This command clears RADIUS associated entities.
All
This command clears RADIUS accounting data for the specified policy.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS accounting policy information.
The following output displays subscriber management RADIUS accounting policy information.
Table 380 describes subscriber management RADIUS accounting policy output fields.
Label | Description |
Tx Requests/TX Reqs | Displays the number of accounting requests transmitted for this policy. |
Rx Responses/Rx Resps | Displays the number of accounting responses received for this policy. |
Request Timeouts/Req Timeouts | Displays the number of accounting requests which have timed out for this policy. |
Send Retries | Displays the number of retries to a different server for a single accounting request for this policy. |
Send Failed Req Send Failed | Displays how many accounting requests failed because the packet could not be sent out for this policy. |
Radius Servers | Displays a table in which the statistics associated with this RADIUS accounting policy are broken down by individual RADIUS server. The table columns are: Index—displays the index number assigned to the RADIUS server. The index determines the sequence in which the servers are queried for authentication requests. Servers are queried in order from lowest to highest index. IP Address—the address of the RADIUS server. TX Reqs—see TX Requests in this table. Rx Resps—see RX Responses in this table. Req Timeouts—see Request Timeouts in this table. Req Send Failed—see Send Failed in this table. |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS accounting policy information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears application assurance RADIUS accounting statistics for the specified policy.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS accounting-policy related information.
The following is an example output for the show ipsec radius-accounting-policy command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command provides information about subscriber RADIUS accounting sessions including: the accounting policy name, the accounting mode, the interim intervals, the accounting session ID, and the multi-session ID. If there are no RADIUS accounting sessions enabled for subscribers, this command still shows the session ID that can be used by CoA.
PD hosts modeled as routes are not considered hosts, and therefore, are not shown in the output of this command.
This command only shows a numeric RADIUS session ID even if the RADIUS accounting policy is configured using the descriptive format.
The following output is an example of subscriber RADIUS accounting session information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command shows all available termination causes and their respective number values. The TermCause is equivalent to VSA 226 Alc-Error-Code numeric values. The description is equivalent to VSA 227Alc-Error-Message string.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays a list of subscriber IDs associated to each username and statistics associated to the username.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays IPsec RADIUS authentication policy information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS configuration information.
The following is an example of AAA RADIUS configuration information.
Table 381 provides a description of the counters in the output of the show aaa isa-radius-policy command.
Label | Description |
CoA Port | The RADIUS Change of Authorization (CoA) port |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS proxy server information.
The following is an example of subscriber RADIUS proxy server
Table 382 describes subscriber RADIUS proxy server output fields.
Label | Description |
Invalid response Authenticator Rx packet | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server |
Rx Access-Request | The number of Access-Request packets received by this RADIUS proxy server |
Rx Accounting-Request | The number of Accounting-Request packets received by this RADIUS proxy server |
Rx dropped | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server but dropped |
Retransmit | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they are retransmitted |
Wrong purpose | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because the value of tmnxRadProxSrvPurpose is set to a value not matching the type of packet |
No UE MAC to cache | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because the UE MAC address was not present in the packet |
Client context limit reached | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because the limit of client contexts was reached. For each RADIUS transaction a client context is created, and are deleted once the transaction is finished. |
No ISA RADIUS policy configured | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because it has no ISA RADIUS server policy configured for that type of packet |
Server admin down | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because it is administratively shut down |
No RADIUS policy configured | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because it has no RADIUS server policy configured for that type of packet |
No load-balance-key configured | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because the selected RADIUS server policy's algorithm is set to hashBased and no load balance key is configured |
Invalid length | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because their length was invalid |
Invalid Code field | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they had an invalid Code field |
Invalid attribute encoding | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because one of the attributes was incorrectly encoded |
Invalid User-Name | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they contained an invalid User-Name attribute |
Invalid password | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because the User-Password attribute could not be decoded |
