Cisco Virtual Security Gateway Show Commands
This chapter provides information about Cisco Virtual Security Gateway (VSG) show commands.
show aaa
To display information about authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA), use the show aaa command.
show aaa [ accounting | authentication | authorization | groups | users ]
Syntax Description
accounting |
(Optional) Displays the accounting configuration. |
authentication |
(Optional) Displays the authentication configuration. |
authorization |
(Optional) Displays the authorization configuration. |
groups |
(Optional) Displays configured groups. |
users |
(Optional) Displays remotely authenticated users. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show aaa command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the AAA configuration:
vsg# show aaa authentication
Related Commands
|
|
password |
Configures the password. |
show ac-driver
To display application container statistics, use the show ac-driver command.
show ac-driver statistics
Syntax Description
statistics |
Displays application container statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(3.1) |
The output of the show ac-driver command was changed to show the new application container statistics. |
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show ac-driver command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display application container statistics:
vsg# show ac-driver statistics
Rcvd Total 5510 Buffers in Use 3188
Rcvd vPath L2 Pkts 1140 Rcvd vPath IPV4 Pkts 0
Rcvd VPath Pkts 1140 Sent to VPath 1140
Sent to Service-Path 1140 Sent to Control-Path 4370
Non-vPath LLC 0 Non-vPath OUI 0
Non-vPath IPV4 0 Non-vPath IPV4 UDP 0
Service-Path not Inited 0 Service-Path Down 0
Rcvd Bad Descriptor 0 Send to Service-Path Err 0
Packet Offset Err 0 Send Bad Descriptor 0
Related Commands
|
|
show vsg |
Displays information about a Cisco VSG. |
show accounting
To display the accounting log, use the show accounting command.
show accounting log [ start-time year month day time end-time year month day time ]
Syntax Description
log |
Displays the accounting log. |
start-time |
(Optional) Displays the date in the log the display will start. |
year month day time |
(Optional) Year, day and time. The range for year is from 1970 to 2030, and is in YYYY format. The values for month are Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, or Dec. The range for day is from 1 to 31, and is in dd format. time is in HH:MM:SS. |
end-time |
(Optional) Displays the date in the log the display will end. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show accounting command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl - C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display the accounting log:
Fri Jan 21 17:19:35 2011:update:171.69.17.61@pts/0:admin:dir (SUCCESS)
Fri Jan 21 17:23:36 2011:update:10.193.73.130@ssh.3115:vsnbetauser:test vnsp sp1
Fri Jan 21 17:24:04 2011:update:10.193.73.130@ssh.3120:vsnbetauser:test vnsp sp1
Mon Jan 24 12:50:23 2011:start:171.70.216.167@pts/1:admin:
Mon Jan 24 12:52:59 2011:update:171.70.216.167@pts/1:admin:configure (SUCCESS)
Mon Jan 24 12:55:46 2011:stop:171.70.216.167@pts/1:admin:shell terminated gracef
Wed Feb 2 13:56:54 2011:start:171.70.225.85@pts/2:admin:
Wed Feb 2 14:20:41 2011:stop:171.70.225.85@pts/2:admin:shell terminated because
Wed Feb 2 14:32:19 2011:start:171.70.225.85@pts/3:admin:
Wed Feb 2 14:39:48 2011:stop:171.70.225.85@pts/3:admin:shell terminated because
Fri Feb 4 12:16:43 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/4:admin:
Fri Feb 4 12:17:11 2011:update:171.71.29.84@pts/4:admin:configure (SUCCESS)
Fri Feb 4 12:18:22 2011:update:171.71.29.84@pts/4:admin:configure terminal ; nsc-policy-agent (SUCCESS)
Fri Feb 4 12:20:41 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/4:admin:shell terminated because
Fri Feb 4 14:22:18 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/5:admin:
Fri Feb 4 14:23:05 2011:update:171.71.29.84@pts/5:admin:configure (SUCCESS)
Fri Feb 4 15:33:06 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/5:admin:shell terminated because
Fri Feb 4 17:05:05 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/6:admin:
Fri Feb 4 18:25:32 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/6:admin:shell terminated because
Mon Feb 7 14:12:19 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/7:admin:
Mon Feb 7 15:51:10 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/7:admin:shell terminated because
Mon Feb 7 16:30:10 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/8:admin:
Mon Feb 7 19:11:13 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/8:admin:shell terminated because
Wed Feb 9 14:43:26 2011:start:10.21.84.66@pts/9:admin:
Wed Feb 9 17:43:30 2011:stop:10.21.84.66@pts/9:admin:shell terminated because o
Wed Feb 9 18:13:10 2011:start:10.21.84.66@pts/10:admin:
Wed Feb 9 18:40:00 2011:update:10.21.84.66@pts/10:admin:configure (SUCCESS)
Wed Feb 9 19:50:37 2011:start:10.21.84.66@pts/11:admin:
Wed Feb 9 20:49:00 2011:stop:10.21.84.66@pts/10:admin:shell terminated because
Wed Feb 9 22:03:36 2011:stop:10.21.84.66@pts/11:admin:shell terminated because
Thu Feb 10 18:41:45 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/12:admin:
Thu Feb 10 18:50:50 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/12:admin:shell terminated because
Fri Feb 11 12:09:57 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/13:admin:
Fri Feb 11 16:55:21 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/13:admin:shell terminated because
Fri Feb 11 18:19:49 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/14:admin:
Fri Feb 11 18:55:54 2011:stop:171.71.29.84@pts/14:admin:shell terminated because
Mon Feb 14 13:35:27 2011:start:171.71.29.84@pts/15:admin:
Related Commands
|
|
sh ow logging |
Displays the logging configuration and the contents of the log file. |
show banner
To display the banner, use the show banner command.
show banner motd
Syntax Description
motd |
Displays the message of the day. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show banner command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the banner:
Related Commands
|
|
banner |
Creates a banner message. |
show boot
To display boot variables, use the show boot command.
show boot [ auto-copy | module | sup-1 | sup-2 | variables ]
Syntax Description
auto-copy |
(Optional) Displays whether auto copy is enabled or disabled. |
module |
(Optional) Displays the boot variables for a specific module or all modules. |
sup-1 |
(Optional) Displays the current and next load boot variables for supervisor 1. |
sup-2 |
(Optional) Displays the current and next load boot variables for supervisor 2. |
variables |
(Optional) Displays a list of boot variables. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show boot command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display boot variables:
kickstart variable = bootflash:/ks.bin
system variable = bootflash:/sys.bin
kickstart variable = bootflash:/ks.bin
system variable = bootflash:/sys.bin
No module boot variable set
Boot Variables on next reload:
kickstart variable = bootflash:/ks.bin
system variable = bootflash:/sys.bin
kickstart variable = bootflash:/ks.bin
system variable = bootflash:/sys.bin
No module boot variable set
Related Commands
|
|
boot |
Creates boot variables. |
show cdp
To display Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) information, use the show cdp command.
show cdp { all | entry | global | interface | internal | neighbors | traffic }
Syntax Description
all |
Displays all interfaces in the CDP database. |
entry |
Displays CDP entries in the CDP database. |
global |
Displays global CDP information. |
interface |
Displays CDP information for an interface. |
internal |
Displays private memory statistics for the UUID. |
neighbors |
Displays CDP neighbors. |
traffic |
Displays CDP traffic statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show cdp command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display all interfaces in the CDP database :
Interface Index :83886080
Interface Index :117440512
Related Commands
|
|
cdp |
Configures CDP parameters. |
show cli
To display command-line interface (CLI) information, use the show cli command.
show cli { alias | dynamic | history | interface | internal | list | syntax | variables }
Syntax Description
alias |
Displays the CLI alias. |
dynamic |
Display the current range of dynamic parameters. |
history |
Displays the CLI command history. |
interface |
Displays the CLI interface table. |
internal |
Displays the CLI statistics. |
list |
Displays the CLI command syntax. |
syntax |
Displays the Extended Backus–Naur Form (EBNF) syntax of all commands. |
variables |
Displays the CLI variables. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show cli command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you enter a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display CLI variables:
TIMESTAMP="2011-02-14-17.33.37"
Related Commands
|
|
cli var |
Defines CLI variables. |
show clock
To display the clock, use the show clock command.
show clock [ detail ]
Syntax Description
detail |
(Optional) Displays the day, the time, and the year. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show clock command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the clock:
Mon Feb 14 17:47:44 UTC 2011
Related Commands
|
|
clock |
Manages the system clock. |
show copyright
To display copyright information, use the show copyright command.
show copyright
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show copyright command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display copyright information:
Cisco Nexus Operating System (NX-OS) Software
TAC support: http://www.cisco.com/tac
Copyright (c) 2002-2011, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
The copyrights to certain works contained in this software are
owned by other third parties and used and distributed under
license. Certain components of this software are licensed under
the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2.0 or the GNU
Lesser General Public License (LGPL) Version 2.1. A copy of each
such license is available at
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.php and
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php
Related Commands
|
|
show version build-info |
Displays build information. |
show cores
To display all core dumps, use the show cores command.
