System Management Commands

arp

To display the contents of the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) table, use the arp command in boot loader mode.

arp [ip_address]

Syntax Description

ip_address

(Optional) Shows the ARP table or the mapping for a specific IP address.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The ARP table contains the IP-address-to-MAC-address mappings.

Examples

This example shows how to display the ARP table:


Switch: arp 172.20.136.8
arp'ing 172.20.136.8...
172.20.136.8 is at 00:1b:78:d1:25:ae, via port 0

boot

To load and boot an executable image and display the command-line interface (CLI), use the boot command in boot loader mode.

boot [ -post | -n | -p | flag] filesystem:/file-url...

Syntax Description

-post

(Optional) Run the loaded image with an extended or comprehensive power-on self-test (POST). Using this keyword causes POST to take longer to complete.

-n

(Optional) Pause for the Cisco IOS Debugger immediately after launching.

-p

(Optional) Pause for the JTAG Debugger right after loading the image.

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use flash: for the system board flash device; use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/file-url

Path (directory) and name of a bootable image. Separate image names with a semicolon.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

When you enter the boot command without any arguments, the switch attempts to automatically boot the system by using the information in the BOOT environment variable, if any.

If you supply an image name for the file-url variable, the boot command attempts to boot the specified image.

When you specify boot loader boot command options, they are executed immediately and apply only to the current boot loader session.

These settings are not saved for the next boot operation.

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

Examples

This example shows how to boot the switch using the new-image.bin image:


Switch: set BOOT flash:/new-images/new-image.bin
Switch: boot

After entering this command, you are prompted to start the setup program.

cat

To display the contents of one or more files, use the cat command in boot loader mode.

cat filesystem:/file-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Specifies a file system.

/file-url

Specifies the path (directory) and name of the files to display. Separate each filename with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

If you specify a list of files, the contents of each file appears sequentially.

Examples

This example shows how to display the contents of an image file:


Switch: cat flash:image_file_name
version_suffix: universal-122-xx.SEx
version_directory: image_file_name
image_system_type_id: 0x00000002
image_name: image_file_name.bin
ios_image_file_size: 8919552
total_image_file_size: 11592192
image_feature: IP|LAYER_3|PLUS|MIN_DRAM_MEG=128
image_family: family
stacking_number: 1.34
board_ids: 0x00000068 0x00000069 0x0000006a 0x0000006b 
info_end:

clear location

To clear a specific radio frequency identification (RFID) tag or all of the RFID tags information in the entire database, use the clear location command in EXEC mode.

clear location [mac-address mac-address | rfid]

Syntax Description

mac-address mac-address

MAC address of a specific RFID tag.

rfid

Specifies all of the RFID tags in the database.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to clear information about all of the RFID tags in the database:


Switch> clear location rfid
                                             

clear location statistics

To clear radio-frequency identification (RFID) statistics, use the clear location statistics command in EXEC mode.

clear location statistics

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the clear location rfid command and shows how to clear RFID statistics:

Switch> clear location statistics
                                       

clear nmsp statistics

To clear the Network Mobility Services Protocol (NMSP) statistics, use the clear nmsp statistics command in EXEC mode.

clear nmsp statistics

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User Exec

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the clear nmsp statistics command and shows how to clear all statistics about NMSP information exchanged between the controller and the connected Cisco Mobility Services Engine (MSE):

Switch> clear nmsp statistics
                                       
                                       

clear wireless ccx statistics

To clear CCX statistics, use the clear wireless ccx statistics command in EXEC mode.

clear wireless ccx statistics

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the clear wireless ccx statistics command and shows how to clear all collected statistics about CCX clients:

Switch> clear wireless ccx statistics
                                       
                                       

clear wireless client tsm dot11

To clear the traffic stream metrics (TSM) statistics for a particular access point or all of the access points to which this client is associated, use the clear wireless client tsm dot11 command in EXEC mode.

clear wireless client tsm dot11 { 24ghz | 5ghz } client-mac-addr { all | name ap-name }

Syntax Description

24ghz

Specifies the 802.11a network.

5ghz

Specifies the 802.11b network.

client-mac-addr

MAC address of the client.

all

Specifies all access points.

name ap-name

Name of a Cisco lightweight access point.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the clear wireless client tsm dot11 command and shows how to clear the TSM for the MAC address 00:40:96:a8:f7:98 on all of the access points 5-GHz radios where this client is known:

Switch> clear wireless client tsm dot11 5ghz 00:40:96:a8:f7:98 all
 
                                                      

clear wireless location s69 statistics

To clear statistics about S69 exchanges with CCXv5 clients, use the clear wireless location s69 statistics command in EXEC mode.

clear wireless location s69 statistics

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

S69 messages are exchanged between CCXv5 clients and the wireless infrastructure. The CCXv5 client uses S69 message to request location information, that is then returned by the wireless infrastructure through a S69 response message.

Examples

The following is sample output from the clear wireless location s69 statistics command and shows how to clear statistics about S69 exchanges with CCXv5 clients:

Switch> clear wireless location s69 statistics
                                       
                                       

copy

To copy a file from a source to a destination, use the copy command in boot loader mode.

copy filesystem:/source-file-url filesystem:/destination-file-url

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/source-file-url

Path (directory) and filename (source) to be copied.

/destination-file-url

Path (directory) and filename of the destination.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

Directory names are limited to 127 characters between the slashes (/); the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

Filenames are limited to 127 characters; the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

If you are copying a file to a new directory, the directory must already exist.

Examples

This example shows how to copy a file at the root:


Switch: copy usbflash0:test1.text usbflash0:test4.text
File "usbflash0:test1.text" successfully copied to "usbflash0:test4.text"

You can verify that the file was copied by entering the dir filesystem: boot loader command.

copy startup-config tftp:

To copy the configuration settings from a switch to a TFTP server, use the copy startup-config tftp: command in Privileged EXEC mode.

copy startup-config tftp: remote host {ip-address}/{name}

Syntax Description

remote host {ip-address}/{name}

Host name or IP-address of Remote host.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 16.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

To copy your current configurations from the switch, run the command copy startup-config tftp: and follow the instructions. The configurations are copied onto the TFTP server.

Then, login to another switch and run the command copy tftp: startup-config and follow the instructions. The configurations are now copied onto the other switch.

Examples

This example shows how to copy the configuration settings onto a TFTP server:


Switch: copy startup-config tftp:
Address or name of remote host []?

copy tftp: startup-config

To copy the configuration settings from a TFTP server onto a new switch, use the copy tftp: startup-config command in Privileged EXEC mode on the new switch.

copy tftp: startup-config remote host {ip-address}/{name}

Syntax Description

remote host {ip-address}/{name}

Host name or IP-address of Remote host.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 16.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

After the configurations are copied, to save your configurations, use write memory command and then either reload the switch or run the copy startup-config running-config command.

Examples

This example shows how to copy the configuration settings from the TFTP server onto a switch:


Switch: copy tftp: startup-config
Address or name of remote host []?

debug call-admission wireless all

To enable debugging of the wireless Call Admission Control (CAC) feature, use the debug call-admission wireless all command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug call-admission wireless all [ switch switch ]

no debug call-admission wireless all [ switch switch ]

Syntax Description

switch

Configures debugging options for all wireless CAC messages associated to a particular switch.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the debug call-admission wireless switch command and shows how to enable debugging options for CAC messages:

Switch# debug call-admission wireless switch 1 all

debug rfid

To configure radio-frequency identification (RFID) debug options, use the debug rfid command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug rfid { debug_leaf_name| all | detail | error | nmsp | receive } [ filter | switch switch ]

no debug rfid { debug_leaf_name| all | detail | error | nmsp | receive } [ filter | switch switch ]

Syntax Description

debug_leaf_name

Debug leaf name.

all

Configures debugging of all RFID.

detail

Configures debugging of RFID detail.

error

Configures debugging of RFID error messages.

nmsp

Configures debugging of RFID Network Mobility Services Protocol (NMSP) messages.

receive

Configures debugging of incoming RFID tag messages.

filter

Debug flag filter name.

switch switch

Configures RFID debugging for switch.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the debug rfid command and shows how to enable debugging of RFID error messages:

Switch# debug rfid error switch 1

debug voice diagnostics mac-address

To enable debugging of voice diagnostics for voice clients, use the debug voice diagnostics mac-address command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug voice diagnostics mac-address mac-address1 verbose mac-address mac-address2 verbose

no debug voice diagnostics mac-address mac-address1 verbose mac-address mac-address2 verbose

Syntax Description

voice diagnostics

Configures voice debugging for voice clients.

mac-address mac-address1 mac-address mac-address2

Specifies MAC addresses of the voice clients.

verbose

Enables verbose mode for voice diagnostics.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the debug voice diagnostics mac-address command and shows how to enable debugging of voice diagnostics for voice client with MAC address of 00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60:

Switch# debug voice diagnostics mac-address 00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60

debug wps mfp

To enable WPS MFP debugging options, use the debug wps mfp command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug wps mfp { all | capwap | client | detail | mm | report }[ switch switch]

Syntax Description

wps mfp

Configures WPS MFP debugging options.

all

Displays all WPS MFP debugging messages.

capwap

Displays MFP messages.

client

Displays client MFP messages.

detail

Displays detailed MFP CAPWAP messages.

mm

Displays MFP mobility (inter-controller) messages.

report

Displays MFP reports.

switch switch

Displays the WPS MFP debugging for the switch.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to enable WPS MFP debugging options for client:

Switch# debug wps mfp client switch 1

delete

To delete one or more files from the specified file system, use the delete command in boot loader mode.

delete filesystem:/file-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/file-url...

Path (directory) and filename to delete. Separate each filename with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

The switch prompts you for confirmation before deleting each file.

Examples

This example shows how to delete two files:


Switch: delete usbflash0:test2.text usbflash0:test5.text
Are you sure you want to delete "usbflash0:test2.text" (y/n)?y
File "usbflash0:test2.text" deleted
Are you sure you want to delete "usbflash0:test5.text" (y/n)?y
File "usbflash0:test2.text" deleted 

You can verify that the files were deleted by entering the dir usbflash0: boot loader command.

dir

To display the list of files and directories on the specified file system, use the dir command in boot loader mode.

dir filesystem:/file-url

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use flash: for the system board flash device; use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/file-url

(Optional) Path (directory) and directory name that contain the contents you want to display. Separate each directory name with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot Loader

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Directory names are case sensitive.

Examples

This example shows how to display the files in flash memory:


Switch: dir flash:
Directory of flash:/
    2  -rwx        561   Mar 01 2013 00:48:15  express_setup.debug
    3  -rwx    2160256   Mar 01 2013 04:18:48  c2960x-dmon-mz-150-2r.EX
    4  -rwx       1048   Mar 01 2013 00:01:39  multiple-fs
    6  drwx        512   Mar 01 2013 23:11:42  c2960x-universalk9-mz.150-2.EX
   645 drwx        512   Mar 01 2013 00:01:11  dc_profile_dir
   647 -rwx       4316   Mar 01 2013 01:14:05  config.text
   648 -rwx          5   Mar 01 2013 00:01:39  private-config.text

   96453632 bytes available (25732096 bytes used)
Table 1. dir Field Descriptions

Field

Description

2

Index number of the file.

-rwx

File permission, which can be any or all of the following:

  • d—directory
  • r—readable
  • w—writable
  • x—executable

1644045

Size of the file.

<date>

Last modification date.

env_vars

Filename.

emergency-install

To perform an emergency installation on your system, use the emergency-install command in boot loader mode.

emergency-install url://<url>

Syntax Description

<url>

URL and name of the file containing the emergency installation bundle image.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The boot flash is erased during the installation operation.

Examples

This example shows how to perform the emergency install operation using the contents of an image file:


Switch: emergency-install tftp:<url> 
The bootflash will be erased during install operation, continue (y/n)?y
Starting emergency recovery (tftp:<url> ...
Reading full image into memory......................done
Nova Bundle Image
--------------------------------------
Kernel Address    : 0x6042d5c8
Kernel Size       : 0x317ccc/3243212
Initramfs Address : 0x60745294
Initramfs Size    : 0xdc6774/14444404
Compression Format: .mzip

Bootable image at @ ram:0x6042d5c8
Bootable image segment 0 address range [0x81100000, 0x81b80000] is in range          \
[0x80180000, 0x90000000].
@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
File "sda9:c3850-recovery.bin" uncompressed and installed, entry point: 0x811060f0
Loading Linux kernel with entry point 0x811060f0 ...
Bootloader: Done loading app on core_mask: 0xf

### Launching Linux Kernel (flags = 0x5)



Initiating Emergency Installation of bundle                                          \
tftp:<url> 


Downloading bundle tftp:<url>... 

Validating bundle tftp:<url>... 
Installing bundle tftp:<url>... 
Verifying bundle tftp:<url>... 
Package cat3k_caa-base.SPA.03.02.00SE.pkg is Digitally Signed
Package cat3k_caa-drivers.SPA.03.02.00.SE.pkg is Digitally Signed
Package cat3k_caa-infra.SPA.03.02.00SE.pkg is Digitally Signed
Package cat3k_caa-iosd-universalk9.SPA.150-1.EX.pkg is Digitally Signed
Package cat3k_caa-platform.SPA.03.02.00.SE.pkg is Digitally Signed
Package cat3k_caa-wcm.SPA.10.0.100.0.pkg is Digitally Signed
Preparing flash... 
Syncing device... 
Emergency Install successful... Rebooting
Restarting system.\ufffd


Booting...(use DDR clock 667 MHz)Initializing and Testing RAM                        \
+++@@@@####...++@@++@@++@@++@@++@@++@@++@@++@@done.
Memory Test Pass!