Invalid accounting Authenticator | The number of accounting packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they contained an invalid Authenticator field |
Invalid Message-Authenticator | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they contained an invalid Message-Authenticator attribute |
Management core overload | The number of packets that were rejected by this RADIUS server because the ISA management core is not able to process any new RADIUS requests because of overload |
No memory | The number of packets that were rejected by this RADIUS server because there was not enough memory to store them |
Accounting-Request with invalid Acct-Status-Type | The number of accounting packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they contained an invalid Acct-Status-Type attribute |
Accounting-Request with no Acct-Status-Type | The number of accounting packets received by this RADIUS proxy server that were rejected because they contained no Acct-Status-Type attribute |
Registered user overload | The number of packets that were rejected by this RADIUS server because the registered user indicated to be in overload |
Dropped by Python | The number of packets received by this RADIUS proxy server but dropped by Python |
Tx Access-Accept | The number of Access-Accept packets transmitted by this RADIUS proxy server |
Tx Access-Reject | The number of Access-Reject packets transmitted by this RADIUS proxy server |
Tx Access-Challenge | The number of Access-Challenge packets transmitted by this RADIUS proxy server |
Tx Accounting-Response | The number of Accounting-Response packets transmitted by this RADIUS proxy server |
Tx dropped | The number of packets dropped by this RADIUS proxy server before transmission |
No key to cache | The number of packets that could not be cached by this RADIUS proxy server because the key information was not present in the packet |
Cache key too long | The number of packets that could not be cached by this RADIUS proxy server because the key information present in the packet was too long |
Cache attributes too long | The number of packets that could not be cached by this RADIUS proxy server because the total length of the attributes is too long |
Reached maximum number of cache entries | The number of packets that could not be cached by this RADIUS proxy server because the limit has been reached |
No memory | The number of packets that could not be transmitted by this RADIUS proxy server because there was not enough memory |
Server timeout | The number of packets that were dropped because the RADIUS servers have timed out |
Server authentication failure | The number of packets that were dropped because the RADIUS server replied with a packet which failed authentication (invalid response Authenticator or Message Authenticator attribute) |
Server invalid Code | The number of packets that were dropped because the RADIUS server replied with a packet with an invalid Code field |
Invalid attribute encoding | The number of packets that were dropped because the RADIUS server replied with a packet with an invalid attribute |
Registered user overload | The number of packets that were dropped because the registered user indicated to be in overload |
No RADIUS server configured | The number of packets that were dropped by this RADIUS server because the RADIUS server policy has no servers configured |
RADIUS server send failure | The number of packets that were dropped by this RADIUS server because the packet could not get transmitted to one of the servers in the RADIUS server policy |
Dropped by Python | The number of packets that were dropped by this RADIUS server because the packet was dropped by the Python script |
Invalid response Authenticator | The number of packets that were dropped because the RADIUS server replied with a packet which failed authentication |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears RADIUS proxy server data.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays RADIUS server policy configuration information.
The following is an example of AAA RADIUS server policy information.
Table 383 describes RADIUS server policy statistics output fields.
Label | Description |
Tx transaction requests | The number of RADIUS transaction requests transmitted |
Rx transaction responses | The number of RADIUS transaction responses received |
Transaction requests timed out | The number of RADIUS transaction requests that have timed out |
Transaction requests send failed | The number of RADIUS transaction requests that could not be transmitted |
Packet retries | The number of times a RADIUS request packet was retransmitted to a server |
Transaction requests send rejected | The number of RADIUS transaction requests that were not transmitted due to unacceptable configuration |
Authentication requests failed | The number of authentication failures for this policy |
Accounting requests failed | The number of accounting failures for this policy |
Ratio of access-reject over auth responses | The ratio of access-rejects in the auth responses for this policy |
Transaction success ratio | The transaction success ratio for this policy |
Transaction failure ratio | The transaction failure ratio for this policy |
Statistics last reset at | Indicated the date and time at which the statistics for this policy were last reset |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command dumps the RADIUS message buffer content for the specified radius-server-policy:
When specifying the session-id, the message details are displayed.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command dumps the RADIUS message buffer content for the specified radius-server-policy:
When specifying the session-id, the message details are displayed.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays ranges of addresses on an Area Border Router (ABR) for the purpose of route summarization or suppression.
OSPF Range Output
Table 384 describes the OSPF range output fields.