show cores
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show cores command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display all core dumps:
Related Commands
|
|
show event-log |
Displays the event log. |
show debug
To show debug flags, use the show debug command.
show debug [ aaa | arp | ascii-cfg | bootvar | capability | cdp | cert-enroll | clis | core | ethpm | evmc | fm | fs-daemon | igmp | im | ip | ipconf | ipv6 | kadb | klm-rswem | logfile | module | monitor | msp | mvsh | ntp | platform | plugin | port-channel | redundancy | res_mgr | scheduler | security | snmp | system | tcap | ttyd | vdc | vlan | nsc | nsc-pa | vsh | vshd | xml ]
Syntax Description
aaa |
(Optional) Displays AAA debugging flags. |
arp |
(Optional) Displays ARP debugging flags. |
ascii-cfg |
(Optional) Displays ASCII-CFG debugging flags. |
bootvar |
(Optional) Displays boot variables debugging flags. |
capability |
(Optional) Displays capability debugging flags. |
cdp |
(Optional) Displays CDP debugging flags. |
cert-enroll |
(Optional) Displays certificate enrollment debugging flags. |
clis |
(Optional) Displays CLI debugging flags. |
core |
(Optional) Displays core daemon debugging flags. |
ethpm |
(Optional) Displays ETHPM debugging flags. |
evmc |
(Optional) Displays EVMC debugging flags. |
fm |
(Optional) Displays feature manager debugging flags. |
fs-daemon |
(Optional) Displays FS daemon debugging flags. |
igmp |
(Optional) Displays PIM debugging flags. |
im |
(Optional) Displays IM debugging flags. |
ip |
(Optional) Displays IP information. |
ipconf |
(Optional) Displays IPCONF debugging flags. |
ipv6 |
(Optional) Displays IPv6 information. |
kadb |
(Optional) Displays kernel ADB debugging flags. |
klm-rwsem |
(Optional) Displays RWSEM driver debugging flags. |
logfile |
(Optional) Displays the log file. |
module |
(Optional) Displays module debugging flags. |
monitor |
(Optional) Displays Ethernet Span debugging flags. |
msp |
(Optional) Displays MSP debugging flags. |
mvsh |
(Optional) Displays MVSH debugging flags. |
ntp |
(Optional) Displays NTP debugging flags. |
platform |
(Optional) Displays platform manager debugging flags. |
plugin |
(Optional) Displays plugin debugging flags. |
port-channel |
(Optional) Displays port-channel debugging flags. |
redundancy |
(Optional) Displays redundancy driver debugging flags. |
res_mgr |
(Optional) Displays resource manager debugging flags. |
scheduler |
(Optional) Displays scheduler debugging flags. |
security |
(Optional) Displays security debugging flags. |
snmp |
(Optional) Displays SNMP server debugging flags. |
system |
(Optional) Displays system debugging flags. |
tcap |
(Optional) Displays exception logger debugging flags. |
ttyd |
(Optional) Displays TTYD debugging flags. |
vdc |
(Optional) Displays VDC manager debugging flags. |
vlan |
(Optional) Displays VLAN manager debugging flags. |
nsc |
(Optional) Displays NSC debugging flags. |
nsc-pa |
(Optional) Displays NSC PA debugging flags. |
vsh |
(Optional) Displays VSH debugging flags. |
vshd |
(Optional) Displays VSHD debugging flags. |
xml |
(Optional) Displays XML debugging flags. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show debug command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display AAA debug flags:
Related Commands
|
|
show debug-filter |
Displays debugging filters. |
show debug-filter
To display debug filters, use the show debug-filter command.
show debug-filter { all | arp | igmp | ip | ipv6 }
Syntax Description
all |
Displays all debugs filters. |
arp |
Displays Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) debug filters. |
igmp |
Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) debug filters. |
ip |
Displays IP information. |
ipv6 |
Displays IPv6 information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show debug-filter command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display debug filters:
vsg# show debug-filter all
Related Commands
|
|
show debug |
Displays debugging flags. |
show environment
To display information about the system environment, use the show environment command.
show environment [ clock | fan | power | temperature ]
Syntax Description
clock |
(Optional) Displays clock information. |
fan |
(Optional) Displays fan information. |
power |
(Optional) Displays power capacity and power distribution information. |
temperature |
(Optional) Displays temperature sensor information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show environment command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about the system fan:
vsg# show environment fan
------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------
Fan Air Filter : NotSupported
Related Commands
|
|
show clock |
Displays the system clock. |
show event manager internal
To display event manager events, use the show event manager internal command.
show event manager internal [ evmc | mvsh | errors ]
Syntax Description
evmc |
(Optional) Displays event manager events. |
mvsh |
(Optional) Displays memory allocation statistics. |
errors |
(Optional) Displays the error log. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show event manager command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display event manager errors:
vsg# show event manager internal errors
1) Event:E_DEBUG, length:253, at 232142 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:20:07 2011
[100] fu_sdb_handle_update: validation fail,
fu_is_state_active = 1,
fu_is_sync_pss_to_standby_enabled = 0,
mts_sync_event_get(mts_msg) = 0,
2) Event:E_DEBUG, length:43, at 232138 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:20:07 2011
[100] fu_sdb_handle_update: validation fail
3) Event:E_DEBUG, length:55, at 232136 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:20:07 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Set of checks failed
4) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971337 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:20:02 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
5) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971525 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:57 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
6) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971719 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:52 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
7) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971918 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:47 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
8) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971103 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:42 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
9) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971307 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:37 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
10) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971524 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:32 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
11) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971693 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:27 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
12) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971886 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:22 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
13) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971094 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:17 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
14) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971275 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:12 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
15) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971494 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:07 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
16) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971702 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:19:02 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
17) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971921 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:18:57 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
18) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971218 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:18:52 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
19) Event:E_DEBUG, length:58, at 971289 usecs after Wed Feb 16 15:18:47 2011
[100] fu_sync_pss_to_standby_apply:Input event not MTS msg
Related Commands
|
|
show event-log |
Displays the event log. |
show event-log
To display the event log, use the show event-log command.
show event-lo g all
Syntax Description
all |
Displays the event log. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show event-log command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display the event log:
Related Commands
|
|
show event manager internal |
Displays the event manager. |
show feature
To display system features, use the show feature command.
show feature
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show feature command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display system features:
Feature Name Instance State
-------------------- -------- --------
port-profile-roles 1 disabled
Related Commands
|
|
show http-server |
Displays the status of the HTTP server. |
show file
To confirm a directory’s existence, use the show file command.
show file { bootflash: | debug: | modflash: | volatile: }
Syntax Description
bootflash: |
Displays the bootflash directory. |
debug: |
Displays the debug directory. |
modflash: |
Displays the modflash directory. |
volatile: |
Displays the volatile directory. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show file command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to confirm the existence of the bootflash directory:
vsg# show file bootflash:
/bin/showfile: /bootflash/: Is a directory
Related Commands
|
|
pwd |
Displays the current directory. |
show hardware
To display hardware statistics, use the show hardware command.
show hardware [ capacity | internal | stats ]
Syntax Description
capacity |
(Optional) Displays usage levels. |
internal |
(Optional) Displays internal hardware information. |
stats |
(Optional) Displays hardware statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show hardware command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display management 0 port statistics:
vsg# show hardware internal mgmt0 stats
eth1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:50:56:BB:00:38
inet addr:10.193.73.138 Bcast:10.193.79.255 Mask:255.255.248.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:1193889201 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:1298817 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
RX bytes:162479674502 (151.3 GiB) TX bytes:192218320 (183.3 MiB)
Related Commands
|
|
show interface |
Displays interface status and information. |
show hostname
To display the hostname, use the show hostname command.
show hostname
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show hostname command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the hostname:
Related Commands
|
|
show hosts |
Displays the hosts. |
show hosts
To display hosts, use the show hosts command.
show hosts
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show hosts command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display hosts:
Name/address lookup uses domain service
Name servers are 255.255.255.255
Related Commands
|
|
show hostname |
Displays the hostname. |
show http-server
To display the status of the HTTP server, use the show http-server command.
show http-server
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show http-server command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows to display the status of the HTTP server:
Related Commands
|
|
show feature |
Displays system features. |
show incompatibility
To display incompatibilities with an image, use the show incompatibility command.
show incompatibility system { bootflash: | volatile: }
Syntax Description
system |
Displays directories. |
bootflash: |
Displays the bootflash directory. |
volatile: |
Displays the volatile directory. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show incompatibility command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows to display incompatibilities with an image:
vsg# show incompatibility system bootflash:
Related Commands
|
|
show version image |
Displays the software version of an image. |
show inspect ftp statistics
To display inspection File Transfer Protocol (FTP) statistics, use the show inspect ftp statistics command.
show inspect ftp statistics [ svs-domain ]
Syntax Description
svs-domain |
(Optional) Displays the SVS domain identification number. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show inspect ftp statistics command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows to display inspection FTP statistics:
vsg# show inspect ftp statistics
Related Commands
|
|
show ip tftp |
Displays TFTP client information. |
show install all
To display installation logs, use the show install all command.
show install all { failed-standby | failure-reason | impact | status }
Syntax Description
failed-standby |
Displays a log that reports failed-standby installations. |
failure-reason |
Displays a log that reports the reason for failed installations. |
impact |
Displays a log that reports the impact of installations. |
status |
Displays a log that reports the status of the current installation. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show install all command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display a log that reports the status of the current installation:
vsg# show install all status
No installation has taken place since the last reboot.
