control.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display recovery timer information for error disable:
Switch# show errdisable recovery
ErrDisable Reason Timer Status
----------------- --------------
security-violatio Disabled
channel-misconfig Disabled
psecure-violation Disabled
Timer interval:30 seconds
Interfaces that will be enabled at the next timeout:
Interface Errdisable reason Time left(sec)
--------- ----------------- --------------
Related Commands
errdisable detect
errdisable recovery
show interfaces status
show etherchannel
To display EtherChannel information for a channel, use the show etherchannel command.
show etherchannel [channel-group] {port-channel | brief | detail | summary | port | load-balance
| protocol}
Syntax Description
channel-group
|
(Optional) Number of the channel group; valid values are from 1 to 64.
|
port-channel
|
Displays port-channel information.
|
brief
|
Displays a summary of EtherChannel information.
|
detail
|
Displays detailed EtherChannel information.
|
summary
|
Displays a one-line summary per channel group.
|
port
|
Displays EtherChannel port information.
|
load-balance
|
Displays load-balance information.
|
protocol
|
Displays the enabled protocol.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(13)EW
|
Support for LACP was added to this command.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you do not specify a channel group, all channel groups are displayed.
In the output below, the Passive port list field is displayed for Layer 3 port channels only. This field means that the physical interface, which is still not up, is configured to be in the channel group (and indirectly is in the only port channel in the channel group).
Examples
This example shows how to display port-channel information for a specific group:
Switch# show etherchannel 1 port-channel
Port-channels in the group:
Age of the Port-channel = 02h:35m:26s
Logical slot/port = 10/1 Number of ports in agport = 0
GC = 0x00000000 HotStandBy port = null
Passive port list = Fa5/4 Fa5/5
Port state = Port-channel L3-Ag Ag-Not-Inuse
Ports in the Port-channel:
This example shows how to display load-balancing information:
Switch# show etherchannel load-balance
Source XOR Destination mac address
This example shows how to display a summary of information for a specific group:
Switch# show etherchannel 1 brief
port-channels: 1 Max port-channels = 1
This example shows how to display detailed information for a specific group:
Switch# show etherchannel 1 detail
Port-channels: 1 Max Port-channels = 1
Port state = EC-Enbld Down Not-in-Bndl Usr-Config
Channel group = 1 Mode = Desirable Gcchange = 0
Port-channel = null GC = 0x00000000 Psudo-agport = Po1
Port indx = 0 Load = 0x00
Flags: S - Device is sending Slow hello. C - Device is in Consistent state.
A - Device is in Auto mode. P - Device learns on physical port.
Timers: H - Hello timer is running. Q - Quit timer is running.
S - Switching timer is running. I - Interface timer is running.
Hello Partner PAgP Learning Group
Port Flags State Timers Interval Count Priority Method Ifindex
Fa5/4 d U1/S1 1s 0 128 Any 0
Age of the port in the current state: 02h:33m:14s
Port state = EC-Enbld Down Not-in-Bndl Usr-Config
Channel group = 1 Mode = Desirable Gcchange = 0
Port-channel = null GC = 0x00000000 Psudo-agport = Po1
Port indx = 0 Load = 0x00
Flags: S - Device is sending Slow hello. C - Device is in Consistent state.
A - Device is in Auto mode. P - Device learns on physical port.
Timers: H - Hello timer is running. Q - Quit timer is running.
S - Switching timer is running. I - Interface timer is running.
Hello Partner PAgP Learning Group
Port Flags State Timers Interval Count Priority Method Ifindex
Fa5/5 d U1/S1 1s 0 128 Any 0
Age of the port in the current state: 02h:33m:17s
Port-channels in the group:
Age of the Port-channel = 02h:33m:52s
Logical slot/port = 10/1 Number of ports in agport = 0
GC = 0x00000000 HotStandBy port = null
Passive port list = Fa5/4 Fa5/5
Port state = Port-channel L3-Ag Ag-Not-Inuse
Ports in the Port-channel:
This example shows how to display a one-line summary per channel group:
Switch# show etherchannel summary
U-in use I-in port-channel S-suspended D-down i-stand-alone d-default
----- ------------ ----------------------------------------------------------
1 Po1(U) Fa5/4(I) Fa5/5(I)
2 Po2(U) Fa5/6(I) Fa5/7(I)
This example shows how to display EtherChannel port information for all ports and all groups:
Switch# show etherchannel port
Port state = EC-Enbld Down Not-in-Bndl Usr-Config
Channel group = 1 Mode = Desirable Gcchange = 0
Port-channel = null GC = 0x00000000 Psudo-agport = Po1
Port indx = 0 Load = 0x00
Flags: S - Device is sending Slow hello. C - Device is in Consistent state.
A - Device is in Auto mode. P - Device learns on physical port.
Timers: H - Hello timer is running. Q - Quit timer is running.
S - Switching timer is running. I - Interface timer is running.
Hello Partner PAgP Learning Group
Port Flags State Timers Interval Count Priority Method Ifindex
Fa5/4 d U1/S1 1s 0 128 Any 0
Age of the port in the current state: 02h:40m:35s
Port state = EC-Enbld Down Not-in-Bndl Usr-Config
Channel group = 1 Mode = Desirable Gcchange = 0
Port-channel = null GC = 0x00000000 Psudo-agport = Po1
Port indx = 0 Load = 0x00
Flags: S - Device is sending Slow hello. C - Device is in Consistent state.
A - Device is in Auto mode. P - Device learns on physical port.
Timers: H - Hello timer is running. Q - Quit timer is running.
S - Switching timer is running. I - Interface timer is running.
This example shows how to display the protocol enabled:
Switch# show etherchannel protocol
Related Commands
channel-group
interface port-channel
show flowcontrol
To display the per-interface status and statistics related to flow control, use the show flowcontrol command.
show flowcontrol [module slot | interface interface]
Syntax Description
module slot
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on a specific module.
|
interface interface
|
(Optional) Displays the status on a specific interface.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
Table 2-14 describes the fields in the show flowcontrol command output.
Table 2-14 show flowcontrol Command Output
Field
|
Description
|
Port
|
Module and port number.
|
Send-Flowcontrol-Admin
|
Flow-control administration. Possible settings: on indicates the local port sends flow control to the far end; off indicates the local port does not send flow control to the far end; desired indicates the local end sends flow control to the far end if the far end supports it.
|
Send-Flowcontrol-Oper
|
Flow-control operation. Possible setting: disagree indicates the two ports could not agree on a link protocol.
|
Receive-Flowcontrol-Admin
|
Flow-control administration. Possible settings: on indicates the local port requires the far end to send flow control; off indicates the local port does not allow the far end to send flow control; desired indicates the local end allows the far end to send flow control.
|
Receive-Flowcontrol-Oper
|
Flow-control operation. Possible setting: disagree indicates the two ports could not agree on a link protocol.
|
RxPause
|
Number of pause frames received.
|
TxPause
|
Number of pause frames transmitted.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the flow control status on all the gigabit interfaces:
Port Send FlowControl Receive FlowControl RxPause TxPause
----- -------- -------- -------- -------- ------- -------
Gi1/1 desired off off off 0 0
Gi1/2 on disagree on on 0 0
Gi3/2 desired off off off 0 0
Gi3/3 desired off off off 0 0
Gi3/5 desired off off off 0 0
Gi3/6 desired off off off 0 0
This example shows how to display the flow control status on module 1:
Switch# show flowcontrol module 1
Port Send FlowControl Receive FlowControl RxPause TxPause
----- -------- -------- -------- -------- ------- -------
Gi1/1 desired off off off 0 0
Gi1/2 on disagree on on 0 0
This example shows how to display the flow control status on interface 3/4:
Switch# show flowcontrol interface gigabitethernet 3/4
Port Send FlowControl Receive FlowControl RxPause TxPause
----- -------- -------- -------- -------- ------- -------
Related Commands
flowcontrol
show interfaces status
show idprom
To display the IDPROMs for the chassis, supervisor engine, module, power supplies, fan trays, clock module, and multiplexer (mux) buffer, use the show idprom command.
show idprom {all | chassis | module [mod] | interface int_name | supervisor | power-supply
number | fan-tray}
Syntax Description
all
|
Displays information for all IDPROMs.
|
chassis
|
Displays information for the chassis IDPROMs.
|
module
|
Displays information for the module IDPROMs.
|
mod
|
(Optional) Specifies the module name.
|
interface int_name
|
Displays information for the GBIC or SFP IDPROMs.
|
supervisor
|
Displays information for the supervisor engine IDPROMs.
|
power-supply number
|
Displays information for the power supply IDPROMs.
|
fan-tray
|
Displays information for the fan tray IDPROMs.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for the power-supply, fan-tray, clock-module, and mux-buffer keywords was added.
|
12.1(13)EW
|
Support for interface keyword was added.
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Enhanced the show idprom interface output to include the hexadecimal display of the GBIC/SFP SEEPROM contents.
|
Usage Guidelines
When you enter the show idprom interface command, the output lines for Calibration type and Rx (receive) power measurement may not be displayed for all GBICs.