Base ethernet MAC Address: 20:37:06:ce:25:80
Initializing Flash...

flashfs[7]: 0 files, 1 directories
flashfs[7]: 0 orphaned files, 0 orphaned directories
flashfs[7]: Total bytes: 6784000
flashfs[7]: Bytes used: 1024
flashfs[7]: Bytes available: 6782976
flashfs[7]: flashfs fsck took 1 seconds....done Initializing Flash.

The system is not configured to boot automatically. The
following command will finish loading the operating system
software:

    boot

exit

To return to the previous mode or exit from the CLI EXEC mode, use the exit command.

exit

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to exit the configuration mode:

Switch(config)# exit
Switch#
                                       

flash_init

To initialize the flash: file system, use the flash_init command in boot loader mode.

flash_init

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

The flash: file system is automatically initialized during normal system operation.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

During the normal boot process, the flash: file system is automatically initialized.

Use this command to manually initialize the flash: file system. For example, you use this command during the recovery procedure for a lost or forgotten password.

help

To display the available commands, use the help command in boot loader mode.

help

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to display a list of available boot loader commands:


Switch:help
? -- Present list of available commands
arp -- Show arp table or arp-resolve an address
boot -- Load and boot an executable image
cat -- Concatenate (type) file(s)
copy -- Copy a file
delete -- Delete file(s)
dir -- List files in directories
emergency-install -- Initiate Disaster Recovery
...
...
...
unset -- Unset one or more environment variables
version -- Display boot loader version

license right-to-use

To configure right-to-use access point adder licenses on the switch, use the license right-to-use command in privileged EXEC mode.

license right-to-use { activate | deactivate } apcount | ipbase | ipservices | lanbase

Syntax Description

activate

Activates permanent or evaluation ap-count licenses.

deactivate

Deactivates permanent or evaluation ap-count licenses.

apcount count

Specifies the number of ap-count licenses added.

You can configure the number of adder licenses from 5 to 50.

ipbase count

Activates ipbase licenses on the switch.

ipservices count

Activates ipservices licenses on the switch.

lanbase count

Activates lanbase licenses on the switch.

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to activate an ap-count evaluation license:


Switch# license right-to-use activate apcount evaluation  
Switch# end
 
                              

This example shows how to activate an ap-count permanent license:



Switch# license right-to-use deactivate apcount evaluation 
Switch# end
 
                              

This example shows how to add a new ap-count license:



Switch# license right-to-use activate apcount 500 slot 1  
Switch# end
 
                              

location

To configure location information for an endpoint, use the location command in global configuration mode. To remove the location information, use the no form of this command.

location { admin-tag string | algorithm | civic-location identifier { host | id } | civic-location identifier { host | id } | elin-location { string | identifier id} | expiry { calibrating-client timeout-value| client timeout-value| rouge-aps timeout-value| tags timeout-value } | geo-location identifier { host | id } | notify-threshold { client db| rouge-aps db| tags db | plm { calibrating | { multiband | uniband } | client burst-interval } | prefer { cdp weight priority-value | lldp-med weight priority-value | static config weight priority-value } | rfid { status | timeout rfid-timeout-value| vendor-name name } | rssi-half-life { calibrating-client seconds| client seconds| rogue-aps seconds| tags seconds }

no location { admin-tag string | algorithm | civic-location identifier { host | id } | civic-location identifier { host | id } | elin-location { string | identifier id} | expiry { calibrating-client timeout-value| client timeout-value| rouge-aps timeout-value| tags timeout-value } | geo-location identifier { host | id } | notify-threshold { client db| rouge-aps db| tags db | plm { calibrating | { multiband | uniband } | client burst-interval } | prefer { cdp weight priority-value | lldp-med weight priority-value | static config weight priority-value } | rfid { status | timeout rfid-timeout-value| vendor-name name } | rssi-half-life { calibrating-client seconds| client seconds| rogue-aps seconds| tags seconds }

Syntax Description

admin-tag string

Configures administrative tag or site information. Site or location information in alphanumeric format.

algorithm

Configures the algorithm used to average RSSI and SNR values.

civic-location

Configures civic location information.

identifier

Specifies the name of the civic location, emergency, or geographical location.

host

Defines the host civic or geo-spatial location.

id

Name of the civic, emergency, or geographical location.

Note 

The identifier for the civic location in the LLDP-MED switch TLV is limited to 250 bytes or less. To avoid error messages about available buffer space during switch configuration, be sure that the total length of all civic-location information specified for each civic-location identifier does not exceed 250 bytes.

elin-location

Configures emergency location information (ELIN).

expiry {calibrating-client | client | rogue-aps | tags} timeout-value

Configures the timeout for RSSI values for calibrating clients, clients, rouge access points, and RFID tags.

The valid range for the timeout parameter for calibrating clients is 1 to 3600 seconds, and the default value is 5 seconds.

The valid range for the timeout parameter for clients, rogue access points, and RFID tags is 5 to 3600 seconds, and the default value is 5 seconds

geo-location

Configures geo-spatial location information.

notify-threshold {client| rogue-aps| tags} db

Configures the NMSP notification threshold for RSSI measurements.

The valid range for the threshold parameter is 0 to 10 dB, and the default value is 0 dB.

calibrating {multiband | uniband} | client seconds

Configures path loss measurement (CCX S60) request for calibrating clients and burst interval for clients.

The valid range for the burst interval parameter is 0 to 3600 seconds.

prefer

Sets location information source priority.

rfid

Configures RFID tag tracking for a location.

rssi-half-life

Configures the RSSI half life for various devices.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

After entering the location civic-location identifier global configuration command, you enter civic location configuration mode. After entering the location geo-location identifier global configuration command, you enter geo location configuration mode.

The civic-location identifier must not exceed 250 bytes.

The host identifier configures the host civic or geo-spatial location. If the identifier is not a host, the identifier only defines a civic location or geo-spatial template that can be referenced on the interface.

The host keyword defines the device location. The civic location options available for configuration using the identifier and the host keyword are the same. You can specify the following civic location options in civic location configuration mode:

  • additional-code—Sets an additional civic location code.
  • additional-location-information—Sets additional civic location information.
  • branch-road-name—Sets the branch road name.
  • building—Sets building information.
  • city—Sets the city name.
  • country—Sets the two-letter ISO 3166 country code.
  • county—Sets the county name.
  • default—Sets a command to its defaults.
  • division—Sets the city division name.
  • exit—Exits from the civic location configuration mode.
  • floor—Sets the floor number.
  • landmark—Sets landmark information.
  • leading-street-dir—Sets the leading street direction.
  • name—Sets the resident name.
  • neighborhood—Sets neighborhood information.
  • no—Negates the specified civic location data and sets the default value.
  • number—Sets the street number.
  • post-office-box—Sets the post office box.
  • postal-code—Sets the postal code.
  • postal-community-name—Sets the postal community name.
  • primary-road-name—Sets the primary road name.
  • road-section—Sets the road section.
  • room—Sets room information.
  • seat—Sets seat information.
  • state—Sets the state name.
  • street-group—Sets the street group.
  • street-name-postmodifier—Sets the street name postmodifier.
  • street-name-premodifier—Sets the street name premodifier.
  • street-number-suffix—Sets the street number suffix.
  • street-suffix—Sets the street suffix.
  • sub-branch-road-name—Sets the sub-branch road name.
  • trailing-street-suffix—Sets the trailing street suffix.
  • type-of-place—Sets the type of place.
  • unit—Sets the unit.

You can specify the following geo-spatial location information in geo-location configuration mode:

  • altitude—Sets altitude information in units of floor, meters, or feet.
  • latitude—Sets latitude information in degrees, minutes, and seconds. The range is from -90 degrees to 90 degrees. Positive numbers indicate locations north of the equator.
  • longitude—Sets longitude information in degrees, minutes, and seconds. The range is from -180 degrees to 180 degrees. Positive numbers indicate locations east of the prime meridian.
  • resolution—Sets the resolution for latitude and longitude. If the resolution value is not specified, default value of 10 meters is applied to latitude and longitude resolution parameters. For latitude and longitude, the resolution unit is measured in meters. The resolution value can also be a fraction.
  • default—Sets the geographical location to its default attribute.
  • exit—Exits from geographical location configuration mode.
  • no—Negates the specified geographical parameters and sets the default value.

Use the no lldp med-tlv-select location information interface configuration command to disable the location TLV. The location TLV is enabled by default.

Examples

This example shows how to configure civic location information on the switch:

Switch(config)# location civic-location identifier 1
Switch(config-civic)# number 3550
Switch(config-civic)# primary-road-name “Cisco Way”
Switch(config-civic)# city “San Jose”
Switch(config-civic)# state CA
Switch(config-civic)# building 19
Switch(config-civic)# room C6
Switch(config-civic)# county “Santa Clara”
Switch(config-civic)# country US
Switch(config-civic)# end

You can verify your settings by entering the show location civic-location privileged EXEC command.

This example shows how to configure the emergency location information on the switch:

Switch(config)# location elin-location 14085553881 identifier 1

You can verify your settings by entering the show location elin privileged EXEC command.

The example shows how to configure geo-spatial location information on the switch:

Switch(config)# location geo-location identifier host
Switch(config-geo)# latitude 12.34
Switch(config-geo)# longitude 37.23
Switch(config-geo)# altitude 5 floor
Switch(config-geo)# resolution 12.34

You can use the show location geo-location identifier command to display the configured geo-spatial location details.

location algorithm

To configure the algorithm used to average RSSI and SNR values, use the location algorithm command in global configuration mode. To remove the algorithm used to average RSSI and SNR values, use the no form of this command.

location algorithm { rssi-average | simple }

no location algorithm { rssi-average | simple }

Syntax Description

rssi-average

Specifies a more accurate algorithm but with more CPU overhead.

simple

Specifies faster algorithm with smaller CPU overhead but less accuracy.

Command Default

RSSI average

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to configure a more accurate algorithm but with more CPU overhead:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location algorithm rssi-average
Switch(config)# end
                                             
                                             

location expiry

To configure the timeout for RSSI values, use the location expiry command in global configuration mode.

location expiry { calibrating-client | client | rogue-aps | tags } timeout-value

Syntax Description

calibrating-client

Specifies the RSSI timeout value for calibrating clients.

client

(Optional) Specifies the RSSI timeout value for clients.

rogue-aps

Specifies the RSSI timeout value for rogue access points.

tags

Specifies the RSSI timeout value for RFID tags.

timeout-value

The valid range for the timeout parameter for calibrating clients is 1 to 3600 seconds, and the default value is 5 seconds.

The valid range for the timeout parameter for clients, rogue access points, and RFID tags is 5 to 3600 seconds, and the default value is 5 seconds.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to set the RSSI timeout value for wireless clients:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location expiry client 1000
Switch(config)# end
                                                   
                                                   

location notify-threshold

To configure the NMSP notification threshold for RSSI measurements, use the location notify-threshold command in global configuration mode. To remove the NMSP notification threshold for RSSI measurements, use the no form of this command.

location notify-threshold { client | rogue-aps | tags } db

no location notify-threshold { client | rogue-aps | tags }

Syntax Description

client

Specifies the NMSP notification threshold (in dB) for clients and rogue clients.

The valid range for the threshold parameter is 0 to 10 dB, and the default value is 0 dB.

rogue-aps

Specifies the NMSP notification threshold (in dB) for rogue access points.

The valid range for the threshold parameter is 0 to 10 dB, and the default value is 0 dB.

tags

Specifies the NMSP notification threshold (in dB) for RFID tags.

The valid range for the threshold parameter is 0 to 10 dB, and the default value is 0 dB.

db

The valid range for the threshold parameter is 0 to 10 dB, and the default value is 0 dB.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the NMSP notification threshold to 10 dB for clients. A notification NMSP message is sent to MSE as soon as the client RSSI changes by 10 dB:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location notify-threshold client 10
Switch(config)# end
                                                   
                                                   

location plm calibrating

To configure path loss measurement (CCX S60) request for calibrating clients, use the location plm calibrating command in global configuration mode.

location plm calibrating { multiband | uniband }

Syntax Description

multiband

Specifies the path loss measurement request for calibrating clients on the associated 802.11a or 802.11b/g radio.

uniband

Specifies the path loss measurement request for calibrating clients on the associated 802.11a/b/g radio.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The uniband is useful for single radio clients (even if the radio is a dual band and can operate in the 2.4-GHz and the 5-GHz bands). The multiband is useful for multiple radio clients.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the path loss measurement request for calibrating clients on the associated 802.11a/b/g radio:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location plm calibrating uniband
Switch(config)# end
                                             
                                             

location rfid

To configure RFID tag tracking for a location, use the location rfid command in global configuration mode. To remove a RFID tag tracking for a location, use the no form of this command.

location rfid { status | timeout seconds | vendor-name name }

no location rfid { status | timeout seconds | vendor-name }

Syntax Description

status

Enables location tracking for RFID tags.

The no location rfid status command disables location tracking for tags.

timeout seconds

Specifies the location RFID timeout value.

Determines the amount of time for which a detected RFID location information is considered as valid. Any RSSI change (below the RSSI threshold) in the configured interval do not result in a new location computation and a message is sent to the MSE.

The valid timeout range is from 60 through 7200 seconds.

vendor-name name

Specifies the RFID tag vendor name.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The no location rfid status command disables location RFID status. The no location rfid timeout command returns to the default timeout value. The no location rfid vendor-name disables tracking for a particular vendor.