Related Commands
|
|
show version image |
Displays the software version of an image. |
show interface
To display information about interfaces, use the show interface command.
show interface [ brief | capabilities | counters | data | description | ethernet | loopback | mac-address | mgmt | port-channel | snmp-ifindex | status | switchport | transceiver | trunk ]
Syntax Description
brief |
(Optional) Displays brief information about an interface. |
capabilities |
(Optional) Displays information about interface capabilities. |
counters |
(Optional) Displays interface counters. |
data |
(Optional) Displays the data interface. |
description |
(Optional) Displays a description of an interface. |
ethernet |
(Optional) Displays Ethernet IEEE 802.3z interfaces. |
loopback |
(Optional) Displays the loopback interface. |
mac-address |
(Optional) Displays the MAC address of an interface. |
mgmt |
(Optional) Displays the management interface. |
port-channel |
(Optional) Displays port-channel interfaces. |
snmp-ifindex |
(Optional) Displays the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) interface index. |
status |
(Optional) Displays the interface line status. |
switchport |
(Optional) Displays the switchport interface. |
transceiver |
(Optional) Displays interface transceiver information. |
trunk |
(Optional) Displays trunk interface information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show interface command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about the management 0 interface:
vsg# show interface mgmt 0
Hardware: Ethernet, address: 0050.56bb.0038 (bia 0050.56bb.0038)
Internet Address is 10.193.73.138/21
MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit, DLY 10 usec,
reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
Auto-Negotiation is turned on
1 minute input rate 44136 bits/sec, 62 packets/sec
1 minute output rate 1808 bits/sec, 1 packets/sec
755797571 input packets 131701 unicast packets 2575417 multicast packets
753090453 broadcast packets 107614075553 bytes
1240518 output packets 1144680 unicast packets 43411 multicast packets
52427 broadcast packets 203763544 bytes
Related Commands
|
|
show ip interface |
Displays IP interface information. |
show ip
To display IP statistics, use the show ip command.
show ip { adjacency | arp | client | igmp | interface | internal | logging | netstack | process | route | static-route | tftp | traffic }
Syntax Description
adjacency |
Displays the IP adjacency table. |
arp |
Displays IP Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) table and statistics. |
client |
Displays clients registered with the IP process. |
igmp |
Display the IP address Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) status and configuration. |
interface |
Displays IP interface information. |
internal |
Displays internal IP information. |
logging |
Displays the IP policy logging table. |
netstack |
Displays the netstack local cache. |
process |
Displays global IP information. |
route |
Displays routing information. |
static-route |
Displays configured static routes. |
tftp |
Displays Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) client information. |
traffic |
Displays IP software processed traffic statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show ip command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display IP traffic statistics:
IP Software Processed Traffic Statistics
----------------------------------------
Transmission and reception:
Packets received: 647601245, sent: 1145486, consumed: 0,
Forwarded, unicast: 1099007, multicast: 0, Label: 0
end: 0, nop: 0, basic security: 0, loose source route: 0
timestamp: 0, record route: 0
strict source route: 0, alert: 4,
Bad checksum: 0, packet too small: 0, bad version: 0,
Bad header length: 0, bad packet length: 0, bad destination: 0,
Bad ttl: 0, could not forward: 645386546, no buffer dropped: 0,
Bad encapsulation: 20, no route: 377, non-existent protocol: 0
Fragmentation/reassembly:
Fragments received: 0, fragments sent: 0, fragments created: 0,
Fragments dropped: 0, packets with DF: 0, packets reassembled: 0,
ICMP Software Processed Traffic Statistics
------------------------------------------
Redirect: 30725, unreachable: 0, echo request: 0, echo reply: 0,
Mask request: 0, mask reply: 0, info request: 0, info reply: 0,
Parameter problem: 0, source quench: 0, timestamp: 0,
Timestamp response: 0, time exceeded: 0,
Irdp solicitation: 0, irdp advertisement: 0
Redirect: 0, unreachable: 0, echo request: 0, echo reply: 0,
Mask request: 0, mask reply: 0, info request: 0, info reply: 0,
Parameter problem: 0, source quench: 0, timestamp: 0,
Timestamp response: 0, time exceeded: 0,
Irdp solicitation: 0, irdp advertisement: 0,
Format error: 0, checksum error: 0
Statistics last reset: never
Related Commands
|
|
show ipv6 |
Displays IPv6 information. |
show ipv6
To display IPv6 statistics, use the show ipv6 command.
show ipv6 { adjacency | icmp | mld | nd | neighbor | route | routers }
Syntax Description
adjacency |
Displays the IPv6 adjacency table. |
icmp |
Displays ICMPv6 information. |
mld |
Displays Multicast Listener Discovery information. |
nd |
Displays Neighbor Discovery interface information. |
neighbor |
Displays IPv6 neighbor information. |
route |
Displays the IPv6 routing table. |
routers |
Displays neighbor routing information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show ipv6 command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display an IPv6 adjacency table:
vsg# show ipv6 adjacency summary
IPv6 AM Table - Adjacency Summary
Related Commands
|
|
show ip |
Displays IP information. |
show kernel internal
To display kernel information, use the show kernel command.
show kernel internal { aipc | cpuhogmon | ide-statistics | malloc-stats | meminfo | messages | skb-stats | softnetstat }
Syntax Description
aipc |
Displays kernel AIPC information. |
cpuhogmon |
Displays CPU hog monitoring. |
ide-statistics |
Displays IDE statistics |
malloc-stats |
Displays malloc statistics. |
meminfo |
Displays kernel memory usage information. |
messages |
Displays kernel messages. |
skb-stats |
Displays SK buffer allocation statistics. |
softnetstat |
Displays kernel network queue information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show kernel internal command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about memory:
vsg# show kernel internal meminfo
Related Commands
|
|
show system internal kernel |
Displays kernel information. |
show line
To display the command line configuration, use the show line command.
show line [ com1 | console ]
Syntax Description
com1 |
(Optional) Displays the auxiliary command line configuration. |
console |
(Optional) Displays the console command line configuration. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show line command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the command line configuration:
Databits: 8 bits per byte
default : ATE0Q1&D2&C1S0=1\015
Databits: 8 bits per byte
default : ATE0Q1&D2&C1S0=1\015
Related Commands
|
|
cli |
Configures the command line. |
show logging
To display logging information, use the show logging command.