Examples
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for module 4:
Switch# show idprom module 4
Common Block Signature = 0xABAB
Common Block Length = 144
Common Block Checksum = 4199
OEM String = Cisco Systems, Inc.
Product Number = WS-X4306
Manufacturing Bits = 0x0000
Engineering Bits = 0x0000
Snmp OID = 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0
RMA Failure Code = 0 0 0 0
Linecard Block Signature = 0x4201
Linecard Block Version = 1
Linecard Block Length = 24
Linecard Block Checksum = 658
Feature Bits = 0x0000000000000000
MAC Base = 0010.7bab.9830
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for the GBICs on the Gigabit Ethernet interface 1/2:
Switch# show idprom interface GigabitEthernet 1/2
GBIC Serial EEPROM Contents:
Extended Id = Not specified/compliant with defined MOD_DEF [0x0]
Connector = SC connector [0x1]
Speed = Not available [0x0]
Media = Not available [0x0]
Technology = Not available [0x0]
Link Length = Not available [0x0]
GE Comp Codes = Not available [0x0]
SONET Comp Codes = Not available [0x0]
BR, Nominal = 1300000000 MHz
Length(9u) in km = GBIC does not support single mode fibre, or the length
must be determined from the transceiver technology.
Length(50u) = GBIC does not support 50 micron multi-mode fibre, or the
length must be determined from the transceiver technology.
Length(62.5u) = GBIC does not support 62.5 micron multi-mode fibre, or
the length must be determined from transceiver technology.
Length(Copper) = GBIC does not support copper cables, or the length must
be determined from the transceiver technology.
Vendor name = CISCO-FINISAR
Vendor Part No. = FTR-0119-CSC
Wavelength = Not available
Options = Loss of Signal implemented TX_FAULT signal implemented TX_DISABLE is
implemented and disables the serial output [0x1A]
Vendor Serial No. = K1273DH
Diag monitoring = Implemented
Calibration type = Internal
Rx pwr measuremnt = Optical Modulation Amplitude (OMA)
Address change = Required
Vendor Specific ID Fields:
20944D30 29 00 02 80 22 33 38 3D C7 67 83 E8 DF 65 6A AF )..."38=Gg^Ch_ej/
20944D40 1A 80 ED 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 38 23 3C 1B ............8#<.
SEEPROM contents (hex) size 128:
0x0000 01 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 0D 00 00 FF ................
0x0010 00 00 00 00 43 49 53 43 4F 2D 46 49 4E 49 53 41 ....CISCO-FINISA
0x0020 52 20 20 20 00 00 90 65 46 54 52 2D 30 31 31 39 R ..^PeFTR-0119
0x0030 2D 43 53 43 20 20 20 20 42 20 20 20 00 00 00 1A -CSC B ....
0x0040 00 1A 00 00 4B 31 32 37 33 44 48 20 20 20 20 20 ....K1273DH
0x0050 20 20 20 20 30 33 30 34 30 39 20 20 64 00 00 B2 030409 d..2
0x0060 29 00 02 80 22 33 38 3D C7 67 83 E8 DF 65 6A AF )..^@"38=Gg^C._ej.
0x0070 1A 80 ED 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 38 23 3C 1B .^@m.........8#<.
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for the supervisor engine:
Switch# show idprom supervisor
Common Block Signature = 0xABAB
Common Block Length = 144
Common Block Checksum = 4153
OEM String = Cisco Systems, Inc.
Product Number = WS-X4014
Serial Number = JAB05320CCE
Manufacturing Deviation String = 0
Manufacturing Bits = 0x0000
Engineering Bits = 0x0000
Snmp OID = 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0
RMA Failure Code = 0 0 0 0
Supervisor Block Signature = 0x4101
Supervisor Block Version = 1
Supervisor Block Length = 24
Supervisor Block Checksum = 548
Feature Bits = 0x0000000000000000
MAC Base = 0007.0ee5.2a44
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for the chassis:
Switch# show idprom chassis
Common Block Signature = 0xABAB
Common Block Length = 144
Common Block Checksum = 4285
OEM String = Cisco Systems, Inc.
Product Number = WS-C4006
Serial Number = FOX04473737
Manufacturing Deviation String = 0x00
Manufacturing Bits = 0x0000
Engineering Bits = 0x0000
Snmp OID = 0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0
Chassis Block Signature = 0x4001
Chassis Block Version = 1
Chassis Block Length = 22
Chassis Block Checksum = 421
Feature Bits = 0x0000000000000000
MAC Base = 0004.dd42.2600
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for power supply 1:
Switch# show idprom power-supply 1
Common Block Signature = 0xABAB
Common Block Length = 144
Common Block Checksum = 10207
OEM String = Cisco Systems, Inc.
Product Number = WS-CAC-1440W
Serial Number = ACP05180002
Manufacturing Deviation String =
Manufacturing Bits = 0x0000
Engineering Bits = 0x3031
Snmp OID = 9.12.3.65535.65535.65535.65535.65535
RMA Failure Code = 255 255 255 255
Power Supply Block Signature = 0xFFFF
PowerSupply Block Version = 255
PowerSupply Block Length = 255
PowerSupply Block Checksum = 65535
Feature Bits = 0x00000000FFFFFFFF
This example shows how to display IDPROM information for the fan tray:
Switch# show idprom fan-tray
Common Block Signature = 0xABAB
Common Block Length = 144
Common Block Checksum = 19781
OEM String = "Cisco Systems"
Product Number = WS-X4502-fan
Manufacturing Deviation String =
Manufacturing Bits = 0xFFFF
Engineering Bits = 0xFFFF
Snmp OID = 65535.65535.65535.65535.65535.65535.65535.65535
RMA Failure Code = 255 255 255 255
show interfaces
To display traffic on a specific interface, use the show interfaces command.
show interfaces [{{FastEthernet mod/interface-number} | {GigabitEthernet
mod/interface-number} | {null interface-number} | vlan vlan_id} | status}]
Syntax Description
FastEthernet mod/interface-number
|
(Optional) Specifies the Fast Ethernet module and interface.
|
GigabitEthernet mod/interface-number
|
(Optional) Specifies the Gigabit Ethernet module and interface.
|
null interface-number
|
(Optional) Specifies the null interface; the valid value is 0.
|
vlan vlan_id
|
(Optional) Specifies the VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 4094.
|
status
|
(Optional) Displays status information.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for extended VLAN addresses was added.
|
Usage Guidelines
The statistics are collected on a per-VLAN basis for Layer 2-switched packets and Layer 3-switched packets. The statistics are available for both unicast and multicast. The Layer 3-switched packet counts are available for both the ingress and egress directions. The per-VLAN statistics are updated every 5 seconds.
In some cases, you might see a difference in the duplex mode that is displayed between the show interfaces command and the show running-config commands. The duplex mode that is displayed in the show interfaces command is the actual duplex mode that the interface is running. The show interfaces command shows the operating mode for an interface, while the show running-config command shows the configured mode for an interface.
If you do not enter any keywords, all counters for all modules are displayed.
Examples
This example shows how to display traffic for a specific interface:
Switch# show interfaces GigabitEthernet 2/5
GigabitEthernet9/5 is up, line protocol is up
Hardware is C4k 1000Mb 802.3, address is 0001.64f8.3fa5 (bia 0001.64f8.3fa5)
Internet address is 172.20.20.20/24
MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit, DLY 10 usec,
reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
Last input 00:00:00, output never, output hang never
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
Output queue 0/40, 0 drops; input queue 0/75, 0 drops
5 minute input rate 1000 bits/sec, 2 packets/sec
5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
L2 Switched: ucast: 8199 pkt, 1362060 bytes - mcast: 6980 pkt, 371952 bytes
L3 in Switched: ucast: 0 pkt, 0 bytes - mcast: 0 pkt, 0 bytes mcast
L3 out Switched: ucast: 0 pkt, 0 bytes - mcast: 0 pkt, 0 bytes
300114 packets input, 27301436 bytes, 0 no buffer
Received 43458 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored
0 input packets with dribble condition detected
15181 packets output, 1955836 bytes, 0 underruns
0 output errors, 0 collisions, 3 interface resets
0 babbles, 0 late collision, 0 deferred
0 lost carrier, 0 no carrier
0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
This example shows how to display status information for Gigabit Ethernet interface 1/2:
Switch# show interfaces Gi1/2 status
Port Name Status Vlan Duplex Speed Type
Gi1/2 notconnect 1 auto 1000 1000-XWDM-RXONLY
show interfaces capabilities
To display the interface capabilities for an interface or for all the interfaces on a switch, use the show interfaces capabilities command.
show interfaces capabilities [{module mod}]
show interfaces [interface interface-number] capabilities
Syntax Description
module mod
|
(Optional) Displasy information for the specified module only.
|
interface
|
(Optional) Interface type; valid values are fastethernet, gigabitethernet, and port-channel.
|
interface-number
|
(Optional) Port number.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The interface-number argument designates the module and port number. Valid values for interface-number depend on the chassis and module used. For example, if you have a 48-port 10/100-Mbps Fast Ethernet RJ-21 (telco connector) switching module installed in a Catalyst 4507 chassis, valid values for the slot number are from 2 to 13 and valid values for the port number are 1 to 48.