Examples

The example shows how to configure the static RFID tag data timeout:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location rfid timeout 1000 
Switch(config)# end
                                                
                                                

location rssi-half-life

To configure the RSSI half life for various devices, use the location rssi-half-life command in global configuration mode. To remove a RSSI half life for various devices, use the no form of this command.

location rssi-half-life { calibrating-client | client | rogue-aps | tags } seconds

no location rssi-half-life { calibrating-client | client | rogue-aps | tags }

Syntax Description

calibrating-client

Specifies the RSSI half life for calibrating clients.

client

Specifies the RSSI half life for clients.

rogue-aps

Specifies the RSSI half life for rogue access points.

tags

Specifies the RSSI half life for RFID tags.

seconds

The valid range for the half-life parameter is 0, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, or 300 seconds, and the default value is 0 seconds.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the half life value for a client RSSI to 100 seconds:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# location rssi-half-life client 100
Switch(config)# end
                                                      
                                                      

mac address-table move update

To enable the MAC address table move update feature, use the mac address-table move update command in global configuration mode on the switch stack or on a standalone switch. To return to the default setting, use the no form of this command.

mac address-table move update { receive | transmit }

no mac address-table move update { receive | transmit }

Syntax Description

receive

Specifies that the switch processes MAC address-table move update messages.

transmit

Specifies that the switch sends MAC address-table move update messages to other switches in the network if the primary link goes down and the standby link comes up.

Command Default

By default, the MAC address-table move update feature is disabled.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The MAC address-table move update feature allows the switch to provide rapid bidirectional convergence if a primary (forwarding) link goes down and the standby link begins forwarding traffic.

You can configure the access switch to send the MAC address-table move update messages if the primary link goes down and the standby link comes up. You can configure the uplink switches to receive and process the MAC address-table move update messages.

Examples

This example shows how to configure an access switch to send MAC address-table move update messages:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# mac address-table move update transmit
Switch(config)# end

This example shows how to configure an uplink switch to get and process MAC address-table move update messages:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# mac address-table move update receive
Switch(config)# end

You can verify your setting by entering the show mac address-table move update privileged EXEC command.

mgmt_init

To initialize the Ethernet management port, use the mgmt_init command in boot loader mode.

mgmt_init

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the mgmt_init command only during debugging of the Ethernet management port.

Examples

This example shows how to initialize the Ethernet management port:


Switch: mgmt_init

mkdir

To create one or more directories on the specified file system, use the mkdir command in boot loader mode.

mkdir filesystem:/directory-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/directory-url...

Name of the directories to create. Separate each directory name with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Directory names are case sensitive.

Directory names are limited to 127 characters between the slashes (/); the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

Examples

This example shows how to make a directory called Saved_Configs:


Switch: mkdir usbflash0:Saved_Configs
Directory "usbflash0:Saved_Configs" created

more

To display the contents of one or more files, use the more command in boot loader mode.

more filesystem:/file-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use flash: for the system board flash device.

/file-url...

Path (directory) and name of the files to display. Separate each filename with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

If you specify a list of files, the contents of each file appears sequentially.

Examples

This example shows how to display the contents of a file:


Switch: more flash:image_file_name
version_suffix: universal-122-xx.SEx
version_directory: image_file_name
image_system_type_id: 0x00000002
image_name: image_file_name.bin
ios_image_file_size: 8919552
total_image_file_size: 11592192
image_feature: IP|LAYER_3|PLUS|MIN_DRAM_MEG=128
image_family: family
stacking_number: 1.34
board_ids: 0x00000068 0x00000069 0x0000006a 0x0000006b 
info_end:

nmsp notification interval

To modify the Network Mobility Services Protocol (NMSP) notification interval value on the controller to address latency in the network, use the nmsp notification interval command in global configuration mode.

nmsp notification interval { attachment | location | rssi { clients | rfid | rogues { ap | client } } }

Syntax Description

attachment

Specifies the time used to aggregate attachment information.

location

Specifies the time used to aggregate location information.

rssi

Specifies the time used to aggregate RSSI information.

clients

Specifies the time interval for clients.

rfid

Specifies the time interval for rfid tags.

rogues

Specifies the time interval for rogue APs and rogue clients .

ap

Specifies the time used to aggregate rogue APs .

client

Specifies the time used to aggregate rogue clients.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to set the NMSP notification interval for the active RFID tags to 25 seconds:



Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# nmsp notification-interval rfid 25
Switch(config)# end                          

This example shows how to modify NMSP notification intervals for device attachment (connecting to the network or disconnecting from the network) every 10 seconds:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# nmsp notification-interval attachment 10
Switch(config)# end 

This example shows how to configure NMSP notification intervals for location parameters (location change) every 20 seconds:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# nmsp notification-interval location 20
Switch(config)# end 

no debug all

To disable debugging on a switch, use the no debug all command in Privileged EXEC mode.

no debug all

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 16.1

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to disable debugging on a switch.


Switch: no debug all
All possible debugging has been turned off.

readrtc

To display the current value of the Real Time Clock (RTC) setting, use the readrtc command in boot loader mode.

readrtc

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to display the current RTC setting:


Switch: readrtc
Wednesday 03-27-13
11:42:38

rename

To rename a file, use the rename command in boot loader mode.

rename filesystem:/source-file-url filesystem:/destination-file-url

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/source-file-url

Original path (directory) and filename.

/destination-file-url

New path (directory) and filename.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

Directory names are limited to 127 characters between the slashes (/); the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

Filenames are limited to 127 characters; the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

Examples

This example shows a file named config.text being renamed to config1.text:


Switch: rename usbflash0:config.text usbflash0:config1.text

You can verify that the file was renamed by entering the dir filesystem: boot loader command.

reset

To perform a hard reset on the system, use the reset command in boot loader mode. A hard reset is similar to power-cycling the switch; it clears the processor, registers, and memory.

reset

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to reset the system:


Switch: reset
Are you sure you want to reset the system (y/n)? y
System resetting...

rmdir

To remove one or more empty directories from the specified file system, use the rmdir command in boot loader mode.

rmdir filesystem:/directory-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/directory-url...

Path (directory) and name of the empty directories to remove. Separate each directory name with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Directory names are case sensitive and limited to 45 characters between the slashes (/); the name cannot contain control characters, spaces, deletes, slashes, quotes, semicolons, or colons.

Before removing a directory, you must first delete all of the files in the directory.

The switch prompts you for confirmation before deleting each directory.

Examples

This example shows how to remove a directory:


Switch: rmdir usbflash0:Test

You can verify that the directory was deleted by entering the dir filesystem: boot loader command.

sdm prefer

To specify the SDM template for use on the switch, use the sdm prefer command in global configuration mode.

sdm prefer { advanced }

Syntax Description

advanced

Supports advanced features such as NetFlow.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

In a switch stack, all stack members must use the same SDM template that is stored on the active switch.

When a new switch is added to a stack, the SDM configuration that is stored on the active switch overrides the template configured on an individual switch.

Examples

This example shows how to configure the advanced template:


Switch(config)# sdm prefer advanced
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

set

To set or display environment variables, use the set command in boot loader mode. Environment variables can be used to control the boot loader or any other software running on the switch.

set variable value

Syntax Description

variable value

Use one of the following keywords for variable and the appropriate value for value :

MANUAL_BOOT —Decides whether the switch automatically or manually boots.

Valid values are 1/Yes and 0/No. If it is set to 0 or No, the boot loader attempts to automatically boot the system. If it is set to anything else, you must manually boot the switch from the boot loader mode.

BOOT filesystem:/file-url —Identifies a semicolon-separated list of executable files to try to load and execute when automatically booting.

If the BOOT environment variable is not set, the system attempts to load and execute the first executable image it can find by using a recursive, depth-first search through the flash: file system. If the BOOT variable is set but the specified images cannot be loaded, the system attempts to boot the first bootable file that it can find in the flash: file system.

ENABLE_BREAK —Allows the automatic boot process to be interrupted when the user presses the Break key on the console.

Valid values are 1, Yes, On, 0, No, and Off. If set to 1, Yes, or On, you can interrupt the automatic boot process by pressing the Break key on the console after the flash: file system has initialized.

HELPER filesystem:/file-url —Identifies a semicolon-separated list of loadable files to dynamically load during the boot loader initialization. Helper files extend or patch the functionality of the boot loader.

PS1 prompt —Specifies a string that is used as the command-line prompt in boot loader mode.

CONFIG_FILE flash: /file-url —Specifies the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the system configuration.

BAUD rate —Specifies the number of bits per second (b/s) that is used for the baud rate for the console. The Cisco IOS software inherits the baud rate setting from the boot loader and continues to use this value unless the configuration file specifies another setting. The range is from 0 to 128000 b/s. Valid values are 50, 75, 110, 150, 300, 600, 1200, 1800, 2000, 2400, 3600, 4800, 7200, 9600, 14400, 19200, 28800, 38400, 56000, 57600, 115200, and 128000.

The most commonly used values are 300, 1200, 2400, 9600, 19200, 57600, and 115200.

SWITCH_NUMBER stack-member-number —Changes the member number of a stack member.

SWITCH_PRIORITY priority-number —Changes the priority value of a stack member.

Command Default

The environment variables have these default values:

MANUAL_BOOT: No (0)

BOOT: Null string

ENABLE_BREAK: No (Off or 0) (the automatic boot process cannot be interrupted by pressing the Break key on the console).

HELPER: No default value (helper files are not automatically loaded).

PS1 switch:

CONFIG_FILE: config.text

BAUD: 9600 b/s

SWITCH_NUMBER: 1

SWITCH_PRIORITY: 1


Note

Environment variables that have values are stored in the flash: file system in various files. Each line in the files contains an environment variable name and an equal sign followed by the value of the variable.

A variable has no value if it is not listed in these files; it has a value if it is listed even if the value is a null string. A variable that is set to a null string (for example, “ ”) is a variable with a value.

Many environment variables are predefined and have default values.


Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Environment variables are case sensitive and must be entered as documented.

Environment variables that have values are stored in flash memory outside of the flash: file system.

Under typical circumstances, it is not necessary to alter the setting of the environment variables.

The MANUAL_BOOT environment variable can also be set by using the boot manual global configuration command.

The BOOT environment variable can also be set by using the boot system filesystem:/file-url global configuration command.

The ENABLE_BREAK environment variable can also be set by using the boot enable-break global configuration command.

The HELPER environment variable can also be set by using the boot helper filesystem: / file-url global configuration command.

The CONFIG_FILE environment variable can also be set by using the boot config-file flash: /file-url global configuration command.

The SWITCH_NUMBER environment variable can also be set by using the switch current-stack-member-number renumber new-stack-member-number global configuration command.

The SWITCH_PRIORITY environment variable can also be set by using the switch stack-member-number priority priority-number global configuration command.

The boot loader prompt string (PS1) can be up to 120 printable characters not including the equal sign (=).

Examples

This example shows how to set the SWITCH_PRIORITY environment variable:


Switch: set SWITCH_PRIORITY 2 

You can verify your setting by using the set boot loader command.

show ap name config general

To display detailed information of an MA access point, use the show ap name config general command.

show ap name ap-name ma-ip config general

Syntax Description

ap-name

Access Point name.

ma-ip

MA IPv4 Address.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command works only with MC.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the detailed information of an MA access point:


Cisco controller# show ap name AP5 211.0.0.4 config general 

Cisco AP Name                                   : AP5
Cisco AP Identifier                             : 0
Country Code                                    : US  - United States
Regulatory Domain Allowed by Country            : 802.11bg:-A     802.11a:-AB
AP Country Code                                 : US  - United States
AP Regulatory Domain
  Slot 0                                        : -A
  Slot 1                                        : -A
Switch Port Number                              : Gi1/0/5
MAC Address                                     : 6c20.56e1.4a57
IP Address Configuration                        : DHCP
IP Address                                      : 211.0.0.170
IP Netmask                                      : 255.255.255.0
Gateway IP Address                              : 211.0.0.100
CAPWAP Path MTU                                 : 1485
Telnet State                                    : Disabled
SSH State                                       : Disabled
Jumbo MTU Status                                : Disabled
Cisco AP Location                               : default location
Cisco AP Group Name                             : default-group
Administrative State                            : Enabled
Operation State                                 : Registered
AP Mode                                         : Local
AP Submode                                      : Not Configured
Remote AP Debug                                 : Disabled
Logging Trap Severity Level                     : informational
Software Version                                : 10.3.123.92
Boot Version                                    : 12.4.23.0
Stats Reporting Period                          : 180
LED State                                       : Enabled
PoE Pre-Standard Switch                         : Disabled
PoE Power Injector MAC Address                  : Disabled
Power Type/Mode                                 : PoE/Full Power (normal mode)
Number of Slots                                 : 2
AP Model                                        : AIR-CAP3602I-A-K9
AP Image                                        : C3600-K9W8-M
IOS Version                                     : 15.3(20151222:165605)$
Reset Button                                    : Enabled
AP Serial Number                                : FGL1645W0W1
AP Certificate Type                             : Manufacture Installed
Management Frame Protection Validation          : Disabled
AP User Mode                                    : Customized
AP User Name                                    : cisco
AP 802.1X User Mode                             : Not Configured
AP 802.1X User Name                             : Not Configured
Cisco AP System Logging Host                    : 255.255.255.255
AP Up Time                                      : 23 minutes 53 seconds
AP CAPWAP Up Time                               : 21 minutes 53 seconds
Join Date and Time                              : 01/18/2016 02:36:09
Join Taken Time                                 : 1 minute 59 seconds
Ethernet Port Duplex                            : Auto
Ethernet Port Speed                             : Auto
AP Link Latency                                 : Disabled
Rogue Detection                                 : Enabled
AP TCP MSS Adjust                               : Disabled
AP TCP MSS Size                                 : 0
AP IPv6 TCP MSS Adjust                          : Disabled
AP IPv6 TCP MSS Size                            : 1220


show avc client

To display information about top number of applications, use the show avc client command in privileged EXEC mode.