Label | Description |
Area Id | A 32-bit integer uniquely identifying an area. Area ID 0.0.0.0 is used for the OSPF backbone. |
Address/Mask | The mask for the range expressed as a decimal integer mask length or in dotted decimal notation. |
Advertise | False — The specified address/mask is not advertised outside the area. True — The specified address/mask is advertised outside the area. |
LSDB Type | NSSA — This range was specified in the NSSA context, and specifies that the range applies to external routes (via type-7 LSAs) learned within the NSSA when the routes are advertised to other areas as type-5 LSAs. Summary — This range was not specified in the NSSA context, the range applies to summary LSAs even if the area is an NSSA. |
All
This command restores NAT resources to the recovered MS-ISA and resumes forwarding subscriber traffic.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command shows redirect filter information.
ipv4-address: | a.b.c.d. |
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 |
Redirect Policy Output — The following output is an example of redirect policy information, and Table 385 describes the fields.
Label | Description |
Redirect Policy | Specifies a specific redirect policy |
Applied | Specifies whether the redirect policy is applied to a filter policy entry |
Description | Displays the user-provided description for this redirect policy |
Active Destination | IP address — specifies the IP address of the active destination |
none — indicates that there is currently no active destination | |
Destination | Specifies the destination IP address |
Oper Priority | Specifies the operational value of the priority for this destination; the highest operational priority across multiple destinations is used as the preferred destination |
Admin Priority | Specifies the configured base priority for the destination |
Admin State | Specifies the configured state of the destination |
Out of Service — tests for this destination will not be conducted | |
Oper State | Specifies the operational state of the destination |
Ping Test | Specifies the name of the ping test |
Source Address | Specifies the source address of the ping test (if any) |
Timeout | Specifies the amount of time in seconds that is allowed for receiving a response from the far-end host; if a reply is not received within this time the far-end host is considered unresponsive |
Interval | Specifies the amount of time in seconds between consecutive requests sent to the far end host |
Drop Count | Specifies the number of consecutive requests that must fail for the destination to declared unreachable |
Hold Down | Specifies the amount of time in seconds that the system should be held down if any of the test has marked it unreachable |
Hold Remain | Specifies the amount of time in seconds that the system will remain in a hold down state before being used again |
Last Action at | Displays a time stamp of when this test received a response for a probe that was sent out |
All
Commands in this context perform redirect policy operations.
All
This command shows configured redirect-policy bindings information.
Redirect Policy Output — The following output is an example of redirect policy binding information, and Table 386 describes the fields.
Label | Description |
Test Binding | Specifies a specific test binding field |
All
Commands in this context dump redundancy parameters.
All
Commands in this context show redundancy information.
All
Commands in this context display redundancy information.
All
Commands in this context clear redundancy parameters.
All
This command shows TWAMP-Light reflector information.
The following sample output shows TWAMP Light reflector information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command refreshes LSAs for OSPF.
All
This command displays the working and protection bundles associated with this bundle-id.
The following output is an example of multilink bundle relations, and Table 387 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
BundleID | Displays the bundle number. |
Admin State | Up—The bundle is administratively up. Down — The bundle is administratively down. |
Oper State | Up — The bundle is operationally up. Down—The bundle is operationally down. |
Working BundleID | Displays the bundle that is currently in working mode. |
Protect BundleID | Displays the bundle that is currently in protect mode. |
Active Bundle | Displays the mode of the active bundle. |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e
This command releases a Distributed CPU Protection (DCP) policer from a hold-down countdown (or indefinite hold-down if configured as such).
All
This command allows the remapping of all existing hosts if network card on CMTS/WAC side is changed is required.
When this command is executed, the following restrictions apply:
This command is applicable only when dealing with DHCP lease states which were instantiated using l2header mode of DHCP operation.
When configured, the SAP parameter remaps all MAC addresses of DHCP lease states on the specified SAP. When no optional MAC parameter is specified, the sap sap-id command remaps all MAC addresses of lease states towards the MAC address specified in the l2-header configuration.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays information the BFD-on-LSP sessions with a specified remote discriminator.
All
This command clears the remote management service.
All
This command displays a summarized status of the Remote Management service.
The following examples show output of the show system management-interface remote- management command and parameters, and the tables describe the fields.