Examples
This example shows how to display the interface capabilities for a module:
Router# show interfaces capabilities module 1
Trunk encap. type: 802.1Q,ISL
Trunk mode: on,off,desirable,nonegotiate
Broadcast suppression:percentage(0-100), hw
Flowcontrol: rx-(off,on,desired),tx-(off,on,desired)
VLAN Membership: static, dynamic
Queuing: rx-(N/A), tx-(4q1t, Sharing/Shaping)
Trunk encap. type: 802.1Q,ISL
Trunk mode: on,off,desirable,nonegotiate
Broadcast suppression:percentage(0-100), hw
Flowcontrol: rx-(off,on,desired),tx-(off,on,desired)
VLAN Membership: static, dynamic
Queuing: rx-(N/A), tx-(4q1t, Sharing/Shaping)
This example shows how to display the interface capabilities for interface gi1/1:
Switch# show interfaces gigabitetherneti1/1 capabilities
Trunk encap. type: 802.1Q,ISL
Trunk mode: on,off,desirable,nonegotiate
Broadcast suppression:percentage(0-100), hw
Flowcontrol: rx-(off,on,desired),tx-(off,on,desired)
VLAN Membership: static, dynamic
Queuing: rx-(N/A), tx-(4q1t, Sharing/Shaping)
MTU Supported: jumbo frames, baby giants
This example shows how to display the interface capabilities for interface fa3/1:
Switch# show interfaces fastethernet3/1 capabilities
Trunk encap. type: 802.1Q,ISL
Trunk mode: on,off,desirable,nonegotiate
Broadcast suppression:percentage(0-100), sw
Flowcontrol: rx-(none),tx-(none)
VLAN Membership: static, dynamic
Queuing: rx-(N/A), tx-(4q1t, Shaping)
MTU Supported: no jumbo frames, baby giants
Related Commands
show interfaces counters
show interfaces counters
To display the traffic on the physical interface, use the show interfaces counters command.
show interfaces counters [all | detail | errors | storm-control | trunk] [module mod]
Syntax Description
all
|
(Optional) Displays all the interface counters including errors, trunk, and detail.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Displays the detailed interface counters.
|
errors
|
(Optional) Displays the interface error counters.
|
storm-control
|
(Optional) Displays the number of packets discarded due to suppression on the interface.
|
trunk
|
(Optional) Displays the interface trunk counters.
|
module mod
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on a specific module.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for storm control.
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Support for the display of total suppression discards.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you do not enter any keywords, all the counters for all modules are displayed.
The display for the storm-control keyword includes the suppressed multicast bytes.
Examples
This example shows how to display the error counters for a specific module:
Switch# show interfaces counters errors module 1
Port Align-Err FCS-Err Xmit-Err Rcv-Err UnderSize
Port Single-Col Multi-Col Late-Col Excess-Col Carri-Sen Runts Giants
This example shows how to display the traffic that is seen by a specific module:
Switch# show interfaces counters module 1
Port InOctets InUcastPkts InMcastPkts InBcastPkts
Port OutOctets OutUcastPkts OutMcastPkts OutBcastPkts
This example shows how to display the trunk counters for a specific module:
Switch# show interfaces counters trunk module 1
Port TrunkFramesTx TrunkFramesRx WrongEncap
This example shows how to display the number of packets that are discarded due to suppression:
Switch# show interfaces counters storm-control
Multicast Suppression : Enabled
Port BcastSuppLevel TotalSuppressionDiscards
Related Commands
show interfaces capabilities
show interfaces description
To display a description and status of an interface, use the show interfaces description command.
show interfaces [interface] description
Syntax Description
interface
|
(Optional) Type of interface.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display information for all interfaces:
Switch# show interfaces description
Interface Status Protocol Description
PO0/0 admin down down First interface
Gi1/1 up up GigE to server farm
Related Commands
description (refer to Cisco IOS documentation)
show interfaces link
To display how long a cable has been disconnected from an interface, use the show interfaces link command:
show interfaces link [module mod_num]
Syntax Description
module mod_num
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on a module.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
If the interface state is up, the command displays 0:00. If the interface state is down, the time (in hours, minutes, and seconds) is displayed.
Examples
This example shows how to display active link-level information:
Switch# show interfaces link
This example shows how to display inactive link-level information:
Switch# show interfaces link
In this example, the cable has been disconnected from the port for 1 minute and 28 seconds.
show interfaces mtu
To display the maximum transmission unit (MTU) size of all the physical interfaces and SVIs on the switch, use the show interfaces mtu command.
show interfaces mtu [module mod]
Syntax Description
module mod
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on a specific module.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(13)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the MTU size for all interfaces on module 1:
Switch> show interfaces mtu module 1
Related Commands
mtu
show interfaces private-vlan mapping
To display PVLAN mapping information for VLAN SVIs, use the show interfaces private-vlan mapping command.
show interfaces private-vlan mapping [active]
Syntax Description
active
|
(Optional) Displays active interfaces only.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
This command displays SVI information only.
Examples
This example shows how to display PVLAN mapping information:
Switch# show interfaces private-vlan mapping
Interface Secondary VLAN Type
--------- -------------- -----------------
Related Commands
private-vlan
private-vlan mapping
show interfaces status
To display the interface status or a list of interfaces in error-disabled state, use the show interfaces status command.
show interfaces status [err-disabled]
Syntax Description
err-disabled
|
(Optional) Displays interfaces in error-disabled state.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the status of all interfaces:
Switch# show interfaces status
Port Name Status Vlan Duplex Speed Type
Gi1/1 disabled routed full 1000 missing
Gi1/2 notconnect 1 full 1000 unknown (4)
Fa5/1 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/2 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/3 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/4 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/15 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/16 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa5/17 disabled routed auto auto 10/100BaseTX
This example shows how to display the status of interfaces in an error-disabled state:
Switch# show interfaces status err-disabled
Fa9/4 notconnect link-flap
informational error message when the timer expires on a cause
--------------------------------------------------------------
5d04h:%PM-SP-4-ERR_RECOVER:Attempting to recover from link-flap err-disable state on Fa9/4
Related Commands
errdisable detect
show errdisable recovery
show interfaces switchport
To display the administrative and operational status of a switching (nonrouting) port, use the show interfaces switchport command.
show interfaces [interface-id] switchport [module mod]
Syntax Description
interface-id
|
(Optional) Interface ID for the physical port.
|
module mod
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on the specified module; valid values are from 1 to 6.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for per-interface display.
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Support for displaying the status of native VLAN tagging in the command output.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display switch-port information using the begin output modifier:
Switch# show interfaces switchport | include VLAN
Access Mode VLAN: 200 (VLAN0200)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Trunking VLANs Enabled: ALL
Pruning VLANs Enabled: ALL
This example shows how to display switch-port information for module 1:
Switch# show interfaces switchport module 1
Administrative Mode:dynamic auto
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation:negotiate
Negotiation of Trunking:On
Access Mode VLAN:1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN:1 (default)
Administrative private-vlan host-association:none
Administrative private-vlan mapping:none
Operational private-vlan:none
Trunking VLANs Enabled:ALL
Pruning VLANs Enabled:2-1001
Administrative Mode:dynamic auto
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation:negotiate
Negotiation of Trunking:On
Access Mode VLAN:1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN:1 (default)
Administrative private-vlan host-association:none
Administrative private-vlan mapping:none
Operational private-vlan:none
Trunking VLANs Enabled:ALL
Pruning VLANs Enabled:2-1001
This example shows how to display the status of native VLAN tagging on the port:
Switch# show interfaces g1/2 switchport
Administrative Mode: dynamic auto
Operational Mode: static access
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: negotiate
Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native
Negotiation of Trunking: On
Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Native VLAN tagging: Disabled **
Administrative private-vlan host-association: none
Administrative private-vlan mapping: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk native VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk encapsulation: dot1q
Administrative private-vlan trunk normal VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk private VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk Native VLAN tagging: Disabled
Operational private-vlan: none
Trunking VLANs Enabled: ALL
Pruning VLANs Enabled: 2-1001
Capture VLANs Allowed: ALL
Unknown unicast blocked: disabled
Unknown multicast blocked: disabled
Related Commands
show interfaces capabilities
show interfaces counters
show interfaces transceiver
To display diagnostic-monitoring data for all interfaces that have transceivers installed, use the show interfaces transceiver command.
show interfaces {{[int_name] transceiver {[detail]} | {transceiver [module mod] | detail
[module mod]}}
Syntax Description
int_name
|
(Optional) Interface.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Displays the calibrated values and the A2D readouts if the readout values differ from the calibrated values. Also displays the high-alarm, high-warning, low-warning, and low-alarm thresholds.
|
module mod
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on a specific module.
|
Defaults
The noninterface-specific versions of the show interfaces transceiver command are enabled by default.