show avc client client-mac top n application [ aggregate | upstream | downstream ]

Syntax Description

client client-mac

Specifies the client MAC address.

top n application

Specifies the number of top "N" applications for the given client.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show avc client command:

Switch# sh avc client 0040.96ae.65ec top 10 application aggregate

Cumulative Stats:

No.  AppName      Packet-Count    Byte-Count       AvgPkt-Size     usage%
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1    skinny          7343           449860           61             94
2    unknown         99             13631            137            3
3    dhcp            18             8752             486            2
4    http            18             3264             181            1
5    tftp            9              534              59             0
6    dns             2              224              112            0

Last Interval(90 seconds) Stats:

No.  AppName     Packet-Count     Byte-Count       AvgPkt-Size      usage%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1    skinny          9              540              60              100

show avc wlan

To display information about top applications and users using the applications, use the show avc wlan command in privileged EXEC mode.

show avc wlan ssid top n application [ aggregate | upstream | downstream ]

Syntax Description

wlan ssid

Specifies the Service Set IDentifier (SSID) for WLAN.

top n application

Specifies the number of top "N" applications.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show avc wlan command:

Switch# show avc wlan Lobby_WLAN top 10 application aggregate

Cumulative Stats:

No.  AppName           Packet-Count          Byte-Count          AvgPkt-Size  usage%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1    ssl                10598677              1979525706            997          42
2    vnc                5550900               3764612847            678          14
3    http               3043131               2691327197            884          10
4    unknown            1856297               1140264956            614          4
5    video-over-http    1625019               2063335150            1269         8
6    binary-over-http   1329115               1744190344            1312         6
7    webex-meeting      1146872               540713787             471          2
8    rtp                923900                635650544             688          2
9    unknown            752341                911000213             1210         3
10   youtube            631085                706636186             1119         3

Last Interval(90 seconds) Stats:

No.  AppName          Packet-Count          Byte-Count            AvgPkt-Size  usage%
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1    vnc                687093                602731844             877          68
2    video-over-http    213272                279831588             1312         31
3    ssl                6515                  5029365               771          1
4    webex-meeting      3649                  1722663               472          0
5    http               2634                  1334355               506          0
6    unknown            1436                  99412                 69           0
7    google-services    722                   378121                523          0
8    linkedin           655                   393263                600          0
9    exchange           432                   167390                387          0
10   gtalk-chat         330                   17330                 52           0


show cable-diagnostics tdr

To display the Time Domain Reflector (TDR) results, use the show cable-diagnostics tdr command in privileged EXEC mode.

show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id

Syntax Description

interface-id

Specifies the interface on which TDR is run.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

TDR is supported only on 10/100/100 copper Ethernet ports. It is not supported on 10-Gigabit Ethernet ports and small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module ports.

Examples

This example shows the output from the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command on a switch:


Switch# show cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/23
		TDR test last run on: March 01 00:04:08 
		Interface  Speed  Local pair  Pair length         Remote pair   Pair status
		--------- ----- ---------- ------------------ ----------- --------------------
		Gi1/0/23   1000M  Pair A      1    +/- 1 meters   Pair A        Normal
		                  Pair B      1    +/- 1 meters   Pair B        Normal 
		                  Pair C      1    +/- 1 meters   Pair C        Normal 
		                  Pair D      1    +/- 1 meters   Pair D        Normal 

Table 2. Field Descriptions for the show cable-diagnostics tdr Command Output

Field

Description

Interface

The interface on which TDR is run.

Speed

The speed of connection.

Local pair

The name of the pair of wires that TDR is testing on the local interface.

Pair length

The location of the problem on the cable, with respect to your switch. TDR can only find the location in one of these cases:

  • The cable is properly connected, the link is up, and the interface speed is 1000 Mb/s.
  • The cable is open.
  • The cable has a short.

Remote pair

The name of the pair of wires to which the local pair is connected. TDR can learn about the remote pair only when the cable is properly connected and the link is up.

Pair status

The status of the pair of wires on which TDR is running:

  • Normal—The pair of wires is properly connected.
  • Not completed—The test is running and is not completed.
  • Not supported—The interface does not support TDR.
  • Open—The pair of wires is open.
  • Shorted—The pair of wires is shorted.
  • ImpedanceMis—The impedance is mismatched.
  • Short/Impedance Mismatched—The impedance mismatched or the cable is short.
  • InProgress—The diagnostic test is in progress.

This example shows the output from the show interface interface-id command when TDR is running:


Switch# show interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
		gigabitethernet1/0/2 is up, line protocol is up (connected: TDR in Progress)
		

This example shows the output from the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command when TDR is not running:


Switch# show cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
		% TDR test was never issued on gigabitethernet1/0/2
		

If an interface does not support TDR, this message appears:


% TDR test is not supported on switch 1

show debug

To display all the debug commands available on a switch, use the show debug command in Privileged EXEC mode.

show debug

show debug condition Condition identifier | All conditions

Syntax Description

Condition identifier

Sets the value of the condition identifier to be used. Range is between 1 and 1000.

All conditions

Shows all conditional debugging options available.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 16.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Because debugging output is assigned high priority in the CPU process, it can render the system unusable. For this reason, use debug commands only to troubleshoot specific problems or during troubleshooting sessions with Cisco technical support staff. Moreover, it is best to use debug commands during periods of lower network traffic and fewer users. Debugging during these periods decreases the likelihood that increased debug command processing overhead will affect system use.

Examples

This example shows the output of a show debug command:


Switch# show debug condition all

To disable debugging, use the no debug all command.

show env

To display fan, temperature, and power information for the switch (standalone switch, stack master, or stack member), use the show env command in EXEC modes.

show env { all | fan | power [ all | switch [ switch-number]] | stack [ stack-number ] | temperature [ status ] }

Syntax Description

all

Displays fan, temperature and power environmental status.

fan

Displays the switch fan status.

power

Displays the power supply status.

all

(Optional) Displays the status for all power supplies.

switch switch-number

(Optional) Displays the power supply status for a specific switch.

stack switch-number

(Optional) Displays all environmental status for each switch in the stack or for a specified switch. The range is 1 to 9, depending on the switch member numbers in the stack.

temperature

Displays the switch temperature status.

status

(Optional) Displays the temperature status and threshold values.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the show env stack [switch-number] command to display information about any switch in the stack from any member switch.

Use the show env temperature status command to display the switch temperature states and threshold levels.

Examples

This example shows how to display information about stack member 1 from the master switch:


Switch> show env stack 1
Switch :1
Switch 1 Fan 1 is OK
Switch 1 Fan 2 is OK
Switch 1 Fan 3 is OK
FAN-PS1 is OK
FAN-PS2 is NOT PRESENT
Switch 1: SYSTEM TEMPERATURE is OK
Inlet Temperature Value: 32 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 46 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 56 Degree Celsius

Hotspot Temperature Value: 43 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 105 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 125 Degree Celsius

Switch>


This example shows how to display temperature value, state, and threshold values:


Switch> show env temperature status 
Temperature Value: 26 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 46 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 56 Degree Celsius

Hotspot Temperature Value: 43 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 105 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 125 Degree Celsius

Switch>

Examples

This example shows how to display information about stack member 1 from the master switch:


Switch> show env stack 1
Switch 1:
Switch Fan 1 is OK
Switch Fan 2 is OK
Switch Fan 3 is OK
FAN-PS1 is OK
FAN-PS2 is NOT PRESENT
Switch 1: SYSTEM TEMPERATURE is OK
Temperature Value: 32 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 41 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 56 Degree Celsius

Switch>


This example shows how to display temperature value, state, and threshold values:


Switch> show env temperature status
Temperature Value: 32 Degree Celsius
Temperature State: GREEN
Yellow Threshold : 41 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold : 56 Degree Celsius

Switch>

Table 3. States in the show env temperature status Command Output

State

Description

Green

The switch temperature is in the normal operating range.

Yellow

The temperature is in the warning range. You should check the external temperature around the switch.

Red

The temperature is in the critical range. The switch might not run properly if the temperature is in this range.

show flow monitor

To display the status and statistics for a flow monitor, use the show flow monitor command in privileged EXEC mode.

Syntax Description

name

(Optional) Specifies the name of a flow monitor.

monitor-name

(Optional) Name of a flow monitor that was previously configured.

cache

(Optional) Displays the contents of the cache for the flow monitor.

format

(Optional) Specifies the use of one of the format options for formatting the display output.

csv

(Optional) Displays the flow monitor cache contents in comma-separated variables (CSV) format.

record

(Optional) Displays the flow monitor cache contents in record format.

table

(Optional) Displays the flow monitor cache contents in table format.

statistics

(Optional) Displays the statistics for the flow monitor.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The cache keyword uses the record format by default.

The uppercase field names in the display output of the show flow monitor monitor-name cache command are key fields that uses to differentiate flows. The lowercase field names in the display output of the show flow monitor monitor-name cache command are nonkey fields from which collects values as additional data for the cache.

Examples

The following example displays the status for a flow monitor:

Switch# show flow monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1
 
Flow Monitor FLOW-MONITOR-1:
  Description:       Used for basic traffic analysis
  Flow Record:       flow-record-1
  Flow Exporter:     flow-exporter-1
                     flow-exporter-2
  Cache:
    Type:              normal
    Status:            allocated
    Size:              4096 entries / 311316 bytes
    Inactive Timeout:  15 secs
    Active Timeout:    1800 secs


This table describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 4. show flow monitor monitor-name Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Flow Monitor

Name of the flow monitor that you configured.

Description

Description that you configured or the monitor, or the default description User defined.

Flow Record

Flow record assigned to the flow monitor.

Flow Exporter

Exporters that are assigned to the flow monitor.

Cache

Information about the cache for the flow monitor.

Type

Flow monitor cache type. The value is always normal, as it is the only supported cache type.

Status

Status of the flow monitor cache.

The possible values are:

  • allocated—The cache is allocated.

  • being deleted—The cache is being deleted.

  • not allocated—The cache is not allocated.

Size

Current cache size.

Inactive Timeout

Current value for the inactive timeout in seconds.

Active Timeout

Current value for the active timeout in seconds.

The following example displays the status, statistics, and data for the flow monitor named FLOW-MONITOR-1:

This table describes the significant fields shown in the display.

The following example displays the status, statistics, and data for the flow monitor named FLOW-MONITOR-1 in a table format:

The following example displays the status, statistics, and data for the flow monitor named FLOW-MONITOR-IPv6 (the cache contains IPv6 data) in record format:

The following example displays the status and statistics for a flow monitor:

show license right-to-use

To display detailed information for licenses installed on the switch, use the show license right-to-use command in EXEC modes.

show license right-to-use { default | detail | eula | mismatch | slot | summary | usage }

Syntax Description

default

Displays the default license information.

detail

Displays details of all the licenses in the stack.

eula

Displays the EULA text.

mismatch

Displays mismatch license information.

slot

Specifies the switch number.

summary

Displays consolidated stack-wide license information.

usage

Displays the usage details of all licenses.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show license right-to-use usage command and displays all the detailed information:


Switch# show license right-to-use usage
 
 Slot#       License Name         Type  usage-duration(y:m:d)   In-Use   EULA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1         ipservices    Permanent               00:00:00       no     no
    1         ipservices   Evaluation               00:00:00       no     no
    1             ipbase    Permanent               01:11:12      yes    yes
    1             ipbase   Evaluation               00:00:00       no     no
    1            lanbase    Permanent               00:00:00       no     no
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following is sample output from the show license right-to-use detail command and displays the detailed information of licenses:


Switch# show license right-to-use detail

show license right-to-use detail
Index 1
  License Name    : ipservices
  Period left     : Lifetime
  License Type    : Permanent
  License State   : Not Activated
  License Location: Slot 1
Index 2
  License Name    : ipservices
  Period left     : 90
  License Type    : Evaluation
  License State   : Not Activated
  License Location: Slot 1
Index 3
  License Name    : ipbase
  Period left     : Lifetime
  License Type    : Permanent
  License State   : Active, In use
  License Location: Slot 1
Index 4
  License Name    : ipbase
  Period left     : 90
  License Type    : Evaluation
  License State   : Not Activated
  License Location: Slot 1
Index 5   
  License Name    : lanbase
  Period left     : Lifetime
  License Type    : Permanent
  License State   : Not Activated
  License Location: Slot 1



The following is sample output from the show license right-to-use summary command when the evaluation license is active:


Switch# show license right-to-use summary

License Name       Type      Period left
----------------------------------------
      ipbase  Permanent         Lifetime
dna-advantage Subscription Subscription      Active
------------------------------------------------------


License Level In Use: ipbase+dna-advantage Subscription
License Level on Reboot: ipbase+dna-advantage Subscription

show location

To display location information, use the show location command in privileged EXEC mode.

show location { detail mac-addr | plm | statistics | summary rfid | rfid { client | config | detail MAC-addr | summary } }

Syntax Description

detail mac-addr

Displays detailed location information with the RSSI table for a particular client.

plm

Displays location path loss measurement (CCX S60) configuration.

statistics

Displays location-based system statistics.

summary

Displays location-based system summary information.

rfid

Displays the RFID tag tracking information.

client

Displays the summary of RFID tags that are clients.

config

Displays the configuration options for RFID tag tracking.

detail MAC-addr

Displays the detailed information for one rfid tag.

summary

Displays summary information for all known rfid tags.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show location plm command:

Switch# show location plm
Location Path Loss Configuration

Calbration client      : Disabled, Radio: Multiband
Normal clients         : Disabled
Burst interval         : 60
 

show location ap-detect

To display the location information detected by specified access point, use the show location ap-detect command in privileged EXEC mode.

show location ap-detect { all | client | rfid | rogue-ap | rogue-client } ap-name

Syntax Description

all

Displays information of the client, RFID, rogue access point, and rogue client.

client

Displays the client information.

rfid

Displays RFID information.

rogue-ap

Displays rogue access point information.

rogue-client

Displays rogue client information.

ap-name

Specified access point name.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show location ap-detect client command:

Switch# show location ap-detect client AP02
Clients

MAC Address       Status            Slot  Antenna     RSSI
----------------------------------------------------------
2477.0389.96ac    Associated           1        0      -60
2477.0389.96ac    Associated           1        1      -61
2477.0389.96ac    Associated           0        0      -46
2477.0389.96ac    Associated           0        1      -41


RFID Tags



Rogue AP's



Rogue Clients

MAC Address         State               Slot     Rssi
--------------------------------------------------------
0040.96b3.bce6      Alert               1        -58
586d.8ff0.891a      Alert               1        -72


                                                         
                                                         

show mac address-table move update

To display the MAC address-table move update information on the switch, use the show mac address-table move update command in EXEC mode.

show mac address-table move update

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

User EXEC

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows the output from the show mac address-table move update command:


Switch# show mac address-table move update

Switch-ID : 010b.4630.1780
Dst mac-address : 0180.c200.0010
Vlans/Macs supported : 1023/8320
Default/Current settings: Rcv Off/On, Xmt Off/On
Max packets per min : Rcv 40, Xmt 60
Rcv packet count : 10
Rcv conforming packet count : 5
Rcv invalid packet count : 0
Rcv packet count this min : 0
Rcv threshold exceed count : 0
Rcv last sequence# this min : 0
Rcv last interface : Po2
Rcv last src-mac-address : 0003.fd6a.8701
Rcv last switch-ID : 0303.fd63.7600
Xmt packet count : 0
Xmt packet count this min : 0
Xmt threshold exceed count : 0
Xmt pak buf unavail cnt : 0
Xmt last interface : None


show nmsp

To display the Network Mobility Services Protocol (NMSP) configuration settings, use the show nmsp command.

show nmsp { attachment | { suppress interfaces } | capability | notification interval | statistics { connection | summary } | status | subscription detail [ ip-addr ] | summary }

Syntax Description

attachment suppress interfaces

Displays attachment suppress interfaces.

capability

Displays NMSP capabilities.

notification interval

Displays the NMSP notification interval.

statistics connection

Displays all connection-specific counters.

statistics summary

Displays the NMSP counters.

status

Displays status of active NMSP connections.

subscription detail ip-addr

The details are only for the NMSP services subscribed to by a specific IP address.

subscription summary

Displays details for all of the NMSP services to which the controller is subscribed. The details are only for the NMSP services subscribed to by a specific IP address.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show nmsp notification interval command:


Switch#  show nmsp notification interval
NMSP Notification Intervals
---------------------------

RSSI Interval:
 Client               : 2 sec
 RFID                 : 2 sec
 Rogue AP             : 2 sec
 Rogue Client         : 2 sec
Attachment Interval   : 30 sec
Location Interval     : 30 sec
                                                                
 

show sdm prefer

To display information about the templates that can be used to maximize system resources for a particular feature, use the show sdm prefer command in privileged EXEC mode. To display the current template, use the command without a keyword.

show sdm prefer [ advanced ]

Syntax Description

advanced

(Optional) Displays information on the advanced template.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

If you did not reload the switch after entering the sdm prefer global configuration command, the show sdm prefer privileged EXEC command displays the template currently in use and not the newly configured template.

The numbers displayed for each template represent an approximate maximum number for each feature resource. The actual number might vary, depending on the actual number of other features configured. For example, in the default template if your switch had more than 16 routed interfaces (subnet VLANs), the number of possible unicast MAC addresses might be less than 6000.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show sdm prefer command:


Switch# show sdm prefer

Showing SDM Template Info

This is the Advanced template.
	Number of VLANs: 																																4094
	Unicast MAC addresses:																										 32768
	Overflow Unicast MAC addresses:																	 512
	IGMP and Multicast groups: 																						8192
	Overflow IGMP and Multicast groups:													 512
	Directly connected routes: 																						32768
	Indirect routes: 																																7680
	Security Access Control Entries:																	3072
	QoS Access Control Entries: 																					3072
	Policy Based Routing ACEs: 																						1024
	Netflow ACEs: 																																			1024
	Input Microflow policer ACEs: 																			256
	Output Microflow policer ACEs: 																		256
	Flow SPAN ACEs: 																																	256
	Tunnels: 																																								256
	Control Plane Entries:																										 512
	Input Netflow flows:																												 8192
	Output Netflow flows:																										 16384
 SGT/DGT entries:                                 4096
 SGT/DGT Overflow entries:                        512
These numbers are typical for L2 and IPv4 features.
Some features such as IPv6, use up double the entry size;
so only half as many entries can be created.

Switch#

show tech-support wireless

To display Cisco wireless LAN controller variables frequently requested by Cisco Technical Assistance Center (TAC), use the show tech-support wireless command in privileged EXEC mode.

show tech-support wireless

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show tech-support wireless command:

Switch# show tech-support wireless
 *** show ap capwap timers ***

Cisco AP CAPWAP timers

AP Discovery timer       : 10
AP Heart Beat timeout    : 30
Primary Discovery timer  : 120
Primed Join timeout      : 0
Fast Heartbeat           : Disabled
Fast Heartbeat timeout   : 1
*** show ap capwap retransmit ***
Global control packet retransmit interval : 3
Global control packet retransmit count : 5

AP Name                           Retransmit Interval             Retransmit Count
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TSIM_AP-2                         3                               5
TSIM_AP-3                         3                               5
*** show ap dot11 24ghz cleanair air-quality summary ***

AQ = Air Quality
DFS = Dynamic Frequency Selection

*** show ap dot11 24ghz cleanair air-quality worst ***

AQ = Air Quality
DFS = Dynamic Frequency Selection
AP Name             Channel   Avg AQ  Min AQ  Interferers  DFS
--------------------------------------------------------------
                    0         0       0       0            No
*** show ap dot11 24ghz cleanair config ***

Clean Air Solution............................... : Disabled
Air Quality Settings:
    Air Quality Reporting........................ : Disabled
    Air Quality Reporting Period (min)........... : 15
    Air Quality Alarms........................... : Enabled
    Air Quality Alarm Threshold.................. : 10
Interference Device Settings:
    Interference Device Reporting................ : Enabled
        Bluetooth Link........................... : Enabled
        Microwave Oven........................... : Enabled
        802.11 FH................................ : Enabled
        Bluetooth Discovery...................... : Enabled
        TDD Transmitter.......................... : Enabled
        Jammer................................... : Enabled
        Continuous Transmitter................... : Enabled
        DECT-like Phone.......................... : Enabled
        Video Camera............................. : Enabled
        802.15.4................................. : Enabled
        WiFi Inverted............................ : Enabled
        WiFi Invalid Channel..................... : Enabled
        SuperAG.................................. : Enabled
        Canopy................................... : Enabled
        Microsoft Device......................... : Enabled
        WiMax Mobile............................. : Enabled
        WiMax Fixed.............................. : Enabled
    Interference Device Types Triggering Alarms:
        Bluetooth Link........................... : Disabled
        Microwave Oven........................... : Disabled
        802.11 FH................................ : Disabled
        Bluetooth Discovery...................... : Disabled
        TDD Transmitter.......................... : Disabled
        Jammer................................... : Disabled
        Continuous Transmitter................... : Disabled
        DECT-like Phone.......................... : Disabled
        Video Camera............................. : Disabled
  802.15.4................................. : Disabled
        WiFi Inverted............................ : Enabled
        WiFi Invalid Channel..................... : Enabled
        SuperAG.................................. : Disabled
        Canopy................................... : Disabled
        Microsoft Device......................... : Disabled
        WiMax Mobile............................. : Disabled
        WiMax Fixed.............................. : Disabled
    Interference Device Alarms................... : Enabled
Additional Clean Air Settings:
    CleanAir Event-driven RRM State.............. : Disabled
    CleanAir Driven RRM Sensitivity.............. : LOW
    CleanAir Persistent Devices state............ : Disabled

                                       

show wireless ap summary (MA)

To display the wireless access point mobility agent (MA) summary information, use the show wireless ap summary command.

show wireless ap ma-ip summary

Syntax Description

ma-ip MA IPv4 Address.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command works only with MC.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the wireless access point MA summary:


Cisco controller# show wireless ap 211.0.0.4 summary 

Mobility Agent Access Point Summary:

Mobility Role                                   : Mobility Agent
Mobility Agent IP                               : 211.0.0.4
Mobility Switch Peer Group Name                 : SPG1
Multicast Group IP Address                      : 0.0.0.0
Capwap Multicast Iif-Id                         : NA
Link Encryption                                 : Disabled
Total AP Joined                                 : 1
IOS Version                                     : Not Available
AP software version                             : 10.3.123.92

Codes U - Up, UR - Unregistered, D - Downloading, R - Registered
AP Up Time in hours:minutes:seconds

AP Name           AP Model  Port      IP Address      Radio(Ghz) State Radio MAC       AP UpTime   Clients
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AP5               3602I     Gi1/0/5   211.0.0.170     2.4, 5     R     1ce6.c75b.3e70  00:21:06    0
       

show wireless ap summary

To display the number of access points known to the controller, use the show wireless ap summary command.

show wireless ap summary

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the number of access points known to the controller:


Cisco controller# show wireless ap summary 

Sub-Domain Access Point Summary

Maximum AP Limit: 100
Total AP License Installed: 60
Total AP License Available: 59
Total AP Joined: 1

AP UpTime in hours:minutes:seconds

HostName        Controller IP   AP name           AP Group        AP Model AP IP           AP UpTime   Clients
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Switch          52.2.2.1        APd48c.b5e1.05bd  default-group   1142N    52.2.2.155      452:37:01   0       


show wireless band-select

To display the status of the band-select configuration, use the show wireless band-select command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless band-select

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless band-select command:

Switch# show wireless band-select
Band Select Probe Response    : per WLAN enabling
Cycle Count                  : 2
Cycle Threshold (millisec)   : 200
Age Out Suppression (sec)    : 20
Age Out Dual Band (sec)      : 60
Client RSSI (dBm)            : 80
                                       
                                       

show wireless client calls

To display the total number of active or rejected calls on the switch, use the show wireless client calls command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client calls { active | rejected }

Syntax Description

active

Displays active calls.

rejected

Displays rejected calls.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client calls command:

switch# show wireless client calls active

TSPEC Calls:

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
MAC Address     AP Name             Status               WLAN  Authenticated
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0000.1515.000f    AP-2           Associated              1  Yes

SIP Calls:
------------------
Number of Active TSPEC calls on 802.11a and 802.11b/g: 1
Number of Active SIP calls on 802.11a and 802.11b/g: 0


show wireless client dot11

To display the total number of active or rejected calls for a specific band (2.4 Ghz or 5 Ghz), use the show wireless client dot11 command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client dot11 { 24ghz | 5ghz } calls { active | rejected }

Syntax Description

24ghz

Displays the 802.11b/g network.

5ghz

Displays the 802.11a network.

calls

Displays the wireless client calls.

active

Displays active calls.

rejected

Displays rejected calls.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client dot11 command:

Switch# show wireless client dot11 5ghz calls active

 TSPEC Calls:
------------------


SIP Calls:
------------------
Number of Active TSPEC calls on 802.11a: 0
Number of Active SIP calls on 802.11a: 0
 

show wireless client location-calibration

To display the list of clients currently used to perform location calibration, use the show wireless client location-calibration command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client location-calibration

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client location-calibration command:

Switch# show wireless client location-calibration
                                       
                                       

show wireless client probing

To display the number of probing clients, use the show wireless client probing command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client probing

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client probing command:

Switch# show wireless client probing
MAC Address         
------------------
000b.cd15.0001      
000b.cd15.0002      
000b.cd15.0003      
000b.cd15.0004      
000b.cd15.0005      
000b.cd15.0006
                                       
                                       

show wireless client summary

To display a summary of active clients associated with the controller, use the show wireless client summary command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client summary

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The following is sample output from the show wireless client summary command:

Use the show wireless exclusionlist command to display clients on the exclusion list (blacklisted).