show logging [ console | info | internal | last | level | logfile | module | monitor | pending | pending-diff | server | session | status | timestamp ]
Syntax Description
console |
(Optional) Displays the console logging configuration. |
info |
(Optional) Displays the logging configuration. |
internal |
(Optional) Displays syslog information. |
last |
(Optional) Displays the last few lines of a log. |
level |
(Optional) Displays the facility logging configuration. |
logfile |
(Optional) Displays a log file. |
module |
(Optional) Displays the module logging configuration. |
monitor |
(Optional) Displays the monitor logging configuration. |
pending |
(Optional) Displays the server address pending configuration. |
pending-diff |
(Optional) Displays the server address pending configuration. |
server |
(Optional) Displays the server logging configuration. |
session |
(Optional) Displays the logging session status. |
status |
(Optional) Displays the logging status. |
timestamp |
(Optional) Displays the logging time-stamp configuration. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show logging command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you enter a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl - C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display the logfile:
VSG129-2# show logging logfile start-seqn 1
Last Log cleared/wrapped time is : None
1: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-2-SYSTEM_MSG: Starting kernel... - kernel
2: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: PCI: Cannot allocate resour
ce region 1 of device 0000:00:0f.0 - kernel
3: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: sda: assuming drive cache:
4: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: sda: assuming drive cache:
5: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: CMOS: Module initialized -
6: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-1-SYSTEM_MSG: calling register_stun_set_d
7: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-1-SYSTEM_MSG: register_stun_set_domain_id
8: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-1-SYSTEM_MSG: Successfully registered SNA
P client for SNAP=0x00000c013200 0xf1117360 - kernel
9: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-1-SYSTEM_MSG: STUN : Successfully created
10: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: redun_platform_ioctl : Ent
11: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: redun_platform_ioctl : SW
version is set 4.2(1)VSG1(1) - kernel
12: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: - dhcpd
13: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: No subnet declaration fo
r ftp0 (127.2.1.1). - dhcpd
14: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: ** Ignoring requests on
ftp0. If this is not what - dhcpd
15: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: you want, please writ
e a subnet declaration - dhcpd
16: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: in your dhcpd.conf fi
le for the network segment - dhcpd
17: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: to which interface ft
p0 is attached. ** - dhcpd
18: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: - dhcpd
19: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: Not configured to listen
on any interfaces! - dhcpd
20: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %USER-2-SYSTEM_MSG: CLIS: loading cmd files be
21: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: redun_platform_ioctl : Ent
22: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:21 VSG129-2 %KERN-3-SYSTEM_MSG: redun_platform_ioctl : Hos
t name is set VSG129-2 - kernel
23: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: - dhcpd
24: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: No subnet declaration fo
r ftp0 (127.2.1.1). - dhcpd
25: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: ** Ignoring requests on
ftp0. If this is not what - dhcpd
26: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: you want, please writ
e a subnet declaration - dhcpd
27: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: in your dhcpd.conf fi
le for the network segment - dhcpd
28: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: to which interface ft
p0 is attached. ** - dhcpd
29: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: - dhcpd
30: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %LOCAL7-3-SYSTEM_MSG: Not configured to listen
on any interfaces! - dhcpd
31: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %MODULE-5-ACTIVE_SUP_OK: Supervisor 1 is activ
32: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:23 VSG129-2 %PLATFORM-5-MOD_STATUS: Module 1 current-statu
s is MOD_STATUS_ONLINE/OK
33: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:26 VSG129-2 %USER-2-SYSTEM_MSG: CLIS: loading cmd files en
34: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:26 VSG129-2 %USER-2-SYSTEM_MSG: CLIS: init begin - clis
35: 2011 Jan 21 17:17:44 VSG129-2 %USER-2-SYSTEM_MSG: Invalid feature name eth-p
36: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %POLICY_ENGINE-5-POLICY_ACTIVATE_EVENT: Policy
p1 is activated by profile sp1
37: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %IM-5-IM_INTF_STATE: mgmt0 is DOWN in vdc 1
38: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %IM-5-IM_INTF_STATE: mgmt0 is UP in vdc 1
39: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %IM-5-IM_INTF_STATE: data0 is DOWN in vdc 1
40: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %IM-5-IM_INTF_STATE: data0 is UP in vdc 1
41: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %POLICY_ENGINE-5-POLICY_COMMIT_EVENT: Commit o
42: 2011 Jan 21 17:18:00 VSG129-2 %VDC_MGR-2-VDC_ONLINE: vdc 1 has come online
43: 2011 Jan 24 12:53:47 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.70.216.167@pts/1
44: 2011 Feb 7 16:30:00 VSG129-2 %AUTHPRIV-3-SYSTEM_MSG: pam_aaa:Authentication
failed for user admin from 171.71.29.84 - sshd[7496]
45: 2011 Feb 9 18:41:38 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 10.21.84.66@pts/10
46: 2011 Feb 14 14:15:31 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/15
47: 2011 Feb 14 15:58:21 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/15
48: 2011 Feb 14 16:34:25 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/15
49: 2011 Feb 14 18:38:57 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/16
50: 2011 Feb 17 20:18:55 VSG129-2 %AUTHPRIV-3-SYSTEM_MSG: pam_aaa:Authentication
failed for user admin from 10.21.144.180 - sshd[23785]
51: 2011 Feb 18 15:14:03 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/22
52: 2011 Feb 21 13:16:43 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/26
53: 2011 Feb 21 14:08:23 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/26
54: 2011 Feb 22 11:47:27 VSG129-2 %VSHD-5-VSHD_SYSLOG_CONFIG_I: Configured from
vty by admin on 171.71.29.84@pts/28
Related Commands
|
|
show event-log |
Displays the event log. |
show ntp
To display Network Time Protocol (NTP) information, use the show ntp command.
show ntp [ internal | peer-status | peers | rts-update | source | statistics | timestamp-status ]
Syntax Description
internal |
(Optional) Displays internal NTP information. |
peer-status |
(Optional) Displays the status of all the peers. |
peers |
(Optional) Displays all the peers. |
rts-update |
(Optional) Displays the status of RTS. |
source |
(Optional) Displays the source IP address. |
statistics |
(Optional) Displays NTP statistics. |
timestamp-status |
(Optional) Displays the status of the time-stamp check. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show ntp command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display local NTP statistics:
VSG129-2# show ntp statistics local
time since reset: 2669747
unknown version number: 0
Related Commands
|
|
show clock |
Displays the time. |
show password
To enable the password strength check, use the show password command.
show password strength-check
Syntax Description
strength-check |
Displays the strength of the password. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show password command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to enable password strength check:
vsg# show password strength-check
Password strength check enabled
Related Commands
|
|
show aaa |
Display authentication and authorization information. |
show platform internal
To display platform manager information, use the show platform internal command.
show platform { all | errors | event-history | info | mem-stats | msgs }
Syntax Description
all |
Displays platform information. |
errors |
Displays the platform manager error log. |
event-history |
Displays platform manager event history. |
info |
Displays platform manager internal information. |
mem-stats |
Displays platform manager memory allocation statistics. |
msgs |
Displays platform manager message logs. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show platform command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you enter a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display platform manager memory statistics:
VSG129-2# show platform internal mem-stats
Inside pfm_cli_show_memstats
Private Mem stats for UUID : Malloc track Library(103) Max types: 5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 414 Curr alloc bytes: 19803(19k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : Non mtrack users(0) Max types: 81
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 149 Curr alloc bytes: 1322797(1291k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : libsdwrap(115) Max types: 22
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 11 Curr alloc bytes: 1448(1k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : Associative_db library(175) Max types: 14
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 6 Curr alloc bytes: 200(0k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : Event sequence library(158) Max types: 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 0 Curr alloc bytes: 0(0k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : Associative_db utils library(174) Max types: 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 0 Curr alloc bytes: 0(0k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : libfsrv(404) Max types: 11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 0 Curr alloc bytes: 0(0k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : FSM Utils(53) Max types: 68