The interface-specific versions of these commands are enabled by default if the specified interface has a transceiver (GBIC or SFP) that is configured for diagnostic monitoring, and the transceiver is in a module that supports diagnostic monitoring.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(20)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.2(18)EW
|
Support for the calibration keyword was withdrawn.
|
Usage Guidelines
The show interfaces transceiver command provides useful information under the following conditions:
•
At least one transceiver is installed on a chassis that is configured for diagnostic monitoring.
•
The transceiver is in a module that supports diagnostic monitoring.
If you notice that the alarm and warning flags have been set on a transceiver, reenter the command to confirm.
Examples
This example shows how to display diagnostic monitoring data for all interfaces with transceivers installed on the switch:
Switch# show interfaces transceiver
If device is externally calibrated, only calibrated values are printed.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
NA or N/A: not applicable, Tx: transmit, Rx: receive.
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts).
Temperature Voltage Current Tx Power Rx Power
Port (Celsius) (Volts) (mA) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------- ------- -------- -------- --------
Gi1/1 48.1 3.30 0.0 8.1 ++ N/A
Gi1/2 33.0 3.30 1.8 -10.0 -36.9
Gi2/1 43.7 5.03 50.6 + -16.7 -- N/A
Gi2/2 39.2 5.02 25.7 0.8 N/A
Note
The value for the Optical Tx Power (in dBm) equals ten times log (Tx Power in mW). If the Tx Power value is 3 mW, then the Optical Tx Power value equals 10 * log (3), which equals 10 * .477 or 4.77 dBm. The Optical Rx Power value behaves similarly. If the Tx Power or the Rx Power is zero, then its dBm value is undefined and is shown as N/A (not applicable).
This example shows how to display detailed diagnostic monitoring data, including calibrated values, alarm and warning thresholds, A2D readouts, and alarm and warning flags. The A2D readouts are reported separately in parentheses only if they differ from the calibrated values:
Switch# show interfaces transceiver detail
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts), NA or N/A: not applicable.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
A2D readouts (if they differ), are reported in parentheses.
The threshold values are calibrated.
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Temperature Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius)
------- ------------------ ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi1/1 48.1 100.0 100.0 0.0 0.0
Gi1/2 34.9 100.0 100.0 0.0 0.0
Gi2/1 43.5 70.0 60.0 5.0 0.0
Gi2/2 39.1 70.0 60.0 5.0 0.0
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Voltage Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts)
------- --------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi1/1 3.30 6.50 6.50 N/A N/A
Gi1/2 3.30 6.50 6.50 N/A N/A
Gi2/1 5.03 5.50 5.25 4.75 4.50
Gi2/2 5.02 5.50 5.25 4.75 4.50
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Current Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (milliamperes) (mA) (mA) (mA) (mA)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi1/1 0.0 130.0 130.0 N/A N/A
Gi1/2 1.7 130.0 130.0 N/A N/A
Gi2/1 50.6 + 60.0 40.0 10.0 5.0
Gi2/2 25.8 60.0 40.0 10.0 5.0
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Transmit Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi1/1 8.1 ++ 8.1 8.1 N/A N/A
Gi1/2 -9.8 8.1 8.1 N/A N/A
Gi2/1 -16.7 (-13.0) -- 3.4 3.2 -0.3 -0.5
Gi2/2 0.8 ( 5.1) 3.4 3.2 -0.3 -0.5
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Receive Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi1/1 N/A 8.1 8.1 N/A N/A
Gi1/2 -30.9 8.1 8.1 N/A N/A
Gi2/1 N/A (-28.5) 5.9 -6.7 -28.5 -28.5
Gi2/2 N/A (-19.5) 5.9 -6.7 -28.5 -28.5
This example shows how to display the monitoring data for the interfaces that have transceivers installed on module 2:
Switch# show interfaces transceiver module 2
If device is externally calibrated, only calibrated values are printed.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
NA or N/A: not applicable, Tx: transmit, Rx: receive.
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts).
Temperature Voltage Current Tx Power Rx Power
Port (Celsius) (Volts) (mA) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------- ------- -------- -------- --------
Gi2/1 43.7 5.03 50.6 + -16.7 -- N/A
Gi2/2 39.2 5.02 25.7 0.8 N/A
This example shows how to display the detailed monitoring data for the interfaces that have transceivers installed on module 2:
Switch# show interfaces transceiver detail module 2
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts), NA or N/A: not applicable.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
A2D readouts (if they differ), are reported in parentheses.
The threshold values are calibrated.
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Temperature Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius)
------- ------------------ ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 43.5 70.0 60.0 5.0 0.0
Gi2/2 39.1 70.0 60.0 5.0 0.0
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Voltage Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts)
------- --------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 5.03 5.50 5.25 4.75 4.50
Gi2/2 5.02 5.50 5.25 4.75 4.50
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Current Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (milliamperes) (mA) (mA) (mA) (mA)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 50.6 + 60.0 40.0 10.0 5.0
Gi2/2 25.8 60.0 40.0 10.0 5.0
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Transmit Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 -16.7 (-13.0) -- 3.4 3.2 -0.3 -0.5
Gi2/2 0.8 ( 5.1) 3.4 3.2 -0.3 -0.5
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Receive Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 N/A (-28.5) 5.9 -6.7 -28.5 -28.5
Gi2/2 N/A (-19.5) 5.9 -6.7 -28.5 -28.5
This example shows how to display the monitoring data for the transceivers on interface Gi1/2:
Switch# show interfaces g1/2 transceiver
ITU Channel 23 (1558.98 nm),
Transceiver is externally calibrated.
If device is externally calibrated, only calibrated values are printed.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
NA or N/A: not applicable, Tx: transmit, Rx: receive.
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts).
Temperature Voltage Current Tx Power Rx Power
Port (Celsius) (Volts) (mA) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------- ------- -------- -------- --------
Gi2/1 43.7 5.03 50.6 + -16.7 -- N/A
Switch#
This example shows how to display detailed the monitoring data for the transceivers on interface Gi1/2:
Switch# show interfaces g1/2 transceiver detail
ITU Channel 23 (1558.98 nm),
Transceiver is externally calibrated.
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts), NA or N/A: not applicable.
++ : high alarm, + : high warning, - : low warning, -- : low alarm.
A2D readouts (if they differ), are reported in parentheses.
The threshold values are calibrated.
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Temperature Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius) (Celsius)
------- ------------------ ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 43.5 70.0 60.0 5.0 0.0
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Voltage Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts) (Volts)
------- --------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 5.03 5.50 5.25 4.75 4.50
High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Current Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (milliamperes) (mA) (mA) (mA) (mA)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 50.6 + 60.0 40.0 10.0 5.0
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Transmit Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 -16.7 (-13.0) -- 3.4 3.2 -0.3 -0.5
Optical High Alarm High Warn Low Warn Low Alarm
Receive Power Threshold Threshold Threshold Threshold
Port (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm) (dBm)
------- ----------------- ---------- --------- --------- ---------
Gi2/1 N/A (-28.5) 5.9 -6.7 -28.5 -28.5
Related Commands
show idprom
show interfaces status
show interfaces trunk
To display port and module interface-trunk information, use the show interfaces trunk command.
show interfaces trunk [module mod]
Syntax Description
module mod
|
(Optional) Limits the display to interfaces on the specified module; valid values are from 1 to 6.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you do not specify a keyword, only information for trunking ports is displayed.
Examples
This example shows how to display interface-trunk information for module 5:
Switch# show interfaces trunk module 5
Port Mode Encapsulation Status Native vlan
Fa5/1 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/2 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/3 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/4 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/5 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/6 off negotiate not-trunking 10
Fa5/7 off negotiate not-trunking 10
Fa5/8 off negotiate not-trunking 1
Fa5/9 desirable n-isl trunking 1
Fa5/10 desirable negotiate not-trunking 1
Fa5/11 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/12 routed negotiate routed 1
Fa5/48 routed negotiate routed 1
Port Vlans allowed on trunk
Port Vlans allowed and active in management domain
Fa5/9 1-6,10,20,50,100,152,200,300,303-305,349-351,400,500,521,524,570,801-8
Port Vlans in spanning tree forwarding state and not pruned
Fa5/9 1-6,10,20,50,100,152,200,300,303-305,349-351,400,500,521,524,570,801-8
This example shows how to display trunking information for active trunking ports:
Switch# show interfaces trunk
Port Mode Encapsulation Status Native vlan
Fa5/9 desirable n-isl trunking 1
Port Vlans allowed on trunk
Port Vlans allowed and active in management domain
Fa5/9 1-6,10,20,50,100,152,200,300,303-305,349-351,400,500,521,524,570,801-8
Port Vlans in spanning tree forwarding state and not pruned
Fa5/9 1-6,10,20,50,100,152,200,300,303-305,349-351,400,500,521,524,570,801-8
show ip arp inspection
To show the status of dynamic ARP inspection for a specific range of VLANs, use the show ip arp inspection command.
show ip arp inspection {[statistics] vlan vlan-range | interfaces [interface-name]}
Syntax Description
statistics
|
(Optional) Displays statistics for the following types of packets that have been processed by this feature: forwarded, dropped, MAC validation failure, and IP validation failure.