Label | Description |
Administrative State | Displays the administrative state of the management service |
Operational State | Displays the operational state of the management service |
Operational Down Reason | Displays the reason for the last operationally down state change |
Number of configured managers | Displays the total number of configured managers |
Number of operational managers | Displays the total number of managers whose operational state is Up |
Label | Description |
Last hello Time | Displays the time of the last hello |
Last Registration Time | Displays the time of the last registration |
Last Registration Status | Displays the time of the last registration status |
Sent registration messages | Displays the number of sent registration messages |
Failed registration messages | Displays the number of failed registration messages |
Canceled registration messages | Displays the number of canceled registration messages |
Manager name | Displays the name of the manager |
Manager IP | Displays the IP address of the manager |
Adm | Displays the administrative state of the manager |
Opr | Displays the operational state of the manager |
TLS | Displays whether TLS is configured for the manager |
Label | Description |
Manager name | Displays the name of this manager |
Manager Address | Displays IP address of this manager |
Description | Displays the configured description for this manager |
Router instance | Displays the router instance used by this manager |
Device name | Displays the device name that is configured for this manager |
Device label | Displays the device label that is configured for this manager |
TLS secured | Displays the configured TLS status |
TLS profile | Displays TLS profile, if configured |
Source address | Displays the configured source address |
Source TCP port | Displays the TCP source port |
Manager TCP port | Displays the manager TCP port |
Last registration status | Displays the status of the last registration attempt for this manager |
Last registration time | Displays the time of the last registration for this manager |
Last hello time | Displays the time of the last hello for this manager |
Time until next hello | Displays the time until the next hello for this manager |
Sent registration messages | Displays the number of registration messages sent for this manager |
Failed registration messages | Displays the number of failed registration messages for this manager |
Cancelled registrations | Displays the number of canceled registration messages for this manager |
All
This command displays the information for the replication segments in the P2MP SR tree database.
The following output is an example of P2MP SR tree database replication segment information.
All
This command displays the information for the specified replication segment of the P2MP SR tree.
The following output is an example of replication segment information.
All
This command requests a manual switch to protection or working circuit.
aps-id | aps-group-id | |
aps | keyword | |
group-id | 1 to 128 |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e
This command displays maximum power requirements for the installed devices.
The following output is an example of power management requirements information, and Table 391 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
SUPPLY | |
Power Capacity | Specifies the total amount of power available to the chassis. |
Safety Level | Specifies the configured Power Safety Level, which is a percentage of the worst case power consumption level. |
Alert Level | Specifies the configured power level in Watts, which causes the system to raise an alarm if the available power level drops below a set level. |
Mode | Specifies the configured mode: none, basic, advanced. |
Reserved Power | Signifies the amount of power in reserve. For basic and advanced modes, the system keeps an additional margin of reserve power capacity. This margin is the provisioned capacity of the highest-rated power module. In advanced mode, the system will shed load to always keep this amount of power in reserve. In basic mode, it won’t shed load to maintain the reserve, but it only allows cards or MDAs to load as long as the reserve power margin can be maintained. |
Reqd. + Reserve | Specifies the Safety Level (Watts) + Reserved Power. |
Remaining Power | Specifies the excess capacity. It is equal to (“Power Capacity” - “Reqd + Reserve”). |
REQUIREMENTS | |
Fan | Specifies the amount of power required for each fan tray. |
IO Module | Specifies the amount of power required for each IO Module. |
CPM Module | Specifies the amount of power required for each CPM. |
Fabric Module | Specifies the amount of power required for each SFM. |
MDA Module | Specifies the amount of power required for each line card. |
Total Required | Specifies the total amount of power required for all system elements. |
Safety Level | Specifies the percentage configured with configure system power-management power-safety-level percent. This is a percentage of the total system requirement (Total Required). The corresponding value in Watts is also shown for information. |
Safety Alert | Specifies the output of configure system power-management power-safety-alert wattage. A non-zero value indicates that the user wants to receive a warning when the system power capacity drops to within this number of Watts of the system level. If the power safety is 0, “N/A” is displayed in the output since no alert will be produced. |
Alert Level | Specifies the value when the safety alert will be issued (= safety-level + safety alert). If the power safety alert is 0, “N/A” is displayed in the output since no alert will be produced. |
7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command sets an IMA-bundle to the Start Up state.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7950 XRS
This command resignals a specific path of a RSVP-TE P2P LSP, a RSVP P2MP LSP tree, or a SR-TE LSP. When an lsp-name and path-name are provided, a manual resignal is performed for the named path of the named LSP only. In this case, the new path is always programmed in data path regardless of the metric comparison between the new path and the current path.
The delay, p2mp-delay, or the sr-te-delay parameters override the global resignal timer value of all LSPs of the corresponding type for resignal. At the expiry of this override timer, the procedures of the timer based resignal are applied to all LSPs of the corresponding type. The resignal timer is then reset to its configured value in MPLS configuration. In this case, the new path is programmed in data path only if the metric of the new path is different from one of the current path.