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 136 Curr alloc bytes: 7760(7k)
Private Mem stats for UUID : Platform Manager(24) Max types: 25
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curr alloc: 0 Curr alloc bytes: 0(0k)
Curr alloc: 716 Curr alloc bytes: 1352008 (1320k)
Related Commands
|
|
show system internal mem-alerts-log |
Displays the memory alert log. |
show policy-engine
To display policy engine statistics, use the show policy-engine command.
show policy-engine { policy-name | stats }
Syntax Description
policy-name |
Name of the policy engine. |
stats |
Displays policy engine statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show policy-engine command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display policy engine statistics:
vsg# show policy-engine stats
NOT_APPLICABLE : 0 (Drop)
Related Commands
|
|
policy |
Configures a policy. |
show processes
To display processes, use the show processes command.
show processes [ cpu | log | memory | vdc ]
Syntax Description
cpu |
(Optional) Displays information about CPU processes. |
log |
(Optional) Displays information about process logs. |
memory |
(Optional) Displays information about memory processes. |
vdc |
(Optional) Displays information about virtual device context (VDC) processes. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show processes command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you enter a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl - C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about memory processes:
vsg(config)# show processes memory
PID MemAlloc MemLimit MemUsed StackBase/Ptr Process
----- -------- ---------- ---------- ----------------- ----------------
1 147456 0 1441792 bffffe60/bffff950 init
1976 155648 0 1536000 bffffdb0/bffffcb0 portmap
2003 180224 0 1642496 bffffd80/bffffb60 rpc.mountd
2009 159744 0 1601536 bffffda0/bffffb10 rpc.statd
2036 2551808 0 15540224 bffffd40/bfffed20 sysmgr
2319 0 0 0 0/0 mping-thread
2320 0 0 0 0/0 mping-thread
2336 0 0 0 0/0 stun_kthread
2337 0 0 0 0/0 stun_arp_mts_kt
2338 0 0 0 0/0 stun_packets_re
2373 0 0 0 0/0 redun_kthread
2374 0 0 0 0/0 redun_timer_kth
2513 0 0 0 0/0 sf_rdn_kthread
2514 364544 214619750 69095424 bffffa40/bffff8b0 xinetd
2515 421888 95819750 68964352 bffffa70/bffff8a0 tftpd
2516 23015424 125824371 106741760 bffffa40/bfffe73c syslogd
2517 933888 109213561 74809344 bffffa80/bfffe850 sdwrapd
2519 4120576 0 81752064 bffffa70/bfff79e0 platform
2524 0 0 0 0/0 ls-notify-mts-t
2537 282624 92591910 74170368 bffffa70/bfffe058 pfm_dummy
2545 155648 0 1441792 bffffa60/bffff988 klogd
2552 2109440 393881241 78864384 bffffa80/bffff278 vshd
2553 1073152 95385382 76709888 bffffa80/bfffe4d0 stun
2554 2732032 367819865 144842752 bffffa30/bffff690 smm
2555 1155072 165002041 75182080 bffffa50/bfffe4b0 session-mgr
2556 479232 135244736 73154560 bffffa40/bffff770 psshelper
2557 212992 96888422 69488640 bffff9f0/bfffe680 lmgrd
2558 528384 91650240 73543680 bffffa60/bffff5f8 licmgr
2559 512000 92225126 78594048 bffffa90/bffff260 fs-daemon
2560 397312 85133312 72286208 bffffa60/bfff3690 feature-mgr
2561 315392 85106278 72122368 bffffa70/bffff840 confcheck
2562 958464 92785651 74874880 bffffa60/bfffe910 capability
2563 479232 135244736 73154560 bffffa20/bffff750 psshelper_gsvc
2573 217088 0 2572288 bffff9c0/bffff820 cisco
2576 7733248 664149376 106373120 bffffa30/bffff3e0 clis
2583 2248704 372636352 103321600 bffffa50/bfffd960 port-profile
2585 274432 85254963 72257536 bffffa60/bffff830 xmlma
2586 1245184 95083507 76578816 bffffa60/bfffe2dc nsc_pa_intf
2587 2146304 115889523 76902400 bffffa60/bfffe060 vmm
2588 708608 127975372 76795904 bffffa70/bfffe9c0 vdc_mgr
2589 634880 109440179 84406272 bffffaa0/bffff3c0 ttyd
2590 450560 78402579 70279168 bffffa70/bffff530 sysinfo
2591 438272 91884531 73687040 bffffa80/bffff490 sksd
2593 610304 91614195 73551872 bffffa70/bffff234 res_mgr
2594 1028096 93695782 75186176 bffffa80/bfffe4b0 plugin
2595 3956736 375542464 94433280 bffffa50/bffff4f0 npacl
2596 811008 175709177 74731520 bffffa60/bfffbf80 mvsh
2597 2596864 109250944 79581184 bffffa80/bfffcf70 module
2598 3489792 182622105 87179264 bffffa80/bfffd980 fwm
2599 1175552 100089228 81141760 bffffa60/bfffe490 evms
2600 1015808 93312806 74964992 bffffa60/bfffe4a0 evmc
2601 581632 92554035 84045824 bffffa90/bffff470 core-dmon
2602 454656 92722572 74289152 bffffa80/bffff3b0 bootvar
2603 9854976 367171059 93200384 bffffa60/bffff4c0 ascii-cfg
2604 647168 87422156 74403840 bffffa40/bfffe678 securityd
2605 1048576 98226585 84234240 bffffa60/bfffdce0 cert_enroll
2606 495616 87332044 75096064 bffffa60/bfffe850 aaa
2614 5029888 369338252 86528000 bffffa50/bffff960 l3vm
2615 4288512 366242905 106196992 bffffa50/bffff950 u6rib
2616 6340608 367112486 129155072 bffffa50/bffff8c0 urib
2617 1568768 139989132 77787136 bffffa70/bfffe680 ExceptionLog
2618 3047424 116793318 86609920 bffffa80/bfffe490 ifmgr
2619 806912 87336550 74678272 bffffa80/bfffe8c0 tcap
2623 5693440 262289420 137621504 bffffa10/bfffd8f0 snmpd
2636 163840 293819750 68661248 bffffa20/bffff018 PMon
2637 3104768 256175321 84361216 bffffa50/bfffe210 aclmgr
2662 9428992 373095923 151752704 bffffa50/bffff530 adjmgr
2676 4755456 366648409 128327680 bffffa50/bffff920 arp
2677 6037504 369130995 110952448 bffffa40/bffff2c8 icmpv6
2678 53452800 584746060 201703424 bffffa20/bffff490 netstack
2751 1368064 229098848 124534784 bffffa40/bfffdac0 radius
2752 233472 98996198 69996544 bffffa30/bffff8c8 ip_dummy
2753 233472 98996198 69996544 bffffa30/bffff8c8 ipv6_dummy
2754 1826816 165916537 126001152 bffffa50/bfffeb30 ntp
2755 233472 98996198 69996544 bffffa30/bffff8c8 pktmgr_dummy
2756 233472 98996198 69996544 bffffa30/bffff8c8 tcpudp_dummy
2758 1097728 202319744 126873600 bffffa60/bfffed90 cdp
2762 1024000 109019750 80056320 bffff990/bfffec90 dcos-xinetd
2764 729088 0 12656640 bffffef0/bffff220 ntpd
2881 1409024 113508736 83517440 bffffa80/bfffe0a0 vsim
2882 2785280 366824128 90828800 bffffa60/bfffdbb0 ufdm
2883 1273856 365913996 140460032 bffffa60/bfffd970 sal
2884 2342912 107612243 84082688 bffffa60/bfffd940 pltfm_config
2885 4083712 206235110 88436736 bffffa50/bfffd970 monitor
2886 3870720 317199308 90644480 bffffa50/bfffdf80 ipqosmgr
2887 7446528 504510195 132648960 bffffa50/bffff980 igmp
2888 5025792 186650112 89972736 bffffa40/bfffd8f0 eth-port-sec
2889 2170880 199314508 82145280 bffffa60/bfffe220 copp
2890 2453504 118573030 87961600 bffffa40/bfffd730 eth_port_channel
2891 8450048 156970739 94244864 bffffa50/bfffe990 vlan_mgr
2892 14442496 309585689 102936576 bffffa60/bfffdb40 ethpm
2933 1544192 204094950 85684224 bffffa60/bfffe480 msp
2936 1048576 93330828 74928128 bffffa50/bfffe480 vsn_service_mgr
2937 169234432 1191148288 251592704 bffffa60/bfffe48c sp
2938 10510336 651213798 103919616 bffffa40/bfffe89c policy_engine
2939 3485696 633948339 85774336 bffffa40/bfffe24c inspect
3006 159744 0 1441792 bffffdc0/bffffc58 getty
3007 172032 0 1527808 bffffd90/bffffc28 getty
3019 1142784 0 14630912 bffffa30/bfffe810 dcos_sshd
3021 1167360 0 31797248 bffffdc0/bffffaa0 vsh
28520 1142784 0 14630912 bffffa30/bfffe810 dcos_sshd
28521 1167360 0 31797248 bffffdc0/bfffa7c8 vsh
30327 155648 0 1712128 bffffcf0/bffffb4c more
30328 1167360 0 31830016 bffffdc0/bfffa2d8 vsh
30329 0 0 0 bffffa10/bfffef28 ps
All processes: MemAlloc = 445857792
Related Commands
|
|
show system resources |
Displays memory usage. |
show redundancy status
To display redundancy status, use the show redundancy status command.
show redundan cy status
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show redundancy status command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display redundancy status:
vsg# show redundancy status
administrative: standalone
Internal state: Active with no standby
Redundancy state: Not present
System start time: Fri Jan 21 15:45:28 2011
System uptime: 32 days, 1 hours, 46 minutes, 2 seconds
Kernel uptime: 32 days, 0 hours, 14 minutes, 45 seconds
Active supervisor uptime: 32 days, 1 hours, 45 minutes, 20 seconds
Related Commands
|
|
show system redundancy status |
Displays the system redundancy status. |
show resource
To display resources, use the show resource command.
show resource [ internal | m4route-mem | m6route-mem | monitor-session | port-channel | u4route-mem | u6route-mem | vlan | vrf ]
Syntax Description
internal |
(Optional) Displays resource manager information |
m4route-mem |
(Optional) Displays m4route-mem information. |
m6route-mem |
(Optional) Displays m6route-mem information. |
monitor-session |
(Optional) Displays monitor session information. |
port-channel |
(Optional) Displays port-channel information. |
u4route-mem |
(Optional) Displays u4route-mem information. |
u6route-mem |
(Optional) Displays u6route-mem information. |
vlan |
(Optional) Displays VLAN information. |
vrf |
(Optional) Displays the virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show resource command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display resources:
Resource Min Max Used Unused Avail
----------- ----- ----- ------ -------- -------
monitor-session 0 2 0 0 2
port-channel 0 768 0 0 768
u4route-mem 32 32 1 31 31
u6route-mem 16 16 1 15 15
m4route-mem 58 58 0 58 58
Related Commands
|
|
show system resources |
Displays system resources. |
show role
To show user role information, use the show role command.
show role [ feature | name role-name | pending | pending-diff | session | status ]
Syntax Description
feature |
(Optional) Displays role features. |
name |
(Optional) Displays the role name. |
role-name |
Name of role. |
pending |
(Optional) Displays uncommitted role configurations. |
pending-diff |
(Optional) Displays uncommitted role configurations. |
session |
(Optional) Displays the role session status. |
status |
(Optional) Displays the role status. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show role command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the details of the network-admin role:
vsg# show role name network-admin
Description: Predefined network admin role has access to all commands
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule Perm Type Scope Entity
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Commands
|
|
show users |
Displays users. |
show running-config
To display running configurations, use the show running-config command.