|
vlan vlan-range
|
(Optional) When used with the statistics keyword, displays the statistics for the selected range of VLANs. Without the statistics keyword, displays the configuration and operating state of DAI for the selected range of VLANs.
|
interfaces interface-name
|
(Optional) Displays the trust state and the rate limit of ARP packets for the provided interface. When the interface name is not specified, the command displays the trust state and rate limit for all applicable interfaces in the system.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the statistics of packets that have been processed by DAI for
VLAN 3:
Switch# show ip arp inspection statistics vlan 3
Vlan Forwarded Dropped DHCP Drops ACL Drops
---- --------- ------- ---------- ----------
Vlan DHCP Permits ACL Permits Source MAC Failures
---- ------------ ----------- -------------------
Vlan Dest MAC Failures IP Validation Failures
---- ----------------- ----------------------
This example shows how to display the statistics of packets that have been processed by DAI for all active VLANs:
Switch# show ip arp inspection statistics
Vlan Forwarded Dropped DHCP Drops ACL Drops
---- --------- ------- ---------- ----------
Vlan DHCP Permits ACL Permits Source MAC Failures
---- ------------ ----------- -------------------
Vlan Dest MAC Failures IP Validation Failures
---- ----------------- ----------------------
This example shows how to display the configuration and operating state of DAI for VLAN 1:
Switch# show ip arp inspection vlan 1
Source Mac Validation : Disabled
Destination Mac Validation : Disabled
IP Address Validation : Disabled
Vlan Configuration Operation ACL Match Static ACL
---- ------------- --------- --------- ----------
Vlan ACL Logging DHCP Logging
---- ----------- ------------
This example shows how to display the trust state of interface Fa6/3:
Switch# show ip arp inspection interfaces fastEthernet 6/3
Interface Trust State Rate (pps) Burst Interval
--------------- ----------- ---------- --------------
This example shows how to display the trust state of the interfaces on the switch:
Switch# show ip arp inspection interfaces
Interface Trust State Rate (pps)
--------------- ----------- ----------
Related Commands
arp access-list
clear ip arp inspection log
show ip arp inspection
show ip arp inspection log
To show the status of the log buffer, use the show ip arp inspection log command.
show ip arp inspection log
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(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the current contents of the log buffer before and after the buffers are cleared:
Switch# show ip arp inspection log
Total Log Buffer Size : 10
Syslog rate : 0 entries per 10 seconds.
Interface Vlan Sender MAC Sender IP Num of Pkts
--------------- ----- ----------------- --------------- -----------
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.2 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.3 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.4 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.5 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.6 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.7 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.8 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.9 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.10 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
Fa6/3 1 0002.0002.0002 1.1.1.11 1(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
-- -- -- -- 5(12:02:52 UTC Fri Apr 25 2003)
This example shows how to clear the buffer with the clear ip arp inspection log command:
Switch# clear ip arp inspection log
Switch# show ip arp inspection log
Total Log Buffer Size : 10
Syslog rate : 0 entries per 10 seconds.
No entries in log buffer.
Related Commands
arp access-list
clear ip arp inspection log
show ip cef vlan
To view IP CEF VLAN interface status and configuration information and display the prefixes for a specific interface, use the show ip cef vlan command.
show ip cef vlan vlan_num [detail]
Syntax Description
vlan_num
|
Number of the VLAN.
|
detail
|
(Optional) Displays detailed information.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the prefixes for a specific VLAN:
Switch# show ip cef vlan 1003
Prefix Next Hop Interface
0.0.0.0/0 172.20.52.1 FastEthernet3/3
10.7.0.0/16 172.20.52.1 FastEthernet3/3
10.16.18.0/23 172.20.52.1 FastEthernet3/3
This example shows how to display detailed IP CEF information for a specific VLAN:
Switch# 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
show ip dhcp snooping
To display the DHCP snooping configuration, use the show ip dhcp snooping command.
show ip dhcp snooping
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(12c)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping configuration:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping
Switch DHCP snooping is enabled
DHCP snooping is configured on following VLANs:
Insertion of option 82 is enabled
Interface Trusted Rate limit (pps)
-------------------- ------- ----------------
Related Commands
ip dhcp snooping
ip dhcp snooping information option
ip dhcp snooping limit rate
ip dhcp snooping trust
ip dhcp snooping vlan
show ip dhcp snooping binding
To display the DHCP snooping binding entries, use the show ip dhcp snooping binding command.
show ip dhcp snooping binding [ip-address] [mac-address] [vlan vlan_num]
[interface interface_num]
Syntax Description
ip-address
|
(Optional) IP address for the binding entries.
|
mac-address
|
(Optional) MAC address for the binding entries.
|
vlan vlan_num
|
(Optional) Specifies a VLAN.
|
interface interface_num
|
(Optional) Specifies an interface.
|
Defaults
If no argument is specified, the switch will display the entire DHCP snooping binding table.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
DHCP snooping is enabled on a VLAN only if both the global snooping and the VLAN snooping are enabled.
To configure a range of VLANs, use the optional last_vlan argument to specify the end of the VLAN range.
Examples
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries for a switch:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding
MacAddress IP Address Lease (seconds) Type VLAN Interface
----------- ----------- ---------------- ------------- ----- ------------
0000.0100.0201 10.0.0.1 1600 dhcp-snooping 100 FastEthernet3/1
This example shows how to display an IP address for DHCP snooping binding entries:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding 172.100.101.102
MacAddress IP Address Lease (seconds) Type VLAN Interface
----------- ----------- ---------------- ------------- ----- ------------
0000.0100.0201 172.100.101.102 1600 dhcp-snooping 100 FastEthernet3/1
This example shows how to display the MAC address for the DHCP snooping binding entries:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding 55.5.5.2 0002.b33f.3d5f
MacAddress IpAddress Lease(sec) Type VLAN Interface
------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------- ---- --------------------
00:02:B3:3F:3D:5F 55.5.5.2 492 dhcp-snooping 99 FastEthernet6/36
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries' MAC address for a specific VLAN:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding 55.5.5.2 0002.b33f.3d5f vlan 99
MacAddress IpAddress Lease(sec) Type VLAN Interface
------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------- ---- --------------------
00:02:B3:3F:3D:5F 55.5.5.2 479 dhcp-snooping 99 FastEthernet6/36
This example shows how to display the dynamic DHCP snooping binding entries:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding dynamic
MacAddress IP Address Lease (seconds) Type VLAN Interface
----------- ----------- ---------------- ------------ ----- ------------
0000.0100.0201 10.0.0.1 1600 dhcp-snooping 100 FastEthernet3/1
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries on VLAN 100:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding vlan 100'
MacAddress IP Address Lease (seconds) Type VLAN Interface
----------- ----------- ---------------- ------------ ----- ------------
0000.0100.0201 10.0.0.1 1600 dhcp-snooping 100 FastEthernet3/1
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries on Ethernet interface 0/1:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping binding interface FastEthernet3/1
MacAddress IP Address Lease (seconds) Type VLAN Interface
----------- ----------- ---------------- ------------ ----- ------------
0000.0100.0201 10.0.0.1 1600 dhcp-snooping 100 FastEthernet3/1
Table 2-15 describes the fields in the show ip dhcp snooping command output.
Table 2-15 show ip dhcp snooping Command Output
Field
|
Description
|
Mac Address
|
Client hardware MAC address.
|
IP Address
|
Client IP address assigned from the DHCP server.
|
Lease (seconds)
|
IP address lease time.
|
Type
|
Binding type; statically configured from CLI or dynamically learned.
|
VLAN
|
VLAN number of the client interface.
|
Interface
|
Interface that connects to the DHCP client host.
|
Related Commands
ip dhcp snooping information option
ip dhcp snooping limit rate
ip dhcp snooping trust
ip igmp snooping
ip igmp snooping vlan
show ip dhcp snooping database
To display the status of the DHCP snooping database agent, use the show ip dhcp snooping database command.
show ip dhcp snooping database [detail]
Syntax Description
detail
|
(Optional) Provides additional operating state and statistics information.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Added support of state and statistics information.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping database:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping database
Write delay Timer : 300 seconds
Abort Timer : 300 seconds
Delay Timer Expiry : Not Running
Abort Timer Expiry : Not Running
Last Succeded Time : None
Last Failed Reason : No failure recorded.
Total Attempts : 0 Startup Failures : 0
Successful Transfers : 0 Failed Transfers : 0
Successful Reads : 0 Failed Reads : 0
Successful Writes : 0 Failed Writes : 0
This example shows how to view additional operating statistics:
Switch# show ip dhcp snooping database detail
Agent URL : tftp://10.1.1.1/directory/file
Write delay Timer : 300 seconds
Abort Timer : 300 seconds
Delay Timer Expiry : 7 (00:00:07)
Abort Timer Expiry : Not Running
Last Succeded Time : None
Last Failed Time : 17:14:25 UTC Sat Jul 7 2001
Last Failed Reason : Unable to access URL.
