show clock
To display clock statistics, use the show clock command in EXEC mode.
show clock
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
Cisco Unified SRST Manager uses the Network Time Protocol (NTP) server for clocking functions. Use the show clock command to display the Cisco Unified SRST Manager clock status.
Examples
The following is sample output for the show clock command:
19:20:33.724 PST Wed Mar 17 1993
time zone: America/Los_Angeles
delta from reference (microsec): 0
estimated error (microsec): 175431
time resolution (microsec): 1
clock interrupt period (microsec): 10000
time of day (sec): 732424833
time of day (microsec): 760817
Table 16 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 16 show clock Field Descriptions
|
|
time zone |
Current time zone setting. |
clock state |
Synchronization state of the clock. |
delta from reference (ms) |
Difference between the module clock and the NTP reference clock. |
time of day (sec) |
Current time of day in seconds. |
time of day (ms) |
Current time of day in microseconds. |
Related Commands
|
|
ntp server |
Specifies the NTP server for Cisco Unified SRST Manager. |
show ntp |
Displays the time source for an NTP server. |
show configuration
To display the contents of the non-volatile memory, use the show configuration command in EXEC mode.
show configuration
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
Use this command for troubleshooting.
Examples
The following is sample output for the show configuration command:
se-1-100-100-100# show configuration
! This adds all the platform CLI commands
hostname se-1-100-100-100
ip domain-name localdomain
ip name-server 1.100.100.100
clock timezone America/Los_Angeles
ip address 1.100.100.100 255.255.0.0
ip default-gateway 1.100.100.100
Related Commands
|
|
backup category |
Specifies the type of data to be backed up and initiates the backup process. |
hostname |
Specifies the hostname of the current messaging gateway. |
ip domain-name |
Specifies the local messaging gateway’s domain name and/or domain name server. |
restore factory default |
Restores factory default settings. |
show interfaces
To display the IP configuration and statistics for the Ethernet interface, use the show interfaces command in privileged EXEC mode.
show interfaces
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Examples
The following is sample output for the show interfaces command:
se-192-100-1-1# show interfaces
Ethernet 0 is up, line protocol is up
Internet address is 192.100.1.1 mask 255.255.255.0 (configured locally)
5188306 packets input, 0 bytes
25113 input errors, 0 dropped, 0 overrun, 0 frame errors
10791446 packets output, 0 bytes
20301 output errors, 0 dropped, 0 overrun, 0 collision errors
0 output carrier detect errors
Related Commands
|
|
ip name-server |
Specifies the domain name server. |
show ip dns cache
To display the DNS cache, use the show ip dns cache command in EXEC mode.
show ip dns cache
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Examples
The following is sample output for the show ip dns cache command:
srstmgr-1> show ip dns cache
srstmgr-1.unspecified. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
localhost.\(none\). 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.23
192.0.2.22.in-addr.arpa. 2147483647 IN PTR localhost.
stress-umg1-192.0.2.24.example.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
192.0.2.24.in-addr.arpa. 2147483647 IN PTR 192.0.2.24.te
se-192.0.2.24.localdomain. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
sundial1-umg-se-192.0.2.24.localdomain. 2147483647 IN A 10.1.12.95
localhost.temp.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.18
192.0.2.24.temp.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
192.0.2.24.\(none\). 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
stress-umg1-192.0.2.24.example.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
localhost. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.20
stress-umg1-192.0.2.22.\(none\). 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
se-192.0.2.24.example.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.24
localhost.cisco.com. 2147483647 IN A 192.0.2.23
Related Commands
|
|
hostname |
Specifies the hostname for the current configuring Cisco Unified SRST Manager. |
ip name-server |
Specifies the domain name server. |
ntp server |
Specifies the NTP clocking server. |
show hosts |
Displays all configured hosts. |
show license status
To display the license agreement, use the show license status command in EXEC mode.
show license status
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Examples
The following is sample output for the show license status command:
se-1-100-80-203# show license status
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING TERMS CAREFULLY. INSTALLING THE LICENSE OR
LICENSE KEY PROVIDED FOR ANY CISCO PRODUCT FEATURE OR USING SUCH
PRODUCT FEATURE CONSTITUTES YOUR FULL ACCEPTANCE OF THE FOLLOWING
TERMS. YOU MUST NOT PROCEED FURTHER IF YOU ARE NOT WILLING TO BE BOUND
BOUND BY ALL THE TERMS SET FORTH HEREIN.
