This command enters the context to display EHS handler information.
The following is an example of handler information.
Table 161 describes handler output fields.
Label | Description |
Handler | The name of the handler. |
Description | The handler description string. |
Admin State | The administrative state of the handler. |
Oper State | The operational state of the handler. |
Handler Action-List Entry | |
Entry-id | The action-list entry identifier. |
Description | The action-list entry description string. |
Admin State | The administrative state of the action-list entry. |
Policy Name | The name of the related script policy. |
Policy Owner | The owner of the related script policy. |
Last Exec | The timestamp of the last successful execution of the action-list entry. |
Handler Action-List Entry Execution Statistics | |
Enqueued | The number of times the action-list entry was successfully passed on to the SR OS sub-system or module that will attempt to process and execute the action. For a script-policy entry, this indicates that the script request has been enqueued but does not necessarily indicate that the script has successfully launched or completed. For status and information about the script, use the show>system>script-control command. |
Err Launch | The number of times the action-list entry was not successfully handed over to the next SR OS sub-system or module in the processing chain. This can be caused by a variety of conditions including a full script request input queue. |
Err Adm Status | The number of times the action-list entry was not executed because the entry was administratively disabled. |
Total | The total number of times that the action-list entry attempted execution. |
This command clears the counters in the show log event-handling handler handler-name output. It does affect the global or aggregate counters shown using the information command.
This command displays active subscriber hierarchy information. To display an IPoE/PPP session, the group of hosts within the session is visually indented. Additional information related to the session is also shown. For PPPoE, the circuit ID and remote ID if used is shown. For IPoE, the key used to group the session is shown (for example, the circuit ID). The command also display PD host which are modeled as a managed route. The PD managed route is directly underneath and points to the host that it is using as the next hop. The PD managed route forwarding status is also shown, where (N) indicates that the route is not forwarding.
The following output displays active subscriber hierarchy information.
This command displays a NAT pool port usage histogram
This command displays SLAAC host related information.
The following is an example of detailed SLAAC host information.
Table 162 describes service SLAAC host information.
Field | Description |
Service ID | The service identifier. |
Prefix | The prefix for the service |
Interface Id | The interface identifier of this SLAAC host. If the SLAAC host has multiple addresses, this field will only show the interface identifier of one of them. |
Mac Address | |
Subscriber-interface | The subscriber interface name |
Group-interface | The subscriber interface group interface name |
SAP | The service SAP ID |
Termination Type | The termination type of this SLAAC host |
Creation Time | The date and time the service was created |
Persistence Key | The key value that can be used to track this SLAAC host in the persistence file. |
Router adv. policy | The name of the router advertisement policy associated with the SLAAC host during authentication |
IPoE|PPP session | The indication if this SLAAC host belongs to an IPoE or PPP session |
Radius sub-if prefix | The subscriber interface prefix that is received from a Radius server |
IPoE Trigger | The trigger name |
Last Auth Time | The sysUpTime at the time of the last authentication for this session |
Inactivity Timer | The remaining time in seconds before the host is removed. A value of 0 indicates no inactivity timer is active. |
Sub-Ident | The name of the subscriber identification policy |
Sub-Profile-String | The name of the subscriber profile |
SLA-Profile-String | The name of the SLA profile |
App-Profile-String | The application profile string |
ANCP-String | The ANCP string applicable for this session |
Int Dest ID | The intermediate destination identifier applicable for this session |
Category-Map-Name | The category map name applicable for this session |
Info origin | The server that provided the Sub-profile, SLA profile, Ancp string and Intermediate Destination Id |
Pool | the DHCP server pool from which the SLAAC prefix is allocated |
Primary-Dns | the primary DNS server |
Secondary-Dns | the secondary DNS server |
Circuit ID | circuit ID of this host |
Remote ID | remote ID of this host |
(only shown when overrides are active) | |
Number of hosts | The total number of hosts matching the search criteria |
MC-Stdby | The number of SAPs defined on this service on a port which is in multi-chassis standby mode |
This command displays static host information configured on this service.
service-id: | 1 to 2147483647 |
svc-name: | 64 characters maximum |
This command lists pool information about a specific host in the BRG.
This command displays MLD host statistics information.
This command displays host connectivity check statistics.
The following is an example of service host connectivity information.