All
This command performs a manual re-optimization of a specific dynamic or manual bypass LSP, or of all dynamic bypass LSPs.
The name of a manual bypass LSP is the one provided by the user at configuration time. The name of a dynamic bypass LSP is shown in the output of show>router>mpls>bypass-tunnel dynamic detail.
The delay option triggers the global re-optimization of all dynamic bypass LSPs at the expiry of the specified delay. Effectively, this option forces the global bypass resignal timer to expire after an amount of time equal to the value of the delay parameter. This option has no effect on a manual bypass LSP.
However, when bypass-lsp-name is specified, the named dynamic or manual bypass LSP is signaled and the associations are moved only if the new bypass LSP path has a lower cost than the current one. This behavior is different from that of the similar command for the primary or secondary active path of an LSP, which signals and switches to the new path regardless of the cost comparison. This handling is required because a bypass LSP may have a large number of PSB associations and the processing churn is much higher.
In the specific case where the name corresponds to a manual bypass LSP, the LSP is torn down and resignaled using the new path provided by CSPF if no PSB associations exist. If one or more PSB associations exist but no PLR is active, the command fails and the user is required to explicitly enter the force option. In this case, the manual bypass LSP is torn down and resignaled, leaving temporarily the associated LSP primary paths unprotected. If one or more PLRs associated with the manual bypass LSP is active, the command fails.
Finally, and as with the timer based resignal, the PSB associations are checked for the SRLG and admin group constraints using the updated information provided by CSPF for the current path and new path of the bypass LSP.
All
This command clears resource overload status in the LDP instance.
All
Commands in this context display system resource information, such as policers, including data for total, available, and free numbers for each resource.
All
Commands in this context display filter resources utilization
All
This command enables dump ISA resources for an MDA.
The following is sample output for this command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command forcibly restarts the PPPoE client linked to the BRG instance. The restart does not remove BRG or related session state, however, forwarding is impacted.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays service retailer information.
The following output displays an example of service retailer information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
Use this command to cause a named LSP, which is currently using a secondary path and for which the revert-timer has been configured, to switch back to using the primary path. Any outstanding revert-timer is canceled.
The primary path must be up for this command to be successful.
All
This command displays RIB-API protocol entities information.
All
This command clears RIB-API protocol entities information.
All
This command configures the dump tools for RIB-API protocol instance.
All
This command clears multi-chassis ring statistics.
All
This command clears multi-chassis ring statistics.
All
This command clears multi-chassis ring unreferenced ring nodes.
All
Commands in this context clear and reset RIP protocol entities.
All
Displays RIP information.
All
Commands in this context clear and reset RIP-NG protocol entities.
All
Commands in this context display RIP-NG related information.
All
This command displays rollback configuration and state.
The following output is an example of system rollback information.
All
This command displays the root objects created by dynamic data services.
The following output is an example of dynamic services root object information.
Table 392 describes the Root Objects fields.
Output field | Description |
OID prefix | The corresponding SNMP OID prefix for this root object. |
OID index | The corresponding SNMP OID index for this root object. |
Snippet name | The name of the python function that created this root object. The name is set to N/A when the root-object is orphaned. |
Snippet instance | The instance for which the python function with “Snippet name” created this root object. If the snippet is a result from a dynamic reference, then the snippet instance is the reference-id string passed in the dyn.reference(). If the snippet is not the result from a dynamic reference, then the snippet instance is the dynamic data service SAP-ID. The instance is set to N/A when the root object is orphaned. |
Orphan time | The timestamp when the root-object became orphaned (root-object not deleted when corresponding teardown function is called) or N/A if the root-object is not orphaned. |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays the root objects created by vsd.
All
This command displays RIB-API route information.
ipv4-prefix: | a.b.c.d (host bits must be 0) | |
ipv4-prefix-length | 0 to 32 | |
ipv6-prefix: | 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 | |
ipv6-prefix-length: | 0 to 128 |
ipv4-address: | a.b.c.d |
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 |
The following output is an example of RIB-API route information.