Examples

Switch# show wireless client summary
Number of Local Clients : 1


MAC Address    AP Name                          WLAN State              Protocol
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0000.1515.000f  AP-2                        1    UP                 11a


                                       
                                       

show wireless client timers

To display 802.11 system timers, use the show wireless client timers command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client timers

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client timers command:

Switch# show wireless client timers
 Authentication Response Timeout (seconds)      : 10

                                       

show wireless client voice diagnostics

To display wireless client voice diagnostic parameters, use the show wireless client voice diagnostics command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless client voice diagnostics { qos-map | roam-history | rssi | status | tspec }

Syntax Description

qos-map

Displays information about the QoS and DSCP mapping and packet statistics in each of the four queues: VO, VI, BE, BK. The different DSCP values are also displayed.

roam-history

Displays information about the last 3 roaming histories for each known client. The output contains the timestamp, access point associated with roaming, roaming reason, and if there is a roaming failure, a reason for the roaming failure.

rssi

Displays the client's RSSI values in the last 5 seconds when voice diagnostics are enabled.

status

Displays status of voice diagnostics for clients.

tspec

Displays voice diagnostics that are enabled for TSPEC clients.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Debug voice diagnostics must be enabled for voice diagnostics to work.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless client voice diagnostics status command:

Switch# show wireless client voice diagnostics status
Voice Diagnostics Status: FALSE

show wireless country

To display the configured country and the radio types supported, use the show wireless country command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless country { channels | configured | supported [tx-power] }

Syntax Description

channels

Displays the list of possible channels for each band, and the list of channels allowed in the configured countries.

configured

Display configured countries.

supported tx-power

Displays the list of allowed Tx powers in each supported country.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless country channels command:

Switch# show wireless country channels
  Configured Country.............................: US  - United States
      KEY: * = Channel is legal in this country and may be configured manually.
           A = Channel is the Auto-RF default in this country.
           . = Channel is not legal in this country.
           C = Channel has been configured for use by Auto-RF.
           x = Channel is available to be configured for use by Auto-RF.
         (-,-) = (indoor, outdoor) regulatory domain allowed by this country.
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
    802.11bg     :
    Channels     :                   1 1 1 1 1
                 : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 (-A   ,-AB  )  US  :  A * * * * A * * * * A . . .
 Auto-RF         : . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 802.11a         :                         1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
 Channels        : 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6
                 : 4 6 8 0 2 4 6 8 2 6 0 4 0 4 8 2 6 0 4 8 2 6 0 9 3 7 1 5
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 (-A   ,-AB  )  US  :  . A . A . A . A A A A A * * * * * . . . * * * A A A A *
 Auto-RF         : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 4.9GHz 802.11a  :
   Channels      :                   1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
                 : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 US (-A   ,-AB  ): * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * A * * * * * A
 Auto-RF         : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-

                                                   
                                                   

The following is sample output from the show wireless country configured command:

Switch# show wireless country configured
 Configured Country.............................: US  - United States
 Configured Country Codes
        US  - United States : 802.11a Indoor,Outdoor/ 802.11b / 802.11g

The following is sample output from the show wireless country supported tx-power command:

Switch# show wireless country supported tx-power
      KEY: ##    = Tx Power in dBm.
           ##*   = Channel supports radar detection .
           .     = Channel is not legal in this country.
           (-)   = Regulatory Domains allowed by this country.
           (-,-) = (indoor, outdoor) regulatory Domains allowed by this country.
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
    802.11bg     :
    Channels     :                   1 1 1 1 1
                 : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4
-----------------:+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
 (-CE  ,-CE  )  AE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  AL  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  AR  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  AT  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-NA  )  AU  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-    )  BA  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  BE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  BG  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-    )  BH  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-A   )  BO  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  BR  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-    )  BY  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-ABN )  CA  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-ABN )  CA2 :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  CH  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-AER ,-AR  )  CL  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  CM  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-CE  ,-CE  )  CN  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  CO  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AB  )  CR  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  CY  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  CZ  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  DE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  DK  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-ABN )  DO  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-    )  DZ  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AB  )  EC  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  EE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  EG  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  ES  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  FI  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  FR  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  GB  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  GI  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  GR  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-NA  )  HK  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-    )  HR  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  HU  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-ER  )  ID  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  IE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-EI  ,-IE  )  IL  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-I   ,-I   )  ILO :   .  .  .  . 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AN  )  IN  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  IQ  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  IS  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  IT  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-JPU ,-JPU )  J2  :  23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
 (-JPU ,-JPU )  J3  :  23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
 (-JPQU,-PQ  )  J4  :  23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
 (-E   ,-    )  JO  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-JPU ,-JPU )  JP  :  23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
 (-ACE ,-ACEK)  KE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  KN  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-ACE ,-ACEK)  KR  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  KW  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  KZ  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  LB  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  LI  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,     )  LK  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  LT  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  LU  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  LV  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  MC  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  ME  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  MK  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,     )  MO  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  MT  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-NA  )  MX  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-ACE ,-AEC )  MY  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  NL  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  NO  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-NA  )  NZ  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  OM  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  PA  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  PE  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-ABN )  PH  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-ABN )  PH2 :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  PK  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  PL  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-A   )  PR  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  PT  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-A   )  PY  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  QA  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  RO  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  RS  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-AER ,-ER  )  RU  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-AE  ,-AE  )  SA  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  SE  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-SE  )  SG  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
 (-E   ,-E   )  SI  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  SK  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-ER  )  TH  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  TN  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-EI  ,-E   )  TR  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-ANT )  TW  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  UA  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-A   ,-AB  )  US  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AB  )  US2 :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AB  )  USL :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-    )  USX :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-A   )  UY  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-A   ,-AR  )  VE  :  27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27 27  .  .  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  VN  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .
 (-E   ,-E   )  ZA  :  20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  .

show wireless detail

To display the details of the wireless parameters configured, use the show wireless detail command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless detail

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The following parameters are displayed:
  • The wireless user idle timeout

  • The controller configured RF group name

  • Fast SSID change

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless detail command:

Switch# show wireless detail
User Timeout               : 300
RF network                 : default
Fast SSID                  : Disabled

                                       
                                       

show wireless dtls connections

To display the Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) server status, use the show wireless dtls connections command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless dtls connections

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless dtls connections command:

Switch# show wireless dtls connections
 AP Name         Local Port   Peer IP    Peer Port  Ciphersuite
----------------------------------------------------------------------
  AP-2       Capwap_Ctrl   10.0.0.16     52346      TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA
  AP-3       Capwap_Ctrl   10.0.0.17     52347      TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA

                                       
                                       

show wireless flow-control

To display the information about flow control on a particular channel, use the show wireless flow-control command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless flow-control channel-id

Syntax Description

channel-id

Identification number for a channel through which flow control is monitored.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless flow-control channel-id command:

Switch# show wireless flow-control 3 
Channel Name                           : CAPWAP
FC State                               : Disabled
Remote Server State                    : Enabled
Pass-thru Mode                         : Disabled
EnQ Disabled                           : Disabled
Queue Depth                            : 2048
Max Retries                            : 5
Min Retry Gap (mSec)                   : 3 
                                       

show wireless flow-control statistics

To display the complete information about flow control on a particular channel, use the show wireless flow-control statistics command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless flow-control channel-id statistics

Syntax Description

channel-id

Identification number for a channel through which flow control is monitored.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless flow-control channel-id statistics command:

Switch# show wireless flow-control 3 statistics
 Channel Name                                 : CAPWAP
# of times channel went into FC               : 0
# of times channel came out of FC             : 0
Total msg count received by the FC Infra      : 1
Pass-thru msgs send count                     : 0
Pass-thru msgs fail count                     : 0
# of msgs successfully queued                 : 0
# of msgs for which queuing failed            : 0
# of msgs sent thru after queuing             : 0
# of msgs sent w/o queuing                    : 1
# of msgs for which send failed               : 0
# of invalid EAGAINS received                 : 0
Highest watermark reached                     : 0
# of times Q hit max capacity                 : 0
Avg time channel stays in FC (mSec)           : 0   
                                       

show wireless load-balancing

To display the status of the load-balancing feature, use the show wireless load-balancing command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless load-balancing

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless load-balancing command:

 > show wireless load-balancing
Aggressive Load Balancing............................: per WLAN enabling
Aggressive Load Balancing Window (clients).................:: 5
Aggressive Load Balancing Denial Count.....................:: 3

Statistics
Total Denied Count (clients)................................:: 0
Total Denial Sent (messages)................................:: 0
Exceeded Denial Max Limit Count (times).....................:: 0
None 5G Candidate Count (times).............................:: 0
None 2.4G Candidate Count (times)...........................:: 0

                                       
                                       

show wireless mobility summary

To display the summary of the mobility management configuration, use the show wireless mobility summary command.

show wireless mobility ma-ip summary

Syntax Description

ma-ip MA IPv4 Address.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command works only with MC.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the summary of the mobility management configuration:


Cisco controller# show wireless mobility 211.0.0.4 summary 

Mobility Agent Summary:

Mobility Role                                   : Mobility Agent
Wireless Management VLAN                        : 211
Wireless Management IP Address                  : 211.0.0.4
Mobility Switch Peer Group Name                 : SPG1
Multicast IP Address                            : 0.0.0.0
DTLS Mode                                       : Enabled
Mobility Keepalive Interval/Count               : 10/3
Mobility Control Message DSCP Value             : 48
Switch Peer Group Members Configured            : 1
Central Management                              : Enabled

Link Status is Control Link Status : Data Link Status

The status of Mobility Controller:

Host Name         IP              Public IP            Link Status
--------------------------------------------------------------------
ct3850-62         211.0.0.8       211.0.0.8            UP   : UP

Switch Peer Group members:

Host Name          IP              Public IP            Data Link Status
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
ct3850-63         211.0.0.4       211.0.0.4            N/A


show wireless performance

To display aggressive load balancing configuration, use the show wireless performance command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless performance { ap | client } summary

Syntax Description

ap summary

Displays aggressive load balancing configuration of access points configured to the controller.

client summary

Displays aggressive load balancing configuration details of the clients.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless performance ap summary command.

Switch# show wireless performance ap summary
Number of APs:


                                                

The following is sample output from the show wireless performance client summary command.

Switch# show wireless performance client summary
Number of Clients:

MAC Address        AP Name           Status        WLAN/Guest-Lan Auth Protocol Port Wired
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                                

show wireless pmk-cache

To display information about the pairwise master key (PMK) cache, use the show wireless pmk-cache command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless pmk-cache [ mac-address mac-addr ]

Syntax Description

mac-address mac-addr

(Optional) Information about a single entry in the PMK cache.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless pmk-cache mac-address command:

Switch# show wireless pmk-cache mac-address H.H.H 
Number of PMK caches in total : 0

                                          
                                          

show wireless probe

To display the advanced probe request filtering configuration and the number of probes sent to the WLAN controller per access point per client and the probe interval in milliseconds, use the show wireless probe command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless probe

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless probe command:

Switch# show wireless probe
Probe request filtering                          : Enabled
Number of probes per client per radio fwd from AP: 2
Probe request rate-limiting interval             : 500 msec
Aggregate probe request interval                 : 500 msec


                                       
                                       

show wireless sip preferred-call-no

To display SIP preferred call numbers, use the show wireless sip preferred-call-no command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless sip preferred-call-no

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless sip preferred-call-no command:

Switch# show wireless sip preferred-call-no
Index Preferred-Number
----------------------
1     1031
2     1032
4     1034



                                       
                                       

show wireless summary

To display the number of access points, radios and wireless clients known to the controller, use the show wireless summary command in privileged EXEC mode.

show wireless summary

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show wireless summary command:

Switch# show wireless summary

Access Point Summary

               Total    Up    Down
-----------------------------------
802.11a/n          2     2       0
802.11b/g/n        2     2       0
All APs            2     2       0

Client Summary

Current Clients : 1
Excluded Clients: 0
Disabled Clients: 0
                                       

show wireless wlan summary

To display wireless WLAN details, use the show wireless wlan summary command.

show wireless wlan summary

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to display wireless WLAN summary:


Cisco controller# show wireless WLAN summary 

Total WLAN Configured: 2

Total Client Count: 0



ID    Profile Name          SSID                  Security    Radio       VLAN        Client   Status  
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1     benimr3               benimr3               NONE        All         602         0        UP
2     Proton_2              Proton_2              NONE        All         202         0        UP

show wlan name

To display the MA's WLAN configuration by name, use the show wlan name command.

show wlan name name ma-ip

Syntax Description

name

Access point name.

ma-ip

MA IPv4 address.

Command Default

None

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE 3.7.3E

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command works only with MC.