Total Attempts : 21 Startup Failures : 0
Successful Transfers : 0 Failed Transfers : 21
Successful Reads : 0 Failed Reads : 0
Successful Writes : 0 Failed Writes : 21
First successful access: Read
Last ignored bindings counters :
Binding Collisions : 0 Expired leases : 0
Invalid interfaces : 0 Unsupported vlans : 0
Total ignored bindings counters:
Binding Collisions : 0 Expired leases : 0
Invalid interfaces : 0 Unsupported vlans : 0
Related Commands
ip dhcp snooping
ip dhcp snooping database
ip dhcp snooping information option
ip dhcp snooping limit rate
ip dhcp snooping trust
ip dhcp snooping vlan
show ip igmp interface
To view IP IGMP interface status and configuration information, use the show ip igmp interface command.
show ip igmp interface [FastEthernet slot/port | GigabitEthernet slot/port |
null interface-number | vlan vlan_id]
Syntax Description
FastEthernet slot/port
|
(Optional) Specifies the Fast Ethernet interface and the number of the slot and port.
|
GigabitEthernet slot/port
|
(Optional) Specifies the Gigabit Ethernet interface and the number of the slot and port; valid values are from 1 to 9.
|
null interface-number
|
(Optional) Specifies the null interface and the number of the interface; the only valid value is 0.
|
vlan vlan_id
|
(Optional) Specifies the VLAN and the number of 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
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Added support for extended VLAN addresses.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you omit the optional arguments, the show ip igmp interface command displays information about all interfaces.
Examples
This example shows how to view IGMP information for VLAN 200:
Switch# show ip igmp interface vlan 200
IGMP snooping is globally enabled
IGMP snooping is enabled on this Vlan
IGMP snooping immediate-leave is disabled on this Vlan
IGMP snooping mrouter learn mode is pim-dvmrp on this Vlan
IGMP snooping is running in IGMP-ONLY mode on this VLAN
Related Commands
clear ip igmp group
show ip igmp snooping mrouter
show ip igmp profile
To view all configured IGMP profiles or a specified IGMP profile, use the show ip igmp profile privileged EXEC command.
show ip igmp profile [profile number]
Syntax Description
profile number
|
(Optional) IGMP profile number to be displayed; valid ranges are from 1 to 4294967295.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(11b)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
If no profile number is entered, all IGMP profiles are displayed.
Examples
This example shows how to display IGMP profile 40:
Switch# show ip igmp profile 40
range 233.1.1.1 233.255.255.255
This example shows how to display all IGMP profiles:
Switch# show ip igmp profile
range 230.9.9.0 230.9.9.0
range 229.9.9.0 229.255.255.255
Related Commands
ip igmp profile
show ip igmp snooping
To display information on dynamically learned and manually configured VLAN switch interfaces, use the show ip igmp snooping command.
show ip igmp snooping [querier | groups | mrouter] [vlan vlan_id] a.b.c.d [summary | sources |
hosts] [count]
Syntax Description
querier
|
(Optional) Specifies that the display will contain IP address and version information.
|
groups
|
(Optional) Specifies that the display will list VLAN members sorted by group IP addresses.
|
mrouter
|
(Optional) Specifies that the display will contain information on dynamically learned and manually configured multicast switch interfaces.
|
vlan vlan_id
|
(Optional) Specifies a VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 1001 and from 1006 to 4094.
|
a.b.c.d
|
Group or multicast IP address.
|
summary
|
(Optional) Specifies a display of detailed information for a v2 or v3 group.
|
sources
|
(Optional) Specifies a list of the source IPs for the specified group.
|
hosts
|
(Optional) Specifies a list of the host IPs for the specified group.
|
count
|
(Optional) Specifies a display of the total number of group addresses learned by the system on a global or per-VLAN basis.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for extended addressing was added.
|
12.1(20)EW
|
Added support to display configuration state for IGMPv3 explicit host tracking.
|
Usage Guidelines
You can also use the show mac-address-table multicast command to display the 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 snooping command.
Examples
This example shows how to display the global snooping information on the switch:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping
Global IGMP Snooping configuration:
-----------------------------------
IGMPv3 snooping : Enabled
Report suppression : Enabled
TCN solicit query : Disabled
TCN flood query count : 2
IGMPv2 immediate leave : Disabled
Explicit host tracking : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode : pim-dvmrp
CGMP interoperability mode : IGMP_ONLY
IGMPv2 immediate leave : Disabled
Explicit host tracking : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode : pim-dvmrp
CGMP interoperability mode : IGMP_ONLY
This example shows how to display the snooping information on VLAN 2:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping vlan 2
Global IGMP Snooping configuration:
-----------------------------------
IGMPv3 snooping : Enabled
Report suppression : Enabled
TCN solicit query : Disabled
TCN flood query count : 2
IGMPv2 immediate leave : Disabled
Explicit host tracking : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode : pim-dvmrp
CGMP interoperability mode : IGMP_ONLY
This example shows how to display IGMP querier information for all VLANs on a switch:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping querier
Vlan IP Address IGMP Version Port
---------------------------------------------------
This example shows how to display IGMP querier information for VLAN 5 when running IGMPv2:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping querier vlan 5
This example shows how to display IGMP querier information for VLAN 5 when running IGMPv3:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping querier vlan 5
This example shows how to display snooping information for a specific group:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group
---------------------------------------------------------
This example shows how to display the group's host types and ports in VLAN 1:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 1
Vlan Group Host Type Ports
---------------------------------------------------------
1 229.2.3.4 v3 fa2/1 fa2/3
This example shows how to display the group's host types and ports in VLAN 1:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 10 226.6.6.7
---------------------------------------------------------
10 226.6.6.7 v3 Fa7/13, Fa7/14
This example shows how to display the current state of a group with respect to a source IP address:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 10 226.6.6.7 sources
Source information for group 226.6.6.7:
Timers: Expired sources are deleted on next IGMP General Query
SourceIP Expires Uptime Inc Hosts Exc Hosts
-------------------------------------------------------
2.0.0.1 00:03:04 00:03:48 2 0
2.0.0.2 00:03:04 00:02:07 2 0
This example shows how to display the current state of a group with respect to a host MAC address:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 10 226.6.6.7 hosts
IGMPv3 host information for group 226.6.6.7
Timers: Expired hosts are deleted on next IGMP General Query
Host (MAC/IP) Filter mode Expires Uptime # Sources
-------------------------------------------------------------
175.1.0.29 INCLUDE stopped 00:00:51 2
175.2.0.30 INCLUDE stopped 00:04:14 2
This example shows how to display summary information for a v3 group:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 10 226.6.6.7 summary
Group Address (Vlan 10) : 226.6.6.7
Member Ports : Fa7/13, Fa7/14
Reporters (Include/Exclude) : 2/0
This example shows how to display multicast router information for VLAN 1:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping mrouter vlan 1
-----+----------------------------------------
1 Gi1/1,Gi2/1,Fa3/48,Router
This example shows how to display the total number of group addresses learned by the system globally:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group count
Total number of groups: 54
This example shows how to display the total number of group addresses learned on VLAN 5:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping group vlan 5 count
Total number of groups: 30
Related Commands
ip igmp snooping
ip igmp snooping vlan immediate-leave
ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter
ip igmp snooping vlan static
show ip igmp interface
show ip igmp snooping mrouter
show mac-address-table multicast
show ip igmp snooping membership
To display host membership information, use the show ip igmp snooping membership command.
show ip igmp snooping membership [interface interface_num] [vlan vlan_id]
[reporter a.b.c.d] [source a.b.c.d group a.b.c.d]
Syntax Description
interface interface_num
|
(Optional) Displays IP address and version information of an interface.
|
vlan vlan_id
|
(Optional) Displays VLAN members sorted by group IP address of a VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 1001 and from 1006 to 4094.
|
reporter a.b.c.d
|
(Optional) Displays membership information for a specified reporter.
|
source a.b.c.d
|
(Optional) Specifies a reporter, source, or group IP address.
|
group a.b.c.d
|
(Optional) Displays all members of a channel (source, group), sorted by interface or VLAN.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(20)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
This command is valid only if explicit host tracking is enabled on the switch.
Examples
This example shows how to display host membership for interface gi4/1:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping membership interface gi4/1
Source/Group Interface Reporter Uptime Last-Join Last-Leave
40.40.40.2/224.10.10.10 Gi4/1 20.20.20 .20 00:23: 37 00:06: 50 00:20:30
40.40.40.4/224.10.10.10 Gi4/1 20.20.20 .20 00:39: 42 00:09:17 -
This example shows how to display host membership for VLAN 20 and group 224.10.10.10:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping membership vlan 20 source 40.40.40.2 group 224.10.10.10
Source/Group Interface Reporter Uptime Last-Join Last-Leave
40.40.40.2/224.10.10.10 Gi4/1 20.20.20 .20 00:23: 37 00:06: 50 00:20:30
This example shows how to display host membership information for VLAN 20 and to delete the explicit host tracking:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping membership vlan 20
Snooping Membership Summary for Vlan 20
------------------------------------------
Total number of channels:5
Source/Group Interface Reporter Uptime Last-Join/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
40.0.0.1/224.1.1.1 Fa7/37 0002.4ba0.a4f6 00:00:04 00:00:04 /
40.0.0.2/224.1.1.1 Fa7/37 0002.fd80.f770 00:00:17 00:00:17 /
40.0.0.3/224.1.1.1 Fa7/36 20.20.20.20 00:00:04 00:00:04 /
40.0.0.4/224.1.1.1 Fa7/35 20.20.20.210 00:00:17 00:00:17 /
40.0.0.5/224.1.1.1 Fa7/37 0002.fd80.f770 00:00:17 00:00:17 /
Switch# clear ip igmp snooping membership vlan 20
Related Commands
clear ip igmp snooping membership
ip igmp snooping vlan explicit-tracking
show ip igmp snooping vlan
show ip igmp snooping mrouter
To display information on the dynamically learned and manually configured multicast switch 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 1001 and from 1006 to 4094.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Added support for extended VLAN addresses.
|
Usage Guidelines
You can also use the show mac-address-table multicast command to display entries in the MAC address table for a VLAN that has IGMP snooping enabled.