show running-config [ aaa | all | am | arp | cdp | cert-enroll | diff | exclude | expand-port-profile | icmpv6 | igmp | interface | ip | l3vm | monitor | ntp | object-group group-name | policy policy-name | rule rule-name | security | snmp | vdc-all | vlan | vshd | zone zone-name ]
Syntax Description
aaa |
(Optional) Displays the authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) configuration. |
all |
(Optional) Displays the current operating configuration with defaults. |
am |
(Optional) Displays AM information. |
arp |
(Optional) Displays Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) information. |
cdp |
(Optional) Displays the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) configuration. |
cert-enroll |
(Optional) Displays the configuration of the certificates. |
diff |
(Optional) Displays the difference between the running configuration and the startup configuration. |
exclude |
(Optional) Excludes displaying specified configurations when performing the show running-config command. |
expand-port-profile |
(Optional) Displays the port profile. |
icmpv6 |
(Optional) Displays ICMPv6 information. |
igmp |
(Optional) Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) information. |
interface |
(Optional) Displays interface configurations. |
ip |
(Optional) Displays IP information. |
l3vm |
(Optional) Displays Layer 3 Virtual Machine information. |
monitor |
(Optional) Configures Ethernet SPAN sessions. |
ntp |
(Optional) Displays Network Time Protocol (NTP) information. |
object-group |
(Optional) Displays the object-group configuration. |
group-name |
Object group name. |
policy |
(Optional) Displays the policy configuration. |
policy-name |
Policy name. |
rule |
(Optional) Displays the rule configuration. |
rule-name |
Rule name. |
security |
(Optional) Displays the security configuration. |
snmp |
(Optional) Displays the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) configuration. |
vdc-all |
(Optional) Displays the virtual device context (VDC) configuration. |
vlan |
(Optional) Displays the VLAN configuration. |
vshd |
(Optional) Displays the running configuration for VSHD. |
zone |
(Optional) Displays the running configuration for zones. |
zone-name |
Zone name. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show running-config command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you enter a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display the running configuration:
!Command: show running-config
!Time: Wed Feb 23 11:23:41 2011
username adminbackup password 5 $1$Oip/C5Ci$oOdx7oJSlBCFpNRmQK4na. role network
username admin password 5 $1$nDBYx.EE$aOQn09aSYpclPxcZM9CS3. role network-admin
username vsnbetauser password 5 $1$WBkomPFW$RlOqE7fU2ZS/D4yd7bx/L. role network
banner motd #Nexus vservice#
snmp-server user admin auth md5 0x49381b1f90fcb52a70b55a0bbf05d032 priv 0x49381b
1f90fcb52a70b55a0bbf05d032 localizedkey engineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0
snmp-server user vsnbetauser auth md5 0x272e8099cab7365fd1649d351b953884 priv 0x
272e8099cab7365fd1649d351b953884 localizedkey engineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0
ip route 0.0.0.0/0 10.193.72.1
port-channel load-balance ethernet source-mac
port-profile default max-ports 32
limit-resource vlan minimum 16 maximum 2049
limit-resource monitor-session minimum 0 maximum 2
limit-resource vrf minimum 16 maximum 8192
limit-resource port-channel minimum 0 maximum 768
limit-resource u4route-mem minimum 32 maximum 32
limit-resource u6route-mem minimum 16 maximum 16
limit-resource m4route-mem minimum 58 maximum 58
limit-resource m6route-mem minimum 8 maximum 8
ip address 10.193.73.138/21
ip address 192.168.129.2/24
boot kickstart bootflash:/ks.bin sup-1
boot system bootflash:/sys.bin sup-1
boot kickstart bootflash:/ks.bin sup-2
boot system bootflash:/sys.bin sup-2
Related Commands
|
|
show startup-config |
Displays the startup configuration. |
show service-path connection
To display service path connection information, use the show service-path connection command.
show service-path connection [ svs-domain-id domain-id [ module module-number ]]
Syntax Description
svs-domain-id |
(Optional) Displays the SVS domain. |
domain-id |
Domain identification number. The range is from 1 to 4095. |
module |
(Optional) Displays the module. |
module-number |
Module number. The range is from 3 to 66. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(3) |
The output of the show service-path connection was changed to show that the VLAN column displays VXLAN for any traffic coming from or going to the VXLAN VM machine. |
4.2(1)VSG1(2) |
This command was modified to show more organization and detail. |
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show service-path connection command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Note The show service-path connection command might not display inspect-rsh actions for remote shell traffic. This issue affects the display only and does not disrupt the traffic policy decisions.
Examples
This example shows how to display service path connections:
vsg#
show service-path connection
P - policy at src p - policy at dst
O - conn offloaded to ser-path at src o - conn offloaded to ser-path at dst
S - seen syn from src s - seen syn from dst
A - seen ack for syn/fin from src a - seen ack for syn/fin from dst
F - seen fin from src f - seen fin from dst
R - seen rst from src r - seen rst from dst
E - tcp conn established (SasA done) T - tcp conn torn down (FafA done)
#SVS Domain 3720 Module 5
Proto SrcIP[:Port] DstIP[:Port] VLAN Action Flags
tcp 172.31.2.206:2677 172.31.2.106:80 vxlan permit PpOoSas
Related Commands
|
|
show svs |
Displays SVS information. |
show service-path statistics
To display service path statistics, use the show service-path statistics command.
show service-path statistics [ svs-domain-id domain-id [ module module-number ]]
Syntax Description
svs-domain-id |
(Optional) Displays the SVS domain. |
domain-id |
Domain identification number. The range is from 1 to 4095. |
module |
(Optional) Displays the module. |
module-number |
Module number. The range is from 3 to 66. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(3.1) |
The output of the show service-path statistics command was changed to show the service path statistics. |
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show service-path statistics command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display service path statistics:
vsg# show service-path statistics
Input Packet 9130015 Output Packet 879012
Active Flows 17 Active Connections 12
Flow Create 36696 Flow Destroy 36679
Input Packet Drop 0 Output Packet Drop 0
SP Packet Drop 0 Corrupted Packet 0
Input mode Signal Input mode change fail 0
Input signal mode 1 Input interrupt mode 0
PE Corrupted Packet 0 FTP Corrupted Packet 0
RSH Corrupted Packet 0 TFTP Corrupted Packet 0
Vpath Frag Packet 8249047 Vpath Inst Frag 0
IPV4 Frag Packet 850338 IPV4 Inst Frag 0
Aged Vpath Frag Packet 0 Vpath Frag Packet Drop 0
Aged IPV4 Frag Packet 10 IPV4 Frag Packet Drop 0
Bad Vpath Frag 0 Bad IPV4 Frag 0
Vpath Frag/Packet Exceed 0 IPV4 Frag/Packet Exceed 0
Non-Vpath Packet 0 Vpath Ver Mismatch Packet 0
Input Packet 20957 Output Packet 19328
Flow Create 28856 Flow Destroy 28848
Input Packet 9109058 Output Packet 859684
Flow Create 7840 Flow Destroy 7831
Related Commands
|
|
show svs |
Displays SVS information. |
show snmp
To display Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) information, use the show snmp command.
show snmp [ community | context | engineID | group | host | internal | sessions | source-interface | trap | user ]
Syntax Description
community |
(Optional) Displays SNMP community strings. |
context |
(Optional) Displays SNMP context mapping entries. |
engineID |
(Optional) Displays the SNMP engine ID. |
group |
(Optional) Displays SNMP groups. |
host |
(Optional) Displays SNMP hosts. |
internal |
(Optional) Displays internal SNMP information. |
sessions |
(Optional) Displays SNMP sessions. |
source-interface |
(Optional) Displays the notifications source interface. |
trap |
(Optional) Displays SNMP traps. |
user |
(Optional) Displays SNMPv3 users. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show snmp command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display SNMP users:
______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
User Auth Priv(enforce) Groups
____ ____ _____________ ______
______________________________________________________________
NOTIFICATION TARGET USERS (configured for sending V3 Inform)
______________________________________________________________
(EngineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0)
(EngineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0)
Related Commands
|
|
snmp-server |
Configures the SNMP server. |
show sockets
To display socket information, use the show sockets command.
show sockets { client | connection | internal | statistics }
Syntax Description
client |
Displays client socket information. |
connection |
Displays socket connections information. |
internal |
Displays internal socket information. |
statistics |
Displays socket statistics. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show sockets command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display socket statistics:
vsg# show sockets statistics
0 checksum error, 0 bad offset, 0 too short, 0 MD5 error
33557 packets (1428824 bytes) in sequence
435 duplicate packets (8296 bytes)
0 partially dup packets (0 bytes)
141 out-of-order packets (7736 bytes)
0 packets (0 bytes) with data after window
0 window probe packets, 0 window update packets
470 duplicate ack packets, 0 ack packets with unsent data
17669 ack packets (1759693 bytes)
20950 total, 0 urgent packets
20057 data packets (1759592 bytes)
5 data packets (736 bytes) retransmitted
0 window probe packets, 59 window update packets
0 connections initiated, 129 connections accepted, 129 connections established
129 connections closed (including 107 dropped, 0 embryonic dropped)
4 total rxmt timeout, 0 connections dropped in rxmt timeout
40 keepalive timeout, 40 keepalive probe, 0 connections dropped in keepalive
Related Commands
|
|
show interface |
Displays information about interfaces. |
show ssh
To display secure shell (SSH) information, use the show ssh command.
show ssh { key | name | server }
Syntax Description
key |
Displays the SSH keys. |
name |
Displays the preestablished master SSH connections. |
server |
Displays the status of SSH on the server. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show ssh command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the SSH keys:
**************************************
rsa Keys generated:Fri Oct 8 16:49:02 2010
ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABIwAAAQEAtL6+T2oK4lT1edlXus/eY6FChVxGdDA1T9B3pC06MWst
6+Wh4Sw3Ibpoe2uIuZE9qZjlNKLMWkReu1olXLCJlGG3QjkVUA2CMLYP6o/+fUoMZIPSyQFQk+3JwTFu
UR7uaa6OkATAr35unSnaHPKkYyv7C2S+I/H2nilY+Gbncv9D2tijsFJIOMIeIa8w5EdedMSnxOYg9ynm
9rV+Jql48mvslAKo23eSkzJT2grZu6z3d8DboiEHvrkPR/8Dwum9BXK7pM9p48l3Dae5lRuW92H/wRqs
v0u6Cyex6c6uE2f3jo4yU4tOMTCbyu2O+lXz/AsmM+gUZ1CvxrHhjgHpqw==
1d:1f:75:3c:6b:41:32:c8:0a:87:40:56:10:cb:2b:e9
**************************************
could not retrieve dsa key information
**************************************
Related Commands
|
|
show telnet |
Displays the Telnet server configuration. |
show startup-config
To display startup configurations, use the show startup-config command.