Examples

The following example shows how to display the MA WLAN configuration by name:


Cisco controller# show wlan name anu_mcma 211.0.0.4 

WLAN Profile Name     : anu_mcma
================================================
Identifier                                     : 1
Network Name (SSID)                            : anu_mcma
Status                                         : Disabled
Broadcast SSID                                 : Enabled
Max Associated Clients per WLAN                : 0
Max Associated Clients per AP per WLAN         : 0
Max Associated Clients per AP Radio per WLAN   : 0
AAA Policy Override                            : Disabled
Network Admission Control
  NAC-State                                    : Disabled
Number of Active Clients                       : 0
Exclusionlist Timeout                          : 60
Session Timeout                                : 1800 seconds
CHD per WLAN                                   : Enabled
Webauth DHCP exclusion                         : Disabled
Interface                                      : 211
Interface Status                               : Up
Multicast Interface                            : Unconfigured
WLAN IPv4 ACL                                  :
WLAN IPv6 ACL                                  : unconfigured
DHCP Server                                    : Default
DHCP Address Assignment Required               : Disabled
DHCP Option 82                                 : Disabled
DHCP Option 82 Format                          : ap-mac
DHCP Option 82 Ascii Mode                      : Disabled
DHCP Option 82 Rid Mode                        : Disabled
Local Profiling -Policy Name                   : Disabled
Device Classification                          : Disabled
QoS Service Policy - Input
  Policy Name                                  : unknown
  Policy State                                 : None
QoS Service Policy - Output
  Policy Name                                  : unknown
  Policy State                                 : None
QoS Client Service Policy
  Input  Policy Name                           : unknown
  Output Policy Name                           : unknown
WMM                                            : Allowed
WifiDirect                                     : Disabled
Channel Scan Defer Priority:
  Priority (default)                           : 4
  Priority (default)                           : 5
  Priority (default)                           : 6
Scan Defer Time (msecs)                        : 100
Media Stream Multicast-direct                  : Disabled
CCX - AironetIe Support                        : Enabled
CCX - Gratuitous ProbeResponse (GPR)           : Disabled
CCX - Diagnostics Channel Capability           : Disabled
Dot11-Phone Mode (7920)                        : Invalid
Wired Protocol                                 : None
Peer-to-Peer Blocking Action                   : Disabled
Radio Policy                                   : All
DTIM period for 802.11a radio                  : 1
DTIM period for 802.11b radio                  : 1
Local EAP Authentication                       : Disabled
Mac Filter Authorization list name             : MACFILTER
Accounting list name                           : Disabled
802.1x authentication list name                : wcm_dot1x
Security
    802.11 Authentication                      : Open System
    Static WEP Keys                            : Disabled
    802.1X                                     : Disabled
    Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA/WPA2)          : Enabled
        WPA (SSN IE)                           : Disabled
        WPA2 (RSN IE)                          : Enabled
            TKIP Cipher                        : Disabled
            AES Cipher                         : Enabled
        Auth Key Management
            802.1x                             : Enabled
            PSK                                : Disabled
            CCKM                               : Disabled
            FT dot1x                           : Disabled
            FT PSK                             : Disabled
            PMF dot1x                          : Disabled
            PMF PSK                            : Disabled
    FT Support                                 : Disabled
        FT Reassociation Timeout               : 20
        FT Over-The-DS mode                    : Enabled
    PMF Support                                : Disabled
        PMF Association Comeback Timeout       : 1
        PMF SA Query Time                      : 200
    CKIP                                       : Disabled
    IP Security                                : Disabled
    L2TP                                       : Disabled
    Web Based Authentication                   : Disabled
    Conditional Web Redirect                   : Disabled
    Splash-Page Web Redirect                   : Disabled
    Auto Anchor                                : Disabled
    Sticky Anchoring                           : Enabled
    Cranite Passthru                           : Disabled
    Fortress Passthru                          : Disabled
    PPTP                                       : Disabled
    Infrastructure MFP protection              : Enabled
    Client MFP                                 : Optional
    Webauth On-mac-filter Failure              : Disabled
    Webauth Authentication List Name           : Disabled
    Webauth Parameter Map                      : Disabled
    Tkip MIC Countermeasure Hold-down Timer    : 60
Call Snooping                                  : Disabled
Passive Client                                 : Disabled
Non Cisco WGB                                  : Disabled
Band Select                                    : Disabled
Load Balancing                                 : Disabled
IP Source Guard                                : Disabled
Local HTTP Profiling Status                    : Disabled
Radius HTTP Profiling Status                   : Disabled
Assisted-Roaming
    Neighbor List                              : Disabled
    Prediction List                            : Disabled
    Dual Band Support                          : Disabled
AVC Visibility                                 : Disabled
Universal Ap Admin                             : Disabled
11ac Mu Mimo                                   : Disabled
     

shutdown

To shut down VLAN switching, use the shutdown command in global configuration mode. To disable the configuration set, use the no form of this command.

shutdown [ vlan vlan-id ]

no shutdown

Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

VLAN ID of VLAN to shutdown.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to shutdown a VLAN:


Switch(config)# vlan open1
Switch(config-wlan)# shutdown

This example shows that the access point is not shut down:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# ap name 3602a no shutdown

system env temperature threshold yellow

To configure the difference between the yellow and red temperature thresholds that determines the value of yellow threshold, use the system env temperature threshold yellow command in global configuration mode. To return to the default value, use the no form of this command.

system env temperature threshold yellow value

no system env temperature threshold yellow value

Syntax Description

value

Specifies the difference between the yellow and red threshold values (in Celsius). The range is 10 to 25.

Command Default

These are the default values

Table 5. Default Values for the Temperature Thresholds

Switch

Difference between Yellow and Red

Red1

Catalyst 3650

14°C

60°C

1 You cannot configure the red temperature threshold.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

You cannot configure the green and red thresholds but can configure the yellow threshold. Use the system env temperature threshold yellow value global configuration command to specify the difference between the yellow and red thresholds and to configure the yellow threshold. For example, if the red threshold is 66 degrees C and you want to configure the yellow threshold as 51 degrees C, set the difference between the thresholds as 15 by using the system env temperature threshold yellow 15 command. For example, if the red threshold is 60 degrees C and you want to configure the yellow threshold as 51 degrees C, set the difference between the thresholds as 15 by using the system env temperature threshold yellow 9 command.


Note

The internal temperature sensor in the switch measures the internal system temperature and might vary ±5 degrees C.


Examples

This example sets 15 as the difference between the yellow and red thresholds:


		Switch(config)# system env temperature threshold yellow 15
		Switch(config)#

	

test cable-diagnostics tdr

To run the Time Domain Reflector (TDR) feature on an interface, use the test cable-diagnostics tdr command in privileged EXEC mode.

test cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id

Syntax Description

interface-id

The interface on which to run TDR.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

TDR is supported only on 10/100/100 copper Ethernet ports. It is not supported on 10-Gigabit Ethernet ports or small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module ports.

After you run TDR by using the test cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command, use the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id privileged EXEC command to display the results.

Examples

This example shows how to run TDR on an interface:


Switch# test cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
TDR test started on interface Gi1/0/2
A TDR test can take a few seconds to run on an interface
Use 'show cable-diagnostics tdr' to read the TDR results

If you enter the test cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command on an interface that has an link up status and a speed of 10 or 100 Mb/s, these messages appear:


Switch# test cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/3
TDR test on Gi1/0/9 will affect link state and traffic
TDR test started on interface Gi1/0/3
A TDR test can take a few seconds to run on an interface
Use 'show cable-diagnostics tdr' to read the TDR results.

traceroute mac

To display the Layer 2 path taken by the packets from the specified source MAC address to the specified destination MAC address, use the traceroute mac command in privileged EXEC mode.

traceroute mac [ interface interface-id ] source-mac-address [ interface interface-id ] destination-mac-address [ vlan vlan-id ] [detail]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specifies an interface on the source or destination switch.

source-mac-address

The MAC address of the source switch in hexadecimal format.

destination-mac-address

The MAC address of the destination switch in hexadecimal format.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specifies the VLAN on which to trace the Layer 2 path that the packets take from the source switch to the destination switch. Valid VLAN IDs are 1 to 4094.

detail

(Optional) Specifies that detailed information appears.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

For Layer 2 traceroute to function properly, Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) must be enabled on all of the switches in the network. Do not disable CDP.

When the switch detects a device in the Layer 2 path that does not support Layer 2 traceroute, the switch continues to send Layer 2 trace queries and lets them time out.

The maximum number of hops identified in the path is ten.

Layer 2 traceroute supports only unicast traffic. If you specify a multicast source or destination MAC address, the physical path is not identified, and an error message appears.

The traceroute mac command output shows the Layer 2 path when the specified source and destination addresses belong to the same VLAN.

If you specify source and destination addresses that belong to different VLANs, the Layer 2 path is not identified, and an error message appears.

If the source or destination MAC address belongs to multiple VLANs, you must specify the VLAN to which both the source and destination MAC addresses belong.

If the VLAN is not specified, the path is not identified, and an error message appears.

The Layer 2 traceroute feature is not supported when multiple devices are attached to one port through hubs (for example, multiple CDP neighbors are detected on a port).

When more than one CDP neighbor is detected on a port, the Layer 2 path is not identified, and an error message appears.

This feature is not supported in Token Ring VLANs.

Examples

This example shows how to display the Layer 2 path by specifying the source and destination MAC addresses:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0601 0000.0201.0201
		Source 0000.0201.0601 found on con6[WS-C3750E-24PD] (2.2.6.6)
		con6 (2.2.6.6) :Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/0/3
		con5                 (2.2.5.5        )  :    Gi0/0/3 => Gi0/0/1
		con1                 (2.2.1.1        )  :    Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/0/2
		con2                 (2.2.2.2        )  :    Gi0/0/2 => Gi0/0/1
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2[WS-C3550-24] (2.2.2.2)
		Layer 2 trace completed
		
		

This example shows how to display the Layer 2 path by using the detail keyword:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0601 0000.0201.0201 detail
		Source 0000.0201.0601 found on con6[WS-C3750E-24PD] (2.2.6.6)
		con6 / WS-C3750E-24PD / 2.2.6.6 :
		        Gi0/0/2 [auto, auto] => Gi0/0/3 [auto, auto]
		con5 / WS-C2950G-24-EI / 2.2.5.5 :
		        Fa0/3 [auto, auto] => Gi0/1 [auto, auto]
		con1 / WS-C3550-12G / 2.2.1.1 :
		        Gi0/1 [auto, auto] => Gi0/2 [auto, auto]
		con2 / WS-C3550-24 / 2.2.2.2 :
		        Gi0/2 [auto, auto] => Fa0/1 [auto, auto]
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2[WS-C3550-24] (2.2.2.2)
		Layer 2 trace completed.
		
		

This example shows how to display the Layer 2 path by specifying the interfaces on the source and destination switches:


Switch# traceroute mac interface fastethernet0/1 0000.0201.0601 interface fastethernet0/3 0000.0201.0201
		Source 0000.0201.0601 found on con6[WS-C3750E-24PD] (2.2.6.6)
		con6 (2.2.6.6) :Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/0/3
		con5                 (2.2.5.5        )  :    Gi0/0/3 => Gi0/0/1
		con1                 (2.2.1.1        )  :    Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/0/2
		con2                 (2.2.2.2        )  :    Gi0/0/2 => Gi0/0/1
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2[WS-C3550-24] (2.2.2.2)
		Layer 2 trace completed
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when the switch is not connected to the source switch:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0501 0000.0201.0201 detail
		Source not directly connected, tracing source .....
		Source 0000.0201.0501 found on con5[WS-C3750E-24TD] (2.2.5.5)
		con5 / WS-C3750E-24TD / 2.2.5.5 :
		        Gi0/0/1 [auto, auto] => Gi0/0/3 [auto, auto]
		con1 / WS-C3550-12G / 2.2.1.1 :
		        Gi0/1 [auto, auto] => Gi0/2 [auto, auto]
		con2 / WS-C3550-24 / 2.2.2.2 :
		        Gi0/2 [auto, auto] => Fa0/1 [auto, auto]
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2[WS-C3550-24] (2.2.2.2)
		Layer 2 trace completed.
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when the switch cannot find the destination port for the source MAC address:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0011.1111 0000.0201.0201
		Error:Source Mac address not found. 
		Layer2 trace aborted.
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when the source and destination devices are in different VLANs:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0601 0000.0301.0201
		Error:Source and destination macs are on different vlans. 
		Layer2 trace aborted.
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when the destination MAC address is a multicast address:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0601 0100.0201.0201
  Invalid destination mac address
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when source and destination switches belong to multiple VLANs:


Switch# traceroute mac 0000.0201.0601 0000.0201.0201
		Error:Mac found on multiple vlans.
		Layer2 trace aborted.

		

traceroute mac ip

To display the Layer 2 path taken by the packets from the specified source IP address or hostname to the specified destination IP address or hostname, use the traceroute mac ip command in privileged EXEC mode.

traceroute mac ip { source-ip-address | source-hostname } { destination-ip-address | destination-hostname } [detail]

Syntax Description

source-ip-address

The IP address of the source switch as a 32-bit quantity in dotted-decimal format.

source-hostname

The IP hostname of the source switch.

destination-ip-address

The IP address of the destination switch as a 32-bit quantity in dotted-decimal format.

destination-hostname

The IP hostname of the destination switch.

detail

(Optional) Specifies that detailed information appears.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

For Layer 2 traceroute to function properly, Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) must be enabled on each switch in the network. Do not disable CDP.

When the switch detects a device in the Layer 2 path that does not support Layer 2 traceroute, the switch continues to send Layer 2 trace queries and lets them time out.

The maximum number of hops identified in the path is ten.

The traceroute mac ip command output shows the Layer 2 path when the specified source and destination IP addresses are in the same subnet.

When you specify the IP addresses, the switch uses Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) to associate the IP addresses with the corresponding MAC addresses and the VLAN IDs.

  • If an ARP entry exists for the specified IP address, the switch uses the associated MAC address and identifies the physical path.
  • If an ARP entry does not exist, the switch sends an ARP query and tries to resolve the IP address. The IP addresses must be in the same subnet. If the IP address is not resolved, the path is not identified, and an error message appears.

The Layer 2 traceroute feature is not supported when multiple devices are attached to one port through hubs (for example, multiple CDP neighbors are detected on a port).

When more than one CDP neighbor is detected on a port, the Layer 2 path is not identified, and an error message appears.

This feature is not supported in Token Ring VLANs.

Examples

This example shows how to display the Layer 2 path by specifying the source and destination IP addresses and by using the detail keyword:


		Switch# traceroute mac ip 2.2.66.66 2.2.22.22 detail
  Translating IP to mac ..... 
		2.2.66.66 => 0000.0201.0601
		2.2.22.22 => 0000.0201.0201
		
		Source 0000.0201.0601 found on con6[WS-C2950G-24-EI] (2.2.6.6)
		con6 / WS-C3750E-24TD / 2.2.6.6 :
		        Gi0/0/1 [auto, auto] => Gi0/0/3 [auto, auto]
		con5 / WS-C2950G-24-EI / 2.2.5.5 :
		        Fa0/3 [auto, auto] => Gi0/1 [auto, auto]
		con1 / WS-C3550-12G / 2.2.1.1 :
		        Gi0/1 [auto, auto] => Gi0/2 [auto, auto]
		con2 / WS-C3550-24 / 2.2.2.2 :
		        Gi0/2 [auto, auto] => Fa0/1 [auto, auto]
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2[WS-C3550-24] (2.2.2.2)
		Layer 2 trace completed.
		