Label | Description |
Family | The route family:
|
Prefix | The IP prefix for the route RTM entry |
Rib-Api Pref | The RIB-API preference opposing to the routes from different clients with the same prefix |
Client IP | The IP address of the gRPC client that configured the RIB-API route entry |
Act | The boolean (YES or NO) that indicates whether the status of the RIB-API route in RTM is active or not |
Next Hop | The next-hop IP address of the RIB-API route entry |
No. of Rib-Api Routes | The total number of the displayed RIB-API routes |
Client Tag | The client tag unique identifier assigned to each gRPC connection by the gRPC server |
Stale client | The stale client (Y or N) that indicates if the route is from a disconnected gRPC client |
Metric | The metric of the route |
RTM Preference | The RTM preference opposing to the routes having the same prefix from different protocols (BGP, OSPF) |
Last Updated | The time stamp of when the route was added or modified from a gRPC client |
Nexthop | The next-hop IP address of the RIB-API route entry |
Active In RTM | The boolean (Y or N) that indicates whether the status of the RIB-API route is active or not in RTM |
Inactive Reason | The inactive reason or the route not active in RTM |
All
This command clears all the radius-downloaded routes from the internal downloader cache (or protocol RIB/db) (and thus eventually from the RTM itself). The parameters vprn and/or family allow to restrict the deletion of those routes learned in a particular address family (IPv4 or IPv6) and/or a particular VPRN.
By default, all VPRNs and both IPv4 and IPv6 families are affected.
![]() | Note: Clearing the internal protocol DB means the corresponding prefixes that were deleted should be removed from the RTM (and from any other exports) as well. |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
Commands in this context configure route downloader parameters.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays route next-hop policies related information.
All
This command displays the active routes in the routing table.
If no command line arguments are specified, all routes are displayed, sorted by prefix.
The following values apply to the 7750 SR and the 7450 ESS:
The following output is an example of standard route table information, and Table 394 describes the output fields.
The following output is an example showing that NAT routes are visible in the routing table.
The following output shows standard route table information.
Label | Description |
Dest Address | The route destination address and mask. |
Next Hop [Interface Name] | The next hop interface name |
Next Hop | The next hop IP address for the route destination. |
Type | Local — The route is a local route. Remote — The route is a remote route. |
Protocol | The protocol through which the route was learned. |
Age | The route age in seconds for the route. |
Metric | The route metric value for the route. |
Pref | The route preference value for the route. |
No. of Routes | The number of routes displayed in the list. |
The following is a sample output of the show router router-instance route-table all command for a VPRN on the standby PE for prefix 10.13.1.0/24.
All
This command displays route-table information.
ipv4 — Displays only those BGP peers that have the IPv4 family enabled and not those capable of exchanging IP-VPN routes.
mcast-ipv4 — Displays the BGP peers that are mcast-ipv4 capable.
ipv6 — Displays the BGP peers that are IPv6 capable.
mcast-ipv6 — Displays the BGP peers that are mcast-ipv6 capable.
ipv4-prefix-length: 0 to 32
ipv6-prefix-length: 0 to 128
The following output displays route table information.
The following is an example of the show router route-table extensive command output with unequal-cost ECMP BGP routes.
Commands in this context display various types of information for the specified router instance.
router-instance : router name | vprn-svc-id | ||
router-name | Base | management | cpm-vr-name | vpls-management | |
cpm-vr-name | [32 characters maximum] | |
vprn-svc-id | [1..2147483647] |
The following are examples of router information.
All
This command dumps tools for the router instance.
router-instance | router-name | vprn-svc-id | |
router-name | Base | Management | cpm-vr-name | vpls-management Default: Base | |
vprn-svc-id | 1 to 2147483647 | |
cpm-vr-name | 32 chars max |
All
Clear router commands affect the router instance in which they are entered.
router-instance | router-name | vprn-svc-id | |
router-name | Base | Management | cpm-vr-name | vpls-management Default: Base | |
vprn-svc-id | 1 to 2147483647 | |
cpm-vr-name | 32 chars max |
All
This command enables the tools for the router instance.
All
7450 ESS-7, 7750 SR-1, 7750 SR-7, 7750 SR-1e, 7750 SR-s
This command clears all router advertisement counters.
All
This command displays SPB route information.
The following output is an example of service SPB route information.
All
This command displays routes in the BGP Routing Information Base (RIB). When this command is issued without any parameters, the output displays all learned BGP routes belonging to the IPv4 address family. When this command is issued with other parameters the output can display a narrower or wider set of routes, including routes belonging to other address families.