You can display IGMP snooping information for the VLAN interfaces by entering the show ip igmp interface vlan vlan-num command.
Examples
This example shows how to display snooping information for a specific VLAN:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping mrouter vlan 1
-----+----------------------------------------
1 Gi1/1,Gi2/1,Fa3/48,Switch
Related Commands
ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter
show ip igmp interface
show mac-address-table multicast
show ip igmp snooping vlan
To display information on the dynamically learned and manually configured VLAN switch interfaces, use the show ip igmp snooping vlan command.
show ip igmp snooping vlan vlan_num
Syntax Description
vlan_num
|
Number of the VLAN; valid values are from 1 to 1001 and from 1006 to 4094.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for extended addressing was added.
|
Usage Guidelines
You can also use the show mac-address-table multicast command to display the entries in the MAC address table for a VLAN that has IGMP snooping enabled.
Examples
This example shows how to display snooping information for a specific VLAN:
Switch# show ip igmp snooping vlan 2
IGMP snooping is globally enabled
IGMP snooping TCN solicit query is globally enabled
IGMP snooping global TCN flood query count is 2
IGMP snooping is enabled on this Vlan
IGMP snooping immediate-leave is disabled on this Vlan
IGMP snooping mrouter learn mode is pim-dvmrp on this Vlan
IGMP snooping is running in IGMP_ONLY mode on this Vlan
Related Commands
ip igmp snooping
ip igmp snooping vlan immediate-leave
ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter
ip igmp snooping vlan static
show ip igmp interface
show ip igmp snooping mrouter
show mac-address-table multicast
show ip mfib
To display all active Multicast Forwarding Information Base (MFIB) routes, use the show ip mfib command.
show ip mfib [all | counters | log [n]]
Syntax Description
all
|
(Optional) Specifies all routes in the MFIB, including those routes that are used to accelerate fast switching but that are not necessarily in the upper-layer routing protocol table.
|
counters
|
(Optional) Specifies the counts of MFIB-related events. Only nonzero counters are shown.
|
log
|
(Optional) Specifies a log of the most recent number of MFIB-related events. The most recent event is first.
|
n
|
(Optional) Number of events.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
The MFIB table contains a set of IP multicast routes; each route in the MFIB table contains several flags that associate to the route.
The route flags indicate how a packet that matches a route is forwarded. For example, the IC flag on an MFIB route indicates that some process on the switch needs to receive a copy of the packet. These flags are associated with MFIB routes:
•
Internal Copy (IC) flag—Set on a route when a process on the switch needs to receive a copy of all packets matching the specified route.
•
Signaling (S) flag—Set on a route when a switch process needs notification that a packet matching the route is received. In the expected behavior, the protocol code updates the MFIB state in response to having received a packet on a signaling interface.
•
Connected (C) flag—When set on a route, the C flag has the same meaning as the S flag, except that the C flag indicates that only packets sent by directly connected hosts to the route should be signaled to a protocol process.
A route can also have a set of flags associated with one or more interfaces. For an (S,G) route, the flags on interface 1 indicate how the ingress packets should be treated and whether packets matching the route should be forwarded onto interface 1. These per-interface flags are associated with the MFIB routes:
•
Accepting (A)—Set on the RPF interface when a packet that arrives on the interface and that is marked as Accepting (A) is forwarded to all Forwarding (F) interfaces.
•
Forwarding (F)—Used with the A flag as described above. The set of forwarding interfaces together form a multicast olist or output interface list.
•
Signaling (S)—Set on an interface when a multicast routing protocol process in Cisco IOS needs to be notified of ingress packets on that interface.
•
Not Platform (NP) fast-switched—Used with the F flag. A forwarding interface is also marked as Not Platform fast-switched whenever that output interface cannot be fast-switched by the platform hardware and requires software forwarding.
For example, the Catalyst 4006 switch with Supervisor Engine III cannot switch tunnel interfaces in hardware so these interfaces are marked with the NP flag. When an NP interface is associated with a route, a copy of every ingress packet arriving on an Accepting interface is sent to the switch software forwarding path for software replication and then forwarded to the NP interface.
Examples
This example shows how to display all active MFIB routes:
IP Multicast Forwarding Information Base
Entry Flags: C - Directly Connected, S - Signal,
Interface Flags: A - Accept, F - Forward, NS - Signal,
NP - Not platform switched
Packets: Fast/Partial/Slow Bytes: Fast/Partial/Slow:
(171.69.10.13, 224.0.1.40), flags (IC)
Packets: 2292/2292/0, Bytes: 518803/0/518803
(*, 224.0.1.60), flags ()
Packets: 2292/0/0, Bytes: 518803/0/0
(*, 224.0.1.75), flags ()
(10.34.2.92, 239.192.128.80), flags ()
Packets: 24579/100/0, 2113788/15000/0 bytes
(*, 239.193.100.70), flags ()
Packets: 1/0/0, 1500/0/0 bytes
Related Commands
clear ip mfib counters
show ip mfib fastdrop
To show all currently active fast-drop entries and to show whether fast drop is enabled, use the show ip mfib fastdrop command.
show ip mfib fastdrop
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)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display all currently active fast-drop entries and whether fast drop is enabled.
Switch# show ip mfib fasttdrop
MFIB fastdrop is enabled.
(10.0.0.1, 224.1.2.3, Vlan9 ) 00:01:32
(10.1.0.2, 224.1.2.3, Vlan9 ) 00:02:30
(1.2.3.4, 225.6.7.8, Vlan3) 00:01:50
Related Commands
clear ip mfib fastdrop
show ip mroute
To display IP multicast routing table information, use the show ip mroute command.
show ip mroute [interface_type slot/port | host_name | host_address [source] | active [kbps |
interface_type num] | count | pruned | static | summary]
Syntax Description
interface_type slot/port
|
(Optional) Interface type and number of the slot and port; valid values for interface type are FastEthernet, GigabitEthernet, null, and vlan.
|
host_name
|
(Optional) Name or IP address as defined in the DNS hosts table.
|
host_address source
|
(Optional) IP address or name of a multicast source.
|
active
|
(Optional) Displays the rate that active sources are sending to multicast groups.
|
kbps interface_type num
|
(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
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(8a)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you omit all the optional arguments and keywords, the show ip mroute command displays all the entries in the IP multicast routing table.
The show ip mroute active kbps command displays all the sources sending at a rate greater than or equal to kbps.
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" refers to 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 (through Reverse Path Forwarding (RPF).
Examples
This example shows how to display all the entries in the IP multicast routing table:
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
Outgoing interface flags:H - Hardware switched
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
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
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
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
This example shows how to display the rate that the active sources are sending to the multicast groups and to display only the active sources that are sending at greater than the default rate:
Switch# 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)
This example shows how to display route and packet count information:
Switch# show ip mroute count
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
This example shows how to display summary information:
Switch# 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
Outgoing interface flags: H - Hardware switched
Interface state: Interface, Next-Hop or VCD, State/Mode
Table 2-16 describes the fields shown in the output.
Table 2-16 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
|
Switch 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 the (S,G) entry; is the (S,G) entry pointing toward the RP. The R - Rp-bit set is typically a prune state along the shared tree for a particular source.
|
F - Register flag
|
Status of the software; indicates if the software is registered for a multicast source.
|
T - SPT-bit set
|
Status of the packets; indicates if the packets 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 switch 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 switch 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 switch 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 switch immediately switches to the shortest-path tree when traffic from a new source is received.
|
Outgoing interface flag:
|
Information about the outgoing entry.
|
H - Hardware switched
|
Entry is hardware switched.
|
Timer:
|
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 switch followed by the IP address of the multicast group. An asterisk (*) in place of the source switch 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) 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 switch. For switches 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 switch to the source. "Tunneling" indicates that this switch 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 downstream neighbor's IP address. VCD specifies the virtual circuit descriptor number. VCD0 indicates that the group is using the static-map virtual circuit.
|
Forward/Dense
|
Status of the packets; indicates if they are they 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 (refer to Cisco IOS documentation)
ip pim (refer to Cisco IOS documentation)
show ip source binding
To display IP source bindings that are configured on the system, use the show ip source binding EXEC command.
show ip source binding [ip-address] [mac-address] [dhcp-snooping | static] [vlan vlan-id]
[interface interface-name]
Syntax Description
ip-address
|
(Optional) Binding IP address.
|
mac-address
|
(Optional) Binding MAC address.
|
dhcp-snooping
|
(Optional) DHCP-snooping type binding.
|
static
|
(Optional) Statically configured binding.
|
vlan vlan-id
|
(Optional) VLAN number.
|
interface interface-name
|
(Optional) Binding interface.
|
Defaults
Displays both static and DHCP snooping bindings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
This command was first introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
The optional parameters filter the display output result.