Table 163 describes show service-id host connectivity verification output fields.
Label | Description |
Svc Id | The service identifier. |
SapId/SdpId | The SAP and SDP identifiers. |
DestIp Address | The destination IP address. |
Last Response | The time when the last response was received. |
Time Expired | Displays whether the interval value has expired. |
Oper State | Displays the current operational state of the service. |
This command displays host lockout policy information.
The following is an example of subscriber management host lockout policy information.
Table 164 describes subscriber management host lockout policy output fields.
Field | Description |
Lockout Policy | The subscriber Host Lockout Policy name |
Last Mgmt Change | The sysUpTime at the time of the most recent management-initiated change to this policy |
Lockout Time Min | The minimum lockout-time for this host lockout policy |
Lockout Time Max | The maximum lockout-time for this host lockout policy |
Description | The user-provided description of this subscriber Host Lockout Policy |
Max Lockout Hosts | The maximum number of lockouts for this host |
Last Mgmt Change | The sysUpTime at the time of the most recent management-initiated change to this policy |
Lockout time min | The minimum lockout-time for this Host Lockout Policy |
Lockout time max | The maximum lockout-time for this Host Lockout Policy |
Lockout reset time | The lockout reset time for this Host Lockout Policy |
Max lockout hosts | The maximum number of locked out hosts for this Host Lockout Policy |
Host key | The method for host matching |
This command performs a lookup in the local user database. This command looks up the host with the match-list configured in the local user database.
This command performs a lookup in the local user database.
This command performs a lookup in the local user database.
This command displays active subscriber host tracking information.
This command clears host tracking data.
This command displays SPB system-id to hostname mapping.
The following output is an example of service SPB hostname information.
This command displays the hostname database. There are no options or parameters.
IS-IS Hostname Output
Table 165 describes output fields for IS-IS hostname output.
Label | Description |
System-id | System identifier mapped to hostname. |
Hostname | Hostname for the specific system-id. |
Type | The type of entry (static or dynamic). |
This command displays information about the hostname database.
The following is an example of OSPF hostname database information. Table 166 displays field descriptions.
Label | Description |
Nbr Rtr Id | The OSPF ID. |
hostname | The OSPF hostname. |
No. of OSPF RTR id/hostnames | The total number of OSPF router IDs and hostnames. |
This command displays IGMP hosts information.
The following output is an example of IGMP host information.
This command lists all the hosts connected to the BRG.
The following output is an example of BRG gateway host information.
This command shows MLD hosts information.
The following output is an example of MLD host information.
This command displays information about HS attachment policies in the system.
The following output is an example of HS attachment policy information.
This command displays information about HS pool policies in the system.
The following output is an example of HS pool policy information.
This command shows the egress pool information relating to an HSQ IOM.
The card and fp output shows the total buffer allocation, the number of allocated buffers, the available buffer allocation, and the buffer high-water marks for the system pools and the hierarchy of user-provisioned root and mid pools on the specified card and FP. The output includes the applied slope policy and the related instantaneous slope drop probabilities (as a percentage) for the user-provisioned pools.
The port output adds the port class pool information to the above hierarchy of user-provisioned pools for the specified port. The queue information for network queues, queue group instances, SAPs, or subscribers on the specified port is included when the associated parameter is added.
The following output is an example of HS pool information.
This command displays information about HS port pool policies in the system.
The following output is an example of HS port pool policy information.
This command displays the egress HS scheduler hierarchy for the HS scheduler policy applied to the related port. The output includes the current maximum rate and each scheduling class rate on the port. The parameters allow for the current rates for the scheduling classes for all HS secondary shapers or a specific HS secondary shaper, or for the queue rates in a specified access or network queue group instance, SAP or subscriber to be included in the output.
The following output is an example of HS scheduler hierarchy information.
This command displays information about HS scheduler policies in the system.
The following output is an example of HS scheduler policy information.
This command displays HSMDA pool policy information.
The following output is an example of HSMDA pool policy information, and Table 167 describes the HSMDA pool policy fields.