You hereby acknowledge and agree that the product feature license
is terminable and that the product feature enabled by such license
may be shut down or terminated by Cisco after expiration of the
applicable term of the license (e.g., 30-day trial period). Cisco
reserves the right to terminate or shut down any such product feature
electronically or by any other means available. While alerts or such
messages may be provided, it is your sole responsibility to monitor
your terminable usage of any product feature enabled by the license
and to ensure that your systems and networks are prepared for the shut
down of the product feature. You acknowledge and agree that Cisco will
not have any liability whatsoever for any damages, including, but not
limited to, direct, indirect, special, or consequential damages related
to any product feature being shutdown or terminated.
show log name
To display logging data, use the show log name command in EXEC mode.
show log name word [ containing expression | paged | tail ]
Syntax Description
word |
The name of the log file to display. Use the show logs command to display a list of available log files. |
containing expression |
Only displays events that match a search expression. |
paged |
Displays in paged mode. |
tail |
Displays the latest events as they occur. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This command has the following filtering options:
- show begin : Begins the output of any show command from a specified string.
- show exclude : Filters show command output so that it excludes lines that contain a particular regular expression.
- show include : Filters show command output so that it displays only lines that contain a particular regular expression.
Examples
The following partial output for the show log name command displays the dmesg log:
srstmgr-1# show log name dmesg
Press <CTRL-C> to exit...
Linux version 2.4.24 (bld_adm@bld-system) (gcc version 2.95.3 20010315 (version4
setup.c: handling flash window at [15MB..16MB]
setup.c: handling kernel log buf at [245.5MB]
setup.c: handling trace buf at [246MB]
BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009f400 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000000009f400 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 00000000000e0800 - 0000000000100000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 0000000000100000 - 0000000000f00000 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 0000000000f00000 - 0000000001000000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 0000000001000000 - 000000000f580000 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000000f580000 - 000000000f600000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 000000000f600000 - 0000000010000000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 00000000fff00000 - 0000000100000000 (reserved)
On node 0 totalpages: 62848
Kernel command line: root=/dev/hda1 ro plat=nm
Detected 498.674 MHz processor.
Calibrating delay loop... 996.14 BogoMIPS
Memory: 245128k/251392k available (1164k kernel code, 4852k reserved, 667k data)
kdb version 4.3 by Keith Owens, Scott Lurndal. Copyright SGI, All Rights Reservd
log_head: h: 0, t: 8429274, l: 0, w: 0, s: 10484672
log_head: h: 0, t: 8429274, l: 0, w: 0, s: 10484672
Dentry cache hash table entries: 32768 (order: 6, 262144 bytes)
Inode cache hash table entries: 16384 (order: 5, 131072 bytes)
Mount cache hash table entries: 512 (order: 0, 4096 bytes)
Buffer cache hash table entries: 16384 (order: 4, 65536 bytes)
Page-cache hash table entries: 65536 (order: 6, 262144 bytes)
CPU: L1 I cache: 16K, L1 D cache: 16K
CPU serial number disabled.