		

This example shows how to display the Layer 2 path by specifying the source and destination hostnames:


		Switch# traceroute mac ip con6 con2
		Translating IP to mac ..... 
		2.2.66.66 => 0000.0201.0601
		2.2.22.22 => 0000.0201.0201
		
		Source 0000.0201.0601 found on con6
		con6 (2.2.6.6) :Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/0/3
		con5                 (2.2.5.5        )  :    Gi0/0/3 => Gi0/1
		con1                 (2.2.1.1        )  :    Gi0/0/1 => Gi0/2
		con2                 (2.2.2.2        )  :    Gi0/0/2 => Fa0/1
		Destination 0000.0201.0201 found on con2
		Layer 2 trace completed
		
		

This example shows the Layer 2 path when ARP cannot associate the source IP address with the corresponding MAC address:


		Switch# traceroute mac ip 2.2.66.66 2.2.77.77
		Arp failed for destination 2.2.77.77.
		Layer2 trace aborted.

		

trapflags

To enable sending rogue access point detection traps, use the trapflags command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable sending rogue access point detection traps, use the no form of this command.

trapflags rogueap

no trapflags rogueap

Syntax Description

rogueap

Enables sending rogue access point detection traps.

Command Default

Enabled.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to disable the sending of rogue access point detection traps:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# no trapflags rogueap
Switch(config)# end
                                             
                                             

trapflags client

To enable the sending of client-related DOT11 traps, use the trapflags client command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable the sending of client-related DOT11 traps, use the no form of this command.

trapflags client [ dot11 { assocfail | associate | authfail | deauthenticate | disassociate } | excluded ]

no trapflags client [ dot11 { assocfail | associate | authfail | deauthenticate | disassociate } | excluded ]

Syntax Description

dot11

Client-related DOT11 traps.

assocfail

Enables the sending of Dot11 association fail traps to clients.

associate

Enables the sending of Dot11 association traps to clients.

authfail

Enables the sending of Dot11 authentication fail traps to clients.

deauthenticate

Enables the sending of Dot11 deauthentication traps to clients.

disassociate

Enables the sending of Dot11 disassociation traps to clients.

excluded

Enables the sending of excluded trap to clients.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to enable the sending of Dot11 disassociation trap to clients:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# trapflags client dot11 disassociate
Switch(config)# end
                                                            
                                                            

type

To display the contents of one or more files, use the type command in boot loader mode.

type filesystem:/file-url...

Syntax Description

filesystem:

Alias for a file system. Use flash: for the system board flash device; use usbflash0: for USB memory sticks.

/file-url...

Path (directory) and name of the files to display. Separate each filename with a space.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Filenames and directory names are case sensitive.

If you specify a list of files, the contents of each file appear sequentially.

Examples

This example shows how to display the contents of a file:


Switch: type flash:image_file_name
version_suffix: universal-122-xx.SEx
version_directory: image_file_name
image_system_type_id: 0x00000002
image_name: image_file_name.bin
ios_image_file_size: 8919552
total_image_file_size: 11592192
image_feature: IP|LAYER_3|PLUS|MIN_DRAM_MEG=128
image_family: family
stacking_number: 1.34
board_ids: 0x00000068 0x00000069 0x0000006a 0x0000006b 
info_end:

unset

To reset one or more environment variables, use the unset command in boot loader mode.

unset variable...

Syntax Description

variable

Use one of these keywords for variable :

MANUAL_BOOT —Specifies whether the switch automatically or manually boots.

BOOT —Resets the list of executable files to try to load and execute when automatically booting. If the BOOT environment variable is not set, the system attempts to load and execute the first executable image it can find by using a recursive, depth-first search through the flash: file system. If the BOOT variable is set but the specified images cannot be loaded, the system attempts to boot the first bootable file that it can find in the flash: file system.

ENABLE_BREAK —Specifies whether the automatic boot process can be interrupted by using the Break key on the console after the flash: file system has been initialized.

HELPER —Identifies the semicolon-separated list of loadable files to dynamically load during the boot loader initialization. Helper files extend or patch the functionality of the boot loader.

PS1 —Specifies the string that is used as the command-line prompt in boot loader mode.

CONFIG_FILE —Resets the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the system configuration.

BAUD —Resets the rate in bits per second (b/s) used for the console. The Cisco IOS software inherits the baud rate setting from the boot loader and continues to use this value unless the configuration file specifies another setting.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Under typical circumstances, it is not necessary to alter the setting of the environment variables.

The MANUAL_BOOT environment variable can also be reset by using the no boot manual global configuration command.

The BOOT environment variable can also be reset by using the no boot system global configuration command.

The ENABLE_BREAK environment variable can also be reset by using the no boot enable-break global configuration command.

The HELPER environment variable can also be reset by using the no boot helper global configuration command.

The CONFIG_FILE environment variable can also be reset by using the no boot config-file global configuration command.

Examples

This example shows how to unset the SWITCH_PRIORITY environment variable:


Switch: unset SWITCH_PRIORITY

version

To display the boot loader version, use the version command in boot loader mode.

version

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Boot loader

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to display the boot loader version on a switch:



Switch: version
CAT3K_CAA Boot Loader (CAT3K_CAA-HBOOT-M) Version 1.2, RELEASE SOFTWARE (P) 
Compiled Sun Jul 14 20:22:00 PDT 2013 by rel


wireless client

To configure client parameters, use the wireless client command in global configuration mode.

wireless client { association limit assoc-number interval interval | band-select { client-rssi rssi | cycle-count count | cycle-threshold threshold | expire dual-band timeout | expire suppression timeout } | max-user-login max-user-login | timers auth-timeout seconds }

Syntax Description

association limit assoc-number interval interval

Enables association request limit per access point slot at a given interval and configures the association request limit interval.

You can configure number of association request per access point slot at a given interval from one through 100.

You can configure client association request limit interval from 100 through 10000 milliseconds.

band-select

Configures the band select options for the client.

client-rssi rssi

Sets the client received signal strength indicator (RSSI) threshold for band select.

The minimum dBm of a client RSSI to respond to probe is between -90 and -20.

cycle-count count

Sets the band select probe cycle count.

You can configure the cycle count from 1 to 10.

cycle-threshold threshold

Sets the time threshold for a new scanning cycle.

You can configure the cycle threshold from 1 to 1000 milliseconds.

expire dual-band timeout

Sets the timeout before stopping to try to push a given client to the 5-GHz band.

You can configure the timeout from 10 to 300 seconds, and the default value is 60 seconds.

expire suppression timeout

Sets the expiration time for pruning previously known dual-band clients.

You can configure the suppression from 10 to 200 seconds, and the default timeout value is 20 seconds.

max-user-login max-user-login

Configures the maximum number of login sessions for a user.

timers auth-timeout seconds

Configures the client timers.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to set the proble cycle count for band select to 8:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless client band-select cycle-count 8 
Switch(config)# end    
 
                                                                   
                                                                        

This example shows how to set the time threshold for a new scanning cycle with threshold value of 700 milliseconds:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless client band-select cycle-threshold 700
Switch(config)# end


This example shows how to suppress dual-band clients from the dual-band database after 70 seconds:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless client band-select expire suppression 70
Switch(config)# end


wireless client mac-address deauthenticate

To disconnect a wireless client, use the wireless client mac-address deauthenticate command in global configuration mode.

wireless client mac-address mac-addr deauthenticate

Syntax Description

mac-address mac-addr

Wireless client MAC address.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to disconnect a wireless client:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless client mac-address 00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60 deauthenticate   
Switch(config)# end
                              

wireless client mac-address

To configure the wireless client settings, use the wireless client mac-address command in global configuration mode.

wireless client mac-address mac-addr ccx { clear-reports | clear-results | default-gw-ping | dhcp-test | dns-ping | dns-resolve hostname host-name | get-client-capability | get-manufacturer-info | get-operating-parameters | get-profiles | log-request { roam | rsna | syslog } | send-message message-id | stats-request measurement-duration { dot11 | security } | test-abort | test-association ssid bssid dot11 channel | test-dot1x [profile-id] bssid dot11 channel | test-profile { any | profile-id } }

Syntax Description

mac-addr

MAC address of the client.

ccx

Cisco client extension (CCX).

clear-reports

Clears the client reporting information.

clear-results

Clears the test results on the controller.

default-gw-ping

Sends a request to the client to perform the default gateway ping test.

dhcp-test

Sends a request to the client to perform the DHCP test.

dns-ping

Sends a request to the client to perform the Domain Name System (DNS) server IP address ping test.

dns-resolve hostname host-name

Sends a request to the client to perform the Domain Name System (DNS) resolution test to the specified hostname.

get-client-capability

Sends a request to the client to send its capability information.

get-manufacturer-info

Sends a request to the client to send the manufacturer's information.

get-operating-parameters

Sends a request to the client to send its current operating parameters.

get-profiles

Sends a request to the client to send its profiles.

log-request

Configures a CCX log request for a specified client device.

roam

(Optional) Specifies the request to specify the client CCX roaming log

rsna

(Optional) Specifies the request to specify the client CCX RSNA log.

syslog

(Optional) Specifies the request to specify the client CCX system log.

send-message message-id

Sends a message to the client.

Message type that involves one of the following:
  • 1—The SSID is invalid

  • 2—The network settings are invalid.

  • 3—There is a WLAN credibility mismatch.

  • 4—The user credentials are incorrect.

  • 5—Please call support.

  • 6—The problem is resolved.

  • 7—The problem has not been resolved.

  • 8—Please try again later.

  • 9—Please correct the indicated problem.

  • 10—Troubleshooting is refused by the network.

  • 11—Retrieving client reports.

  • 12—Retrieving client logs.

  • 13—Retrieval complete.

  • 14—Beginning association test.

  • 15—Beginning DHCP test.

  • 16—Beginning network connectivity test.

  • 17—Beginning DNS ping test.

  • 18—Beginning name resolution test.

  • 19—Beginning 802.1X authentication test.

  • 20—Redirecting client to a specific profile.

  • 21—Test complete.

  • 22—Test passed.

  • 23—Test failed.

  • 24—Cancel diagnostic channel operation or select a WLAN profile to resume normal operation.

  • 25—Log retrieval refused by the client.

  • 26—Client report retrieval refused by the client.

  • 27—Test request refused by the client.

  • 28—Invalid network (IP) setting.

  • 29—There is a known outage or problem with the network.

  • 30—Scheduled maintenance period.

  • 31—The WLAN security method is not correct.

  • 32—The WLAN encryption method is not correct.

  • 33—The WLAN authentication method is not correct.

stats-request measurement-duration

Senda a request for statistics.

dot11

Optional) Specifies dot11 counters.

security

(Optional) Specifies security counters.

test-abort

Sends a request to the client to abort the current test.

test-association ssid bssid dot11 channel

Sends a request to the client to perform the association test.

test-dot1x

Sends a request to the client to perform the 802.1x test.

profile-id

(Optional) Test profile name.

bssid

Basic SSID.

dot11

Specifies the 802.11a, 802.11b, or 802.11g network.

channel

Channel number.

test-profile

Sends a request to the client to perform the profile redirect test.

any

Sends a request to the client to perform the profile redirect test.

profile-id
Test profile name.
Note 

The profile ID should be from one of the client profiles for which client reporting is enabled.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The default-gw-ping test does not require the client to use the diagnostic channel.

Examples

This example shows how to clear the reporting information of the client MAC address 00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless client mac-address 00:1f:ca:cf:b6:60 ccx clear-reports 
Switch(config)# end  
                              

wireless load-balancing

To globally configure aggressive load balancing on the controller, use the wireless load-balancing command in global configuration mode.

wireless load-balancing { denial denial-count | window client-count }

Syntax Description

denial denial-count

Specifies the number of association denials during load balancing.

Maximum number of association denials during load balancing is from 1 to 10 and the default value is 3.

window client-count

Specifies the aggressive load balancing client window, with the number of clients needed to trigger aggressive load balancing on a given access point.

Aggressive load balancing client window with the number of clients is from 0 to 20 and the default value is 5.

Command Default

Disabled.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Load-balancing-enabled WLANs do not support time-sensitive applications like voice and video because of roaming delays.

When you use Cisco 7921 and 7920 Wireless IP Phones with controllers, make sure that aggressive load balancing is disabled on the voice WLANs for each controller. Otherwise, the initial roam attempt by the phone might fail, causing a disruption in the audio path.

Examples

This example shows how to configure association denials during load balancing:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless load-balancing denial 5
Switch(config)# end
                                             
                                             

wireless sip preferred-call-no

To add a new preferred call or configure voice prioritization, use the wireless sip preferred-call-no command in global configuration mode. To remove a preferred call, use the no form of this command.

wireless sip preferred-call-no callIndex call-no

no wireless sip preferred-call-no callIndex

Syntax Description

callIndex

Call index with valid values between 1 and 6.

call-no

Preferred call number that can contain up to 27 characters.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE 3.3SECisco IOS XE 3.3SE

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Before you configure voice prioritization, you must complete the following prerequisites:
  • Set WLAN QoS to allow voice calls to pass through.

  • Enable ACM for the radio.

  • Enable SIP call snooping on the WLAN.

Examples

This example shows how to add a new preferred call or configure voice prioritization:


Switch# configure terminal
Switch(config)# wireless sip preferred-call-no 2 0123456789
Switch(config)# end




writertc

To update the value of the Real Time Clock (RTC) setting, use the writertc command in boot loader mode.

writertc { year(0-99) | month(1-12) | date(1-31) | hour (0-23) | min(0-59) | sec(0-59) | dayofweek(1-7) }

Syntax Description