Examples
This example shows how to display the IP source bindings:
Switch# show ip source binding
MacAddress IpAddress Lease(sec) Type VLAN Interface
------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------- ---- --------------------
00:00:00:0A:00:0B 11.0.0.1 infinite static 10 FastEthernet6/10
This example shows how to display the static IP binding entry of IP address 11.0.01:
Switch# show ip source binding 11.0.0.1 0000.000A.000B static vlan 10 interface Fa6/10
show ip source binding 11.0.0.1 0000.000A.000B static vlan 10 interface Fa6/10
MacAddress IpAddress Lease(sec) Type VLAN Interface
------------------ --------------- ---------- ------------- ---- --------------------
00:00:00:0A:00:0B 11.0.0.1 infinite static 10 FastEthernet6/10
Switch#
Related Commands
ip source binding
show ip verify source
To display the IP source guard configuration and filters on a particular interface, use the show ip verify source command.
show ip verify source [interface interface_num]
Syntax Description
interface interface_num
|
(Optional) Specifies an interface.
|
Defaults
This command has no default settings.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(19)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
These examples show how to display the IP source guard configuration and filters on a particular interface with the show ip verify source interface command:
•
This output appears when DHCP snooping is enabled on VLANs 10-20, interface fa6/1 has IP source filter mode that is configured as IP, and an existing IP address binding 10.0.0.1 is on VLAN 10:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/1 ip active 10.0.0.1 10
fa6/1 ip active deny-all 11-20
Note
The second entry shows that a default PVACL (deny all IP traffic) is installed on the port for those snooping-enabled VLANs that do not have a valid IP source binding.
•
This output appears when you enter the show ip verify source interface fa6/2 command and DHCP snooping is enabled on VLANs 10-20, interface fa6/1 has IP source filter mode that is configured as IP, and there is an existing IP address binding 10.0.0.1 on VLAN 10:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/2 ip inactive-trust-port
•
This output appears when you enter the show ip verify source interface fa6/3 command and the interface fa6/3 does not have a VLAN enabled for DHCP snooping:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/3 ip inactive-no-snooping-vlan
•
This output appears when you enter the show ip verify source interface fa6/4 command and the interface fa6/4 has an IP source filter mode that is configured as IP MAC and the existing IP MAC that binds 10.0.0.2/aaaa.bbbb.cccc on VLAN 10 and 11.0.0.1/aaaa.bbbb.cccd on VLAN 11:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/4 ip-mac active 10.0.0.2 aaaa.bbbb.cccc 10
fa6/4 ip-mac active 11.0.0.1 aaaa.bbbb.cccd 11
fa6/4 ip-mac active deny-all deny-all 12-20
•
This output appears when you enter the show ip verify source interface fa6/5 command and the interface fa6/5 has IP source filter mode that is configured as IP MAC and existing IP MAC binding 10.0.0.3/aaaa.bbbb.ccce on VLAN 10, but port security is not enabled on fa6/5:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/5 ip-mac active 10.0.0.3 permit-all 10
fa6/5 ip-mac active deny-all permit-all 11-20
Note
Enable port security first because the DHCP security MAC filter cannot apply to the port or VLAN.
•
This output appears when you enter the show ip verify source interface fa6/6 command and the interface fa6/6 does not have IP source filter mode that is configured:
DHCP security is not configured on the interface fa6/6.
This example shows how to display all the interfaces on the switch that have DHCP snooping security enabled with the show ip verify source command.
The output is an accumulation of per-interface show CLIs:
Interface Filter-type Filter-mode IP-address Mac-address Vlan
--------- ----------- ----------- --------------- -------------- ---------
fa6/1 ip active 10.0.0.1 10
fa6/1 ip active deny-all 11-20
fa6/2 ip inactive-trust-port
fa6/3 ip inactive-no-snooping-vlan
fa6/4 ip-mac active 10.0.0.2 aaaa.bbbb.cccc 10
fa6/4 ip-mac active 11.0.0.1 aaaa.bbbb.cccd 11
fa6/4 ip-mac active deny-all deny-all 12-20
fa6/5 ip-mac active 10.0.0.3 permit-all 10
fa6/5 ip-mac active deny-all permit-all 11-20
Related Commands
ip dhcp snooping information option
ip dhcp snooping limit rate
ip dhcp snooping trust
ip igmp snooping
ip igmp snooping vlan
ip source binding
ip verify source vlan dhcp-snooping
show ip source binding
show ipc
To display IPC information, use the show ipc command.
show ipc {nodes | ports | queue | status}
Syntax Description
nodes
|
Displays the participating nodes.
|
ports
|
Displays the local IPC ports.
|
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
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(12c)EW
|
Support for this command was introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Examples
This example shows how to display the participating nodes:
There are 3 nodes in this IPC realm.
10000 Local IPC Master 0 0
2010000 Local GALIOS IPC:Card 1 0 0
2020000 Ethernet GALIOS IPC:Card 2 12 26
This example shows how to display the local IPC ports:
There are 11 ports defined.
Port ID Type Name (current/peak/total)
10000.1 unicast IPC Master:Zone
10000.2 unicast IPC Master:Echo
10000.3 unicast IPC Master:Control
10000.4 unicast Remote TTY Server Port
10000.5 unicast GALIOS RF :Active
index = 0 seat_id = 0x2020000 last sent = 0 heard = 1635 0/1/1635
10000.6 unicast GALIOS RED:Active
index = 0 seat_id = 0x2020000 last sent = 0 heard = 2 0/1/2
2020000.3 unicast GALIOS IPC:Card 2:Control
2020000.4 unicast GALIOS RFS :Standby
2020000.5 unicast Slave: Remote TTY Client Port
2020000.6 unicast GALIOS RF :Standby
2020000.7 unicast GALIOS RED:Standby
RPC packets: current/peak/total
This example shows how to display the contents of the IPC retransmission queue:
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for acknowledgement in the transmit queue.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for a response.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for additional fragments.
There are 0 IPC messages currently on the IPC inboundQ.
There are 0 messages currently in use by the system.
This example shows how to display the status of the local IPC server:
This processor is the IPC master server.
6000 IPC message headers in cache
3363 messages in, 1680 out, 1660 delivered to local port,
1686 acknowledgements received, 1675 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 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, 1 failed opens, 0 hardware errors
No regular dropping of IPC output packets for test purposes
show l2protocol-tunnel
To display information about the Layer 2 protocol tunnel ports, use the show l2protocol-tunnel command. This command displays information for the interfaces with protocol tunneling enabled.
show l2protocol-tunnel [interface interface-id] [[summary] | {begin | exclude | include}
expression]
Syntax Description
interface interface-id
|
(Optional) Specifies the interface for which protocol tunneling information appears. Valid interfaces are physical ports and port channels; the port channel range is 1 to 64.
|
summary
|
(Optional) Displays only Layer 2 protocol summary information.
|
begin
|
(Optional) Displays information beginning with the line that matches the expression.
|
exclude
|
(Optional) Displays information that excludes lines that match the expression.
|
include
|
(Optional) Displays the lines that match the specified expression.
|
expression
|
(Optional) Expression in the output to use as a reference point.
|
Command Modes
User EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.2(18)EW
|
This command was first introduced on the Catalyst 4500 series switch.
|
Usage Guidelines
After enabling Layer 2 protocol tunneling on an access or 802.1Q tunnel port with the l2protocol-tunnel command, you can configure some or all of these parameters:
•
Protocol type to be tunneled
•
Shutdown threshold
•
Drop threshold
If you enter the show l2protocol-tunnel [interface interface-id] command, only information about the active ports on which all the parameters are configured appears.
If you enter the show l2protocol-tunnel summary command, only information about the active ports on which some or all of the parameters are configured appears.
Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.
Examples
This is an example of output from the show l2protocol-tunnel command:
Switch> show l2protocol-tunnel
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Port Protocol Shutdown Drop Encapsulation Decapsulation Drop
Threshold Threshold Counter Counter Counter
------- -------- --------- --------- ------------- ------------- -------------
Fa0/10 --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
stp ---- ---- 9847 1866 0
Fa0/11 cdp 1100 ---- 2356 2350 0
Fa0/12 cdp ---- ---- 2356 0 0
Fa0/13 cdp ---- ---- 2356 0 0
This is an example of output from the show l2protocol-tunnel summary command:
Switch> show l2protocol-tunnel summary
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Port Protocol Shutdown Drop Status
(cdp/stp/vtp) (cdp/stp/vtp)