BGP Route
Table 395 describes the command output fields for BGP routes.
Label | Description |
BGP Router ID | The local BGP router ID. |
AS | The configured autonomous system number. |
Local AS | The configured local AS setting. If not configured, then the value is the same as the AS. |
Route Dist. | Displays the route distinguisher identifier attached to routes that distinguishes the VPN it belongs. |
VPN Label | Displays the label generated by the PEs label manager. |
Network | The IP prefix and mask length. |
Nexthop | The BGP nexthop. |
From | The advertising BGP neighbor’s IP address. |
Res. Nexthop | The resolved nexthop. |
Local Pref. | The local preference value. This value is used if the BGP route arrives from a BGP peer without the Local Pref attribute set. It is overridden by any value set via a route policy. |
Flag | u — used s — suppressed h —history d — decayed * — valid i — igp e — egp ? — incomplete > — best S — sticky |
Aggregator AS | The aggregator AS value. none — Aggregator AS attributes are not present. |
Aggregator | The aggregator attribute value. none — Aggregator attributes are not present. |
Atomic Aggr. | Atomic —Not Atomic — The atomic aggregator flag is not set. The atomic aggregator flag is set. |
MED | The MED metric value. none — MED metrics are present. |
Community | The BGP community attribute list. |
Cluster | The route reflector cluster list. |
Originator Id | The originator ID path attribute value. none — The originator ID attribute is not present. |
Peer Router Id | The router ID of the advertising router. |
AS-Path | The BGP AS path attribute. |
VPRN Imported | Displays the VPRNs where a particular BGP-VPN received route has been imported and installed. |
TieBreakReason | Displays the step in the BGP decision process where a BGP route lost the tie-break with the next better BGP route for the same prefix. LocalPref — This route is not the best because the next better route has a higher LOCAL_PREF. AIGP — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower derived AIGP metric value. ASPathLen — This route is not the best because the next better route has a shorter AS PATH length. Origin — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower Origin value. MED — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower MED, and MED comparison of the routes was allowed. IBGP — This IBGP route is not the best because the next better route is an EBGP route. NHCost — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower metric value to reach the BGP NEXT HOP. BGPID — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower Originator ID or BGP Identifier. ClusterLen — This route is not the best because the next better route has a shorter Cluster list length. PeerIP — This route is not the best because the next better route has a lower neighbor IP address. |
All
This command displays the routes in the IS-IS route table.
The following output is an example of IS-IS route information, and Table 396 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Prefix | The route prefix and mask. |
Metric MT | The route’s metric. |
Lvl/Type | Specifies the level (1 or 2) and the route type, Internal (Int) or External (Ext). |
Version | SPF version that generated route. |
Nexthop | System ID of nexthop, give hostname if possible. |
SysID/Hostname | Hostname for the specific system-id. |
Status | IS-IS status. |
Nexthop Status | The status of the next hop. |
SPF Version | The SPF version that generated the route. |
MT | The route’s metric. |
AdminTag | The number of administrative tags. |
No. of Routes | The total number of routes. |
SID[F] | The segment identifier flags of a Prefix-SID as defined by IETF segment routing. R: Re-advertisement flag. If set, then the prefix to which this Prefix-SID is attached, has been propagated by the router either from another level (in other words, from level-1 to level-2 or the opposite) or from redistribution (for example, from another protocol). N: Node-SID flag. The N-Flag is set on Prefix-SIDs attached to a router loopback address. nP: no-PHP flag. If set, then the penultimate hop must not pop the Prefix-SID before delivering the packet to the node that advertised the Prefix-SID. E: Explicit-Null Flag. If set, any upstream neighbor of the Prefix-SID originator must replace the Prefix-SID with a Prefix-SID having an Explicit-NULL value (0 for IPv4 and 2 for IPv6) before forwarding the packet. V: Value flag. If set, then the Prefix-SID carries a value (instead of an index). L: Local Flag. If set, then the value/index carried by the Prefix-SID has local significance. |
All
This command displays information about OSPF routes.
The following output shows an example of OSPF routes information.
All
This command displays information about OSPF routes.
The following output shows an example of OSPF information.
All
This command displays about inside NAT routes .
The following is an example of a NAT inside routes. Table 397 provides NAT inside routes descriptions.