The following sample output for the show log command displays the dmesg log using a search string:
srstmgr-1# show log name dmesg containing setup
Press <CTRL-C> to exit...
setup.c: handling flash window at [15MB..16MB]
setup.c: handling kernel log buf at [245.5MB]
setup.c: handling trace buf at [246MB]
The following partial output for the show log command displays the dmesg log in paged mode:
srstmgr-1# show log name dmesg paged
Linux version 2.4.24 (bld_adm@bld-system) (gcc version 2.95.3 20010315 (version
)) #1 Tue Nov 30 23:07:21 PST 2007
setup.c: handling flash window at [15MB..16MB]
setup.c: handling kernel log buf at [245.5MB]
setup.c: handling trace buf at [246MB]
BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009f400 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000000009f400 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 00000000000e0800 - 0000000000100000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 0000000000100000 - 0000000000f00000 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 0000000000f00000 - 0000000001000000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 0000000001000000 - 000000000f580000 (usable)
BIOS-e820: 000000000f580000 - 000000000f600000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 000000000f600000 - 0000000010000000 (reserved)
BIOS-e820: 00000000fff00000 - 0000000100000000 (reserved)
On node 0 totalpages: 62848
Kernel command line: root=/dev/hda1 ro plat=nm
The following output for the show log name command displays the current dmesg log as events are being entered:
srstmgr-1# show log name dmesg tail
Press <CTRL-C> to exit...
Freeing unused kernel memory: 88k freed
The following partial output for the show log name command displays the dmesg log beginning with the first line starting with ide0:
srstmgr-1# show log name dmesg | begin ide0
ide0: BM-DMA at 0xfc00-0xfc07, BIOS settings: hda:pio, hdb:pio
ide1: BM-DMA at 0xfc08-0xfc0f, BIOS settings: hdc:pio, hdd:pio
hda: C/H/S=50127/232/176 from BIOS ignored
hdb: C/H/S=0/0/0 from BIOS ignored
hda: IC25N020ATMR04-0, ATA DISK drive
blk: queue c030c160, I/O limit 4095Mb (mask 0xffffffff)
ide0 at 0x1f0-0x1f7,0x3f6 on irq 14
hda: attached ide-disk driver.
hda: host protected area => 1
hda: 39070080 sectors (20004 MB) w/1740KiB Cache, CHS=2432/255/63, UDMA(33)
Related Commands.
|
|
log console |
Configures the types of messages to be displayed on the console. |
log console monitor |
Displays system messages on the console. |
log server address |
Specifies an external server for saving log messages. |
log trace boot |
Saves the trace configuration on rebooting. |
log trace buffer save |
Saves the current trace information. |
show logging |
Shows the types of messages that are displayed on the console. |
show logs |
Displays the list of available logs. |
show ntp
To display the time source for a Network Time Protocol (NTP) server, use the show ntp command in EXEC mode.
show ntp [ detail ]
Syntax Description
detail |
Displays detailed information about the NTP servers. |
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This command displays the chain of NTP servers back to their primary time source, starting from the local host.
Examples
The following is sample output for the show ntp command:
192.0.2.24: stratum 9, offset 0.000015, synch distance 0.03047
192.0.2.23: stratum 8, offset -0.001124, synch distance 0.00003
Table 17 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 17 show ntp Field Descriptions
|
|
(first field) |
IP address of the host. |
stratum |
Server hop count to the primary clock source. Valid values are:
- 0—Unspecified
- 1—Primary clock reference
- 2–255—Secondary reference via NTP
|
offset |
Time offset between the host and the local host, in seconds. |
synch distance |
Host synchronization distance, which is the estimated error relative to the primary source. |
The following is sample output for the show ntp detail command:
srstmgr-1# show ntp detail
server 192.0.2.24, port 123
stratum 9, precision -17, leap 00
refid [192.0.2.22] delay 0.00012, dispersion 0.00000 offset 0.000011
rootdelay 0.00058, rootdispersion 0.03111, synch dist 0.03140
reference time: af4a3ff7.926698bb Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:47:19.571
originate timestamp: af4a4041.bf991bc5 Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:48:33.748
transmit timestamp: af4a4041.bf90a782 Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:48:33.748
server 192.0.2.23, port 123
stratum 8, precision -18, leap 00
refid [192.0.2.21] delay 0.00024, dispersion 0.00000 offset -0.001130
rootdelay 0.00000, rootdispersion 0.00003, synch dist 0.00003
reference time: af4a402e.f46eaea6 Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:48:14.954