Label | Description |
Policy Name | Displays the policy name. |
Description | Displays the policy description. |
Sys. Reserve | Displays the amount of HSMDA buffers that will be set aside for internal system use. |
Class Pool | Displays the number of the class pool. |
Root Parent | Displays the parent root pool to which the class pool is associated. |
Root Pool | Displays the root pool ID value. |
Root Weight | Displays the weight of the specified root pool and is used by the system to calculate the size of the root buffer pool. |
Alloc. Percent | Displays the percentage of the root pool’s size that defines the size of the class pool. The value is specified as a percentage with two decimal places (100th of a percent). |
This command displays HSMDA pool information.
This command displays HSMDA scheduler hierarchy information.
port-id | slot/mda/port [.channel] | ||
slot[/mda[/port]] | |||
eth-sat-id | esat-id/slot/port | ||
esat | keyword | ||
id | 1 to 20 | ||
pxc-id | pxc-id.sub-port | ||
pxc | keyword | ||
id | 1 to 64 | ||
sub-port | a, b | ||
aps-id | aps-group-id[.channel] | ||
aps | keyword | ||
group-id | 1 to 64 | ||
ccag-id | slot/mda/path-id[cc-type] | ||
path-id | a, b | ||
cc-type | .sap-net, .net-sap |
sap-id | null | port-id | lag-id | ||
dot1q | port-id | lag-id:qtag1 | |||
qinq | port-id | lag-id:qtag1.qtag2 | |||
port-id | slot/mda/port[.channel] | |||
esat-id/slot/port | ||||
esat | keyword | |||
id | 1 to 20 | |||
pxc-id.sub-port | ||||
pxc | keyword | |||
id | 1 to 64 | |||
sub-port | a, b | |||
lag-id | lag-id | |||
lag | keyword | |||
id | 1 to 800 | |||
qtag1 | *, 0 to 4094 | |||
qtag2 | *, 0 to 4094 |
This command displays HSMDA scheduler policy information.
This command displays HSMDA slope policy information.
This command enables the context to dump the HTTP client hash table.
ip-address: | a.b.c.d |
prefix-length: | 0 to 32 |
ipv6-address: | x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x (eight 16-bit pieces) |
x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d | |
x: [0 to FFFF]H | |
d: [0 to 255]D | |
prefix-length: | 0 to 128 |
The following output is an example of HTTP client information.
This command displays HTTP enrichment information.
The following is an example output for the http-enrich command.
This command enables the context to display http-error-redirect static definitions.
The following is an example show output for the policy command.
This command saves the http host values recorded by the tool into a file. The http-host-recorder is configured using debug commands.
local-url: | <cflash-id>/][<file-path>] | |
200 chars max, including cflash-id | ||
directory length 99 chars max each | ||
remote-url: | [{ftp://|tftp://}<login>:<pswd>@<remote-locn>/][<file-path>] | |
255 chars max | ||
directory length 99 chars max each | ||
remote-locn: | <hostname> | <ipv4-address> | <ipv6-address> ] | |
ipv4-address | a.b.c.d | |
ipv6-address | x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x[-interface] | |
x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d[-interface] | ||
x - [0..FFFF]H | ||
d - [0..255]D | ||
interface | 32 chars max, for link local addresses | |
cflash-id | flash slot ID |
This command displays the current status of the http-host-recorder with current-time, start-time, stop-time, sample-rates, filters, buffer as well as number of bytes and flows recorded for the specified AA ISA. The http-host-recorder is configured using debug commands.
This command configures dump application-assurance http-host-recorder information.
This command displays information about the configured http-notification policy with associated raw statistics:
The following is an example show output for the http-notification command.
This command displays application assurance http-redirect statistics and status information.
The following table describes the show command output fields:
Label | Description |
Template | Specifies HTTP redirect template id information. Each HTTP redirect template returns a specific HTTP redirect message such as HTTP 302 or Javascript and can optionally use macro substitution. |
Redirect URL | Specifies the address the subscriber will be redirected to. |
Captive Redirect | Specifies Yes if captive redirect is used and No if captive redirect is not used. |
Redirect HTTPS | Specifies Yes if redirect https is used and No if redirect https is not used. |
VLAN ID | Specifies the AA interface VLAN id used for captive redirect. |
Admin Status | Specifies the administrative status (Up/Down) of the HTTP redirect policy. |
AQP Ref | Specifies Yes if the HTTP redirect policy is referenced in AQP, and No if it is not. |
This command displays the number of unique and total installed HTTP redirect destinations per system.
The following output is an example of filter resource HTTP redirect information.