show startup-config [ aaa | am | arp | cdp | cert-enroll | exclude | expand-port-profile | icmpv6 | igmp | interface | ip | l3vm | log | monitor | ntp | security | snmp | vdc-all | vshd ]
Syntax Description
aaa |
(Optional) Displays the authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) configuration. |
am |
(Optional) Displays AM information. |
arp |
(Optional) Displays Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) information. |
cdp |
(Optional) Displays the Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) configuration. |
cert-enroll |
(Optional) Displays the configuration of the certificates configuration. |
diff |
(Optional) Displays the difference between the running configuration and startup configuration. |
expand-port-profile |
(Optional) Displays the port profile. |
icmpv6 |
(Optional) Displays Internet Control Message Protocol Version 6 (ICMPv6) information. |
igmp |
(Optional) Displays Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) information. |
interface |
(Optional) Displays interface configurations. |
ip |
(Optional) Displays IP information. |
l3vm |
(Optional) Displays Layer 3 Virtual Machine information. |
log |
(Optional) Displays the execution log of the latest ASCII startup configuration. |
monitor |
(Optional) Displays Ethernet Switched Port Analyzer (SPAN) sessions. |
ntp |
(Optional) Displays Network Time Protocol (NTP) information. |
security |
(Optional) Displays the security configuration. |
snmp |
(Optional) Displays the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) configuration. |
vdc-all |
(Optional) Displays the virtual device context (VDC) configuration. |
vshd |
(Optional) Displays the running configuration for VSHD. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show startup-config command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the startup configuration:
Sap 106 returned failure code:0x80480002
!Command: show startup-config
!Time: Wed Feb 23 12:52:55 2011
!Startup config saved at: Tue Nov 30 19:23:55 2010
snmp-server user admin auth md5 0x49381b1f90fcb52a70b55a0bbf05d032 priv 0x49381b
1f90fcb52a70b55a0bbf05d032 localizedkey engineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0
snmp-server user vsnbetauser auth md5 0x272e8099cab7365fd1649d351b953884 priv 0x
272e8099cab7365fd1649d351b953884 localizedkey engineID 128:0:0:9:3:0:0:0:0:0:0
ip route 0.0.0.0/0 10.193.72.1
port-channel load-balance ethernet source-mac
port-profile default max-ports 32
limit-resource vlan minimum 16 maximum 2049
limit-resource monitor-session minimum 0 maximum 2
limit-resource vrf minimum 16 maximum 8192
limit-resource port-channel minimum 0 maximum 768
limit-resource u4route-mem minimum 32 maximum 32
limit-resource u6route-mem minimum 16 maximum 16
limit-resource m4route-mem minimum 58 maximum 58
limit-resource m6route-mem minimum 8 maximum 8
ip address 10.193.73.138/21
ip address 192.168.129.2/24
ip address 192.168.129.2/24
ip address 192.168.129.2/24
ip address 192.168.129.2/24
boot kickstart bootflash:/ks.bin sup-1
boot system bootflash:/sys.bin sup-1
boot kickstart bootflash:/ks.bin sup-2
boot system bootflash:/sys.bin sup-2
Related Commands
|
|
show running-config |
Displays the running configuration. |
show system
To display system information, use the show system command.
show ssh { clis | cores | error-id | exception-info | internal | pss | redundancy | resources | standby | uptime }
Syntax Descriptioni
clis |
Displays the command-line interface (CLI) server. |
cores |
Displays the core transfer option. |
error-id |
Displays the system errors. |
exception-info |
Displays the exception log. |
internal |
Displays the internal system information. |
pss |
Displays the most recent PSS shrink status. |
redundancy |
Displays the redundancy status. |
resources |
Displays the system resources. |
standby |
Displays the system standby manual boot option. |
uptime |
Displays how long the system has been up and running. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show system command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display system resources:
vsg# show system resources
Load average: 1 minute: 0.22 5 minutes: 0.28 15 minutes: 0.12
Processes : 245 total, 2 running
CPU states : 0.0% user, 0.0% kernel, 100.0% idle
Memory usage: 1944668K total, 1041116K used, 903552K free
71456K buffers, 398416K cache
Related Commands
|
|
show hardware |
Displays hardware information. |
show tech-support
To display information about technical support, use the show tech-support command.
show tech-support [ adjmgr | arp | bootvar | brief | cert-enroll | cli | clis | details | dhcp | epp | ethport | ha | icmpv6 | im | include-time | internal | ip | ipv6 | l3vm | module | npacl | ntp | pktmgr | platform | port | port-channel | routing | snmp | sockets | sys-mgr | time-optimized | vdc | vsd | xml ]
Syntax Description
adjmgr |
(Optional) Displays adjacency manager information. |
arp |
(Optional) Displays Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) information. |
bootvar |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about boot variables. |
brief |
(Optional) Displays a system summary. |
cert-enroll |
(Optional) Displays certificate information. |
cli |
(Optional) Displays information about the parser. |
clis |
(Optional) Displays information about the command-line interface (CLI) server. |
details |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about troubleshooting. |
dhcp |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). |
epp |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about EPP. |
ethport |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about the Ethernet port. |
ha |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about high availability (HA). |
icmpv6 |
(Optional) Displays information about ICMPv6. |
im |
(Optional) Displays detailed information about IM. |
include-time |
(Optional) Displays the time it took to gather technical support information. |
internal |
(Optional) Displays internal troubleshooting information. |
ip |
(Optional) Displays IP information. |
ipv6 |
(Optional) Displays IPv6 information. |
l3vm |
(Optional) Display virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) information. |
module |
(Optional) Displays information about modules. |
npacl |
(Optional) Displays information about NPACL. |
ntp |
(Optional) Displays information about the Network Time Protocol (NTP). |
pktmgr |
(Optional) Displays packet manager information. |
platform |
(Optional) Displays platform information. |
port |
(Optional) Displays port manager information. |
port-channel |
(Optional) Displays port-channel information. |
routing |
(Optional) Displays information about routing. |
snmp |
(Optional) Displays information about the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP). |
sockets |
(Optional) Displays information about sockets. |
sys-mgr |
(Optional) Displays information about system manager. |
time-optimized |
(Optional) Gathers tech-support faster. |
vdc |
(Optional) Displays information about the virtual device context (VDC). |
vsd |
(Optional) Displays information about VSD. |
xml |
(Optional) Displays information about XML. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show tech-support command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
When you execute a show command that displays a long list of data, you can press Ctrl-C at any time to exit that list.
Examples
This example shows how to display HA information:
VSG129-2# show tech-support ha
`show system internal sysmgr event-history msgs`
1) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 12198 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:48 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SDWRAP_DEBUG_DUMP(1530), Id:0X02ECF618, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/39469, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF618, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:216
0x0000: 01 00 2f 74 6d 70 2f 64 62 67 64 75 6d 70 31 32
2) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 952704 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:47 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_ENNVAR_NON_SYSMGR_SRV_GET(2653), Id:0X02ECF601, Ret
Src:0x00000101/39467, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF601, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
3) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 504521 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:39 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_ENNVAR_NON_SYSMGR_SRV_GET(2653), Id:0X02ECF494, Ret
Src:0x00000101/39441, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF494, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
4) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 824041 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_INTERNAL_STATE(1386), Id:0X02ECF0FB, Ret:S
Src:0x00000101/39438, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0FB, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:624
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
5) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 823997 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_REDUNDANCY_STATUS(2499), Id:0X02ECF0F9, Re
Src:0x00000101/39438, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0F9, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:112
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
6) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 823918 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_SCOPE_DONE(2476), Id:0X02ECF0F7, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/39438, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0F7, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
7) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 819079 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_INTERNAL_STATE(1386), Id:0X02ECF0F5, Ret:S
Src:0x00000101/39437, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0F5, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:624
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
8) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 819034 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_REDUNDANCY_STATUS(2499), Id:0X02ECF0F3, Re
Src:0x00000101/39437, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0F3, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:112
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
9) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 818960 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_SCOPE_DONE(2476), Id:0X02ECF0F1, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/39437, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0F1, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
10) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 814417 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_INTERNAL_STATE(1386), Id:0X02ECF0EF, Ret:S
Src:0x00000101/39436, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0EF, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:624
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
11) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:60, at 814364 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_CLI_SHOW_REDUNDANCY_STATUS(2499), Id:0X02ECF0ED, Re
Src:0x00000101/39436, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0ED, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:112
0x0000: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
12) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 814283 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_SCOPE_DONE(2476), Id:0X02ECF0EB, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/39436, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0EB, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
13) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:44, at 800624 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:38:18 2011
[REQ] Opc:MTS_OPC_SYSMGR_ENNVAR_NON_SYSMGR_SRV_GET(2653), Id:0X02ECF0D3, Ret
Src:0x00000101/39435, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECF0D3, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:0
14) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37941 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAC3, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA4B, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
15) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37931 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAC2, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA4A, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
16) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37921 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAC1, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA49, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
17) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37910 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAC0, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA48, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
18) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37900 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABF, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA47, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
19) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37890 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABE, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA46, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
20) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37880 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABD, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA45, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
21) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37870 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABC, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA44, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
22) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37860 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABB, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA43, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
23) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37850 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEABA, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA42, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
24) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37840 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAB9, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA41, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
25) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37830 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAB8, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA40, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
26) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37820 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAB7, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA3F, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
27) Event:E_MTS_RX, length:48, at 37808 usecs after Thu Feb 24 11:37:00 2011
[RSP] Opc:MTS_OPC_EEM_CFG_SYNC(1701), Id:0X02ECEAB6, Ret:SUCCESS
Src:0x00000101/342, Dst:0x00000101/3, Flags:None
HA_SEQNO:0X00000000, RRtoken:0x02ECEA3E, Sync:UNKNOWN, Payloadsize:4
Related Commands
|
|
show debug |
Displays debug flags. |
show telnet server
To display the status of Telnet services, use the show telnet server command.