originate timestamp: af4a4041.bf6fb4d4 Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:48:33.747
transmit timestamp: af4a4041.bfb0d51f Thu, Mar 11 1993 14:48:33.748
Table 18 describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 18 show ntp detail Field Descriptions
|
|
server |
IP address of the host server. |
port |
Port number of the host server. |
stratum |
Server hop count to the primary clock source. Valid values are:
- 0—Unspecified
- 1—Primary clock reference
- 2–255—Secondary reference via NTP
|
precision |
Precision of the clock, in seconds to the power of two. |
leap |
Two-bit code warning of an impending leap second to be inserted in the NTP time scale. Valid values are:
- 00—No warning
- 01—Last minute was 61 seconds
- 10—Last minute was 59 seconds
- 11—Alarm condition (clock not synchronized)
|
refid |
IP address of the peer selected for synchronization. |
delay |
Round-trip delay of the packet, in milliseconds. |
dispersion |
Measure, in milliseconds, of how scattered the time offsets have been from a given time server. |
offset |
Time offset between the host and the local host, in seconds. |
rootdelay |
Total round-trip delay, in seconds, to the primary reference source at the root of the synchronization subnet. |
rootdispersion |
Maximum error, in seconds, relative to the primary reference source at the root of the synchronization subnet. |
synch dist |
Host synchronization distance, which is the estimated error relative to the primary source. |
reference time |
Local time, in time-stamp format, when the local clock was last updated. If the local clock has never been synchronized, the value is zero. |
originate timestamp |
Local time, in time-stamp format, at the peer when its latest NTP message was sent. If the peer becomes unreachable, the value is zero. |
transmit timestamp |
Local time, in time-stamp format, when the latest NTP message from the peer arrived. If the peer becomes unreachable, the value is zero. |
Related Commands
|
|
ntp server |
Configures the Network Time Protocol (NTP) server to keep the system time synchronized with the NTP server. |
show clock |
Displays clock statistics. |
show srsx central-call-agent
To display the list of configured Cisco Unified Communications Manager systems or details for the specified Cisco Unified Communications Manager system, use the show srsx central-call-agent command.
show srsx central-call-agent [ hostname [ srst-references | nodes ]]
Syntax Description
hostname |
Hostname of a specific Cisco Unified Communications Manager system. |
srst-references |
Displays the Cisco Unified SRST references for the specified Cisco Unified Communications Manager system. |
nodes |
Displays all the nodes discovered for the Cisco Unified Communications Manager system. |
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This information is also available in the Cisco Unified SRST Manager graphical user interface, which we recommend that you use as the primary administrative interface.
Examples
The following is an example of the show srsx central-call-agent command:
srstmgr-1# show srsx central-call-agent
Name |Provisioning|SRST-References
__________________________________
The following is an example of the show srsx central-call-agent command with a central call agent specified:
srstmgr-1# show srsx central-call-agent CUCM8
AXL Username: Administrator
AXL Pacing: 0 (milliseconds)
Provisioning Schedule: Every day at 12:00 am
Default Voicemail: CUC 8.5
Site Provision Enable Default: enabled
Primary Node: CentralCA.srst.bxb.lab
Secondary Node: CentralCA2.srst.bxb.lab
The following is an example of the show srsx central-call-agent command with a central call agent specified and asking for a list of the Cisco Unified SRST references:
srstmgr-1# show srsx central-call-agent ccm ccm.cisco.com srst-references
SRST-references |IP Address
_______________________________________
branch-bos-srst |192.168.1.2
branch-nyc-srst |192.168.1.4
branch-sj-srst |192.168.1.5
The following is an example of the show srsx central-call-agent command with a central call agent specified and asking for a list of the nodes discovered for the central call agent:
srstmgr-1# show srsx central-call-agent CUCM8 nodes
_______________________________________
Related Commands
|
|
show srsx site |
Displays the sites on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx provisioning-history
To display the provisioning history for all sites, use the show srsx provisioning-history command.
show srsx provisioning-history
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This information is also available in the Cisco Unified SRST Manager graphical user interface, which we recommend that you use as the primary administrative interface.