Label | Description |
Router | The router name |
Route Address | The route address |
NAT Policy | The NAT policy name |
Prefix | The router prefix |
Type | The router type; dynamic or static |
This command shows the BIER routing table.
The following is an example of a BIER router table. Table 398 provides BIER routing field descriptions.
Label | Description |
Destination Prefix | The destination prefix |
BFR-ID | The BFR ID |
Age | The tunnel age |
Neighbor | The neighbor IP address |
Nexthop | The next-hop IP address |
Interface | The egress interface name for the programmed tunnel |
All
This command displays the rendezvous point (RP) set information built by the router.
The following is an example of a PIM RP configuration.
Label | Description |
Group Address | The multicast group address of the entry. |
RP Address | The address of the Rendezvous Point (RP) |
Type | Displays whether the entry was learned through the Bootstrap mechanism or if it was statically configured. |
Priority | The priority for the specified group address. The higher the value, the higher the priority. |
Holdtime | The value of the hold time present in the BSM message |
All
This command hashes the RP for the specified group from the RP set.
The following is an example of a PIM RP-Hash configuration. Table 400 provides RP-Hash output field descriptions.
Label | Description |
Group Address | The multicast group address of the entry |
RP Address | The address of the Rendezvous Point (RP) |
Type | Specifies whether the entry was learned through the Bootstrap mechanism or if it was statically configured. |
All
This command displays RPKI session information.
ipv4-address: | a.b.c.d |
ipv6-address | x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d where: x: [0 to FFFF]H d: [0 to 255]D interface: 32 chars max, and mandatory for link local addresses. |
The following output is an example of RPKI session information.
All
This command dumps the Reed-Solomon Forward Error Correction (RS-FEC) information for port.
All
This command displays RSVP RSB information.
The following output is an example of MPLS RSVP RSB detail fields.
All
Commands in this context clear and reset RSVP protocol entities.
All
Commands in this context display RSVP related information.
All
Commands in this context dump tools for RSVP.
All
This command displays video session information.
The following is an example output for this command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-14s
This command displays router advertisement information.
If no command line arguments are specified, all routes are displayed, sorted by prefix.
ipv6 | ipv6-prefix[/pref*: | 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: | 1 to 128 |
Router-Advertisement Table Output — The following output is an example of router advertisement information, and Table 401 describes the fields.
Label | Description |
Rtr Advertisement Tx/Last Sent | The number of router advertisements sent and time since they were sent |
Nbr Solicitation Tx | The number of neighbor solicitations sent and time since they were sent |
Nbr Advertisement Tx | The number of neighbor advertisements sent and time since they were sent |
Rtr Advertisement Rx | The number of router advertisements received and time since they were received |
Nbr Advertisement Rx | The number of neighbor advertisements received and time since they were received |
Max Advert Interval | The maximum interval between sending router advertisement messages |
Managed Config | True — indicates that DHCPv6 has been configured |
False — indicates that DHCPv6 is not available for address configuration | |
Reachable Time | The time, in milliseconds, that a node assumes a neighbor is reachable after receiving a reachability confirmation |
Retransmit Time | The time, in milliseconds, between retransmitted neighbor solicitation messages |
Link MTU | The MTU number the nodes use for sending packets on the link |
Rtr Solicitation Rx | The number of router solicitations received and time since they were received |
Nbr Solicitation Rx | The number of neighbor solicitations received and time since they were received |
Min Advert Interval | The minimum interval between sending ICMPv6 neighbor discovery router advertisement messages |
Other Config | True — indicates there are other stateful configurations False — indicates there are no other stateful configurations |
Router Lifetime | Displays the router lifetime in seconds |
Hop Limit | Displays the current hop limit |
Router-Advertisement Conflicts Output — The following output is an example of router advertisement conflicts, and Table 402 describes the fields.
Label | Description |
Advertisement from | The address of the advertising router |
Reachable Time | The time, in milliseconds, that a node assumes a neighbor is reachable after receiving a reachability confirmation |
Router Lifetime | Displays the router lifetime in seconds |
Retransmit Time | The time, in milliseconds, between retransmitted neighbor solicitation messages |
Hop Limit | Displays the current hop limit |
Link MTU | The MTU number the nodes use for sending packets on the link |
All
This command runs the Shortest Path First (SPF) algorithm.
All
This command runs the Shorted Path First (SPF) algorithm.
All