show telnet server
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show telnet server command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the status of Telnet services:
telnet service not enabled
Related Commands
|
|
show http |
Displays the status of HTTP services. |
show terminal
To display information about the terminal, use the show terminal command.
show terminal [ internal info ]
Syntax Description
internal info |
(Optional) Displays internal terminal information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show terminal command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about the terminal:
VSG129-2# show terminal internal info
core file size (blocks, -c) 146484
data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited
file size (blocks, -f) unlimited
max locked memory (kbytes, -l) unlimited
max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited
pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8
stack size (kbytes, -s) 8192
cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes (-u) unlimited
virtual memory (kbytes, -v) 204800
Related Commands
|
|
show processes |
Displays process information. |
show user-account
To display information about user accounts, use the show user-account command.
show user-account [ user-account-name ]
Syntax Description
user-account-name |
(Optional) User account name. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show user-account command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display user accounts:
this user account has no expiry date
this user account has no expiry date
this user account has no expiry date
Related Commands
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|
show users |
Displays current users. |
show users
To display users, use the show users command.
show users
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show users command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display users:
NAME LINE TIME IDLE PID COMMENT
admin pts/0 Jan 21 17:19 old 3021 (171.69.17.61) session=ssh
admin pts/29 Feb 23 11:13. 4157 (10.21.145.11) session = ssh *
Related Commands
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|
show user-account |
Displays information about user accounts. |
show version
To display the software version, use the show version command.
show version [ build-info | image | internal ]
Syntax Description
build-info |
(Optional) Displays software build information. |
image |
(Optional) Displays software image information. |
internal |
(Optional) Displays software compatibility results between two images. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show version command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display software build information:
vsg# show version build-info
Related Commands
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|
show install |
Displays the software install impact between two images. |
show nsc-pa
To display the Prime Network Services Controller (Prime NSC) policy agent, use the show nsc-pa command.
show nsc-pa [ status | tech-support ]
Syntax Description
status |
(Optional) Displays the policy agent status. |
tech-support |
(Optional) Displays technical support information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show nsc-pa command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display the policy agent status:
NSC Policy-Agent status is - Not Installed
Related Commands
|
|
show vsg |
Displays Cisco VSG information. |
show vsg dvport
To display information about a Cisco VSG DV port, use the show vsg dvport command.
show vsg dvport [ port-name ]
Syntax Description
port-name |
(Optional) DV port name. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show vsg dvport command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information about a DV port:
DV Port : 576::bcaa1c50-8747-8d08-fe7e-a9aa8924bf8e
Security Profile : spcustom
VM uuid : 421c5ae4-51c3-5dd9-60fa-a50cb04ed0ea
Related Commands
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|
show vsg ip-binding |
Displays information about IP bindings. |
show vsg ip-binding
To display a list of Virtual Machine (VM) IP addresses and associated VNSP and policy sets, use the show vsg ip-binding command.
show vsg ip-binding
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show vsg ip-binding command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display a list of VM IP addresses:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VM IP address Security-Profile Name Policy Name
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
100.1.1.20 spcustom policy_one
100.1.1.10 sp_new policy_one
Related Commands
|
|
show vsg security-profile |
Displays information about security profiles. |
show vsg security-profile
To display information about security profiles, use the show vsg security-profile command.
show vsg security-profile [ vnsp-name | detail | table ]
Syntax Description
vnsp-name |
(Optional) Virtual network security profile (VNSP) name. |
detail |
(Optional) Displays more details about the Cisco VSG security profile. |
table |
(Optional) Displays security profile information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show vsg security-profile command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
The detail version of the show vsg security-profile command includes the names of the VMs that are using the security-profile in addition to security-profile information. A VNSP name can be specified to get details of a specific security-profile.
Examples
This example shows how to display detailed information about the security profile sp_deny@root:
vsg# show vsg security-profile sp_deny@root detail
Policy Name : ps_deny@root
Related Commands
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show policy stats |
Displays policy statistics. |
show vsg vm
To display information about a Virtual Machine (VM), use the show vsg vm command.
show vsg vm
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(2) |
This command was modified. The optional parameter vm-uuid was removed. The new version of the command does not accept any parameters and always displays information for all the virtual machines. |
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show vsg vm command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display information for the Cisco VSG VM:
VM uuid : 421c5ae4-51c3-5dd9-60fa-a50cb04ed0ea
host-name : 10.193.73.154
Related Commands
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|
show vsg |
Displays Cisco VSG information. |
show vsg vm name
To display the name information about a Virtual Machine (VM), use the show vsg vm name command.
show vsg vm name name
Syntax Description
name |
Name or partial name of a VM in your Cisco VSG network. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(2) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show vsg vm name command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
This command displays information for one or more VMs. The VM name should be specified as a parameter and can be a prefix (first few characters) or the entire name. The information for the VM includes details of each DV port used by the VM and zones that the VM belongs to.
Examples
This example shows how to display information for the Cisco VSG VM with name linux-204:
vsg# show vsg vm name linux-204
VM uuid : 421ceac2-3b3f-67f9-b71c-3755d2c8cabe
host-name : 10.193.77.204
os-fullname : red hat enterprise linux 4 (32-bit)
tools-status : not-installed
DV Port : 272::1c7b1c50-f1b7-9a71-259d-820f4713a4b1
Security Profile : SP-DC1@root/Cisco-Tenant1
Port Profile : profile_App2
DV Port : 240::1c7b1c50-f1b7-9a71-259d-820f4713a4b1
Security Profile : SP-App1@root/Cisco-Tenant1
Port Profile : profile_App1
zone_linux_204@root/Cisco-Tenant1
Related Commands
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|
show vsg |
Displays Cisco VSG information. |
show vsg vm uuid
To display the Cisco VSG virtual machine UUID, use the show vsg vm uuid command.
show vsg vm uuid uuid
Syntax Description
uuid |
Designates the name of the UUID. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(2) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This command requires the VM UUID as a parameter. Information for the specified VM is displayed.
Examples
This example shows how to display the Cisco VSG UUID information:
vsg# show vsg vm uuid 421cefd6-29d1-4c8e-e563-2c3a4d58cd31
VM uuid : 421cefd6-29d1-4c8e-e563-2c3a4d58cd31
host-name : 10.193.77.206
os-fullname : red hat enterprise linux 4 (32-bit)
resource-pool : resource-pool1
tools-status : not-installed
Related Commands
|
|
show vsg |
Displays Cisco VSG information. |
show vsg zone
To display the Cisco VSG zones, use the show vsg zone command.
show vsg zone
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(2) |
This command was introduced. |
Examples
This example shows how to display Cisco VSG zones:
vsg(config-nsc-policy-agent)# show vsg zone
Zone : centos5.3_2_VEM2@root/tenant_d3337/dc1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zone : tenant_3337_zonename1@root/tenant_d3337
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zone : deletetest@root/tenant_d3337
win2003entr2-32_vlan150_100_split
Related Commands
|
|
show vsg |
Displays Cisco VSG information. |
show xml server
To display XML server information, use the show xml server command.
show xml server [ logging | status ]
Syntax Description
logging |
(Optional) Displays the logging configuration and the contents of the log file. |
status |
(Optional) Displays XML agent information. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Global configuration (config)
network-admin
network-operator
Command History
|
|
4.2(1)VSG1(1) |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
You can use the following operators with the show xml server command:
- > —Redirects the output to a file.
- >> —Redirects the output to a file in append mode.
- | —Pipes the command output to a filter.
Examples
This example shows how to display XML server information:
vsg# show xml server status
operational status is enabled
maximum session configured is 8
Related Commands
|
|
show http-server |
Displays the HTTP server configuration. |