Examples
The following is an example of the show srsx provisioning-history command in Cisco Unified SRST Manager 9.0:
srstmgr-1# show srsx provisioning-history
Site |Last Result|Date |Last Success |Users Provisioned
_________________________________________________________________________________________
branch-bos-srst|Success |Mon, Mar 22, 09:24 AM|Mon, Mar 22, 09:24 AM|21
branch-nyc-srst|unknown | | |0
branch-sj-srst |unknown | | |0
The following is an example of the show srsx provisioning-history command in Cisco Unified SRST Manager 9.0:
srstmgr-1# show srsx provisioning-history
Site |Last Result|Date |Last Success |Users Provisioned
_________________________________________________________________________________________
branch-bos-srst|Success |Mon, Mar 22, 09:24 AM|Mon, Mar 22, 09:24 AM|21
branch-nyc-srst|unknown | | |0
branch-sj-srst |unknown | | |0
Related Commands
|
|
show srsx central-call-agent |
Displays the central call agents available on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx site |
Displays the sites on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx site
To display the list of sites managed by the Cisco Unified SRST Manager or to see details for the specified site, use the show srsx site command.
show srsx site [ sitename ]
Syntax Description
sitename |
Name of a specific site. |
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This information is also available in the Cisco Unified SRST Manager graphical user interface, which we recommend that you use as the primary administrative interface.
Examples
The following is an example of the show srsx site command:
srstmgr-1# show srsx site
Site |Provisioning |Call Agent |SRST |SRST
__________________________________________________________________________________________
srst1 |enabled |CUCM8 |192.168.1.2 |bos-srst.srst.lab
srst1 |enabled |CUCM8 |192.168.1.4 |bos-srst.srst.lab
srst2 |enabled |CUCM7 |192.168.1.5 |bos-srst.srst.lab
The following is an example of the show srsx site command with a site specified:
srstmgr-1# show srsx site srst1
Central Call Agent: CUCM8
Central Voicemail Server: CUC 8.5
Srst Address: 192.168.28.131
SRST provisioning enabled
Router login username bxb100 admin
Router login password *******
Related Commands
|
|
show srsx central-call-agent |
Displays the central call agents available on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx site-template
To display the site provisioning templates used when provisioning Cisco Unified SRST Manager devices, use the show srsx site-template command.
show srsx site-template [ default ] | [ name ] | [ auto-learned ]
Syntax Description
default |
Displays default site provisioning templates. |
name |
Displays details for the selected template. |
auto-learned |
Displays site provisioning templates for auto-learned sites. |
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This information is also available in the Cisco Unified SRST Manager graphical user interface, which we recommend that you use as the primary administrative interface.
Examples
The following is an example of the show srsx site-template command in which the voicemail pilot has been auto-learned:
se-1-100-100-100# show srsx site-template
___________________________________
ESRST_and_Dialplan|Auto-Learned |
ESRST_only |Auto-Learned |
SRST_and_Dialplan |Auto-Learned |
SRST_only |Auto-Learned |
Related Commands
|
|
show srsx central-call-agent |
Displays the central call agents available on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx site |
Displays the sites on the Cisco Unified SRST system. |
show srsx system-settings
To display the global Cisco Unified survivable remote system configuration values, use the show srsx system-settings command.
show srsx system-settings
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC mode
Command History
|
|
9.0 |
This command was introduced. |
Usage Guidelines
This information is also available in the Cisco Unified SRST Manager GUI, which we recommend that you use as the primary administrative interface.
Examples
The following is an example of the show srsx system-settings command:
srstmgr-1# show srsx system-settings
Related Commands
|
|
show srsx central-call-agent |
Displays the central call agents available on the Cisco Unified SRST Manager system. |
show srsx site |
Displays the sites on the Cisco Unified SRST Manager system. |