This command displays switch-point information using TAII.
<global-id[:prefix*> : <global-id>[:<prefix>[:<ac-id>]] | |
global-id | 1 to 4294967295 |
prefix | a.b.c.d | 1 to 4294967295 |
ac-id | 1 to 4294967295 |
The following is an example of service switch-point information using TAII information.
All
This command dumps information for BFD sessions on LSPs.
The following output is an example of tail information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays configuration information for the targeted LDP peers.
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 | |
x: [0 to FFFF]H | |
d: [0 to 255]D |
The following outputs are examples of LDP targeted peer information, and Table 542 describes the output fields.
The following table describes the LDP targeted peer output fields.
Label | Description |
Peer | The IP address of the peer. |
Adm | Up — The LDP is administratively enabled. Down — The LDP is administratively disabled. |
Opr | Up — The LDP is operationally enabled. Down — The LDP is operationally disabled. |
Hello Fctr | The value by which the hello timeout should be divided to give the hello time, for example, the time interval (in s), between LDP hello messages. LDP uses hello messages to discover neighbors and to detect loss of connectivity with its neighbors. |
Hold Time | The hello time or hold time. The time interval (in seconds) that LDP waits before declaring a neighbor to be down. Hello timeout is local to the system and is sent in the hello messages to a neighbor. |
KA Fctr | The value by which the keepalive timeout is divided to calculate the keepalive time, for example, the time interval (in seconds) between LDP keepalive messages. LDP keepalive messages are sent to keep the LDP session from timing out when no other LDP traffic is being sent between the neighbors. |
KA Time | The time interval (in seconds) that LDP waits before tearing down a session. If no LDP messages are exchanged during this time interval, the LDP session is torn down. Generally, the value is configured to be 3 times the keepalive time (the time interval between successive LDP keepalive messages). |
Active Adjacencies | The number of active adjacencies (established sessions) associated with the LDP instance. |
Auth | Enabled — Authentication using MD5 message-based digest protocol is enabled. Disabled — No authentication is used. |
Passive Mode | The mode used to set up LDP sessions. This value is only applicable to targeted sessions and not to LDP interfaces. True — LDP responds only when it gets a connect request from a peer and will not attempt to actively connect to its neighbors. False — LDP actively tries to connect to its peers. |
Auto Created | Specifies that a targeted peer was automatically created through service manager. For an LDP interface, this value is always false. |
Creator | autorx — The autorx is the creator. autotx — The autotx is the creator. |
No. of Peers | The total number of LDP peers. |
Tunneling | Enabled — Tunneling is enabled. Disabled — No tunneling is used. |
LSP | The LSP name. |
All
This command displays the configured parameters of a targeted peer-template.
All
This command displays targeted peer template mappings to prefix policy.
All
This command clears unneeded automatic T-LDP sessions on all applicable nodes. The operator must run this command during a specific time window on all nodes on which auto-rx is configured. The operator must also ensure that the configured hold-time value should be longer than the hello-timer value plus the time required to run the clear command on all applicable nodes. The configured hold-time value must be a non-zero value.
When the hold timer for this command is in progress, the operator can display the remaining timeout value by using the tools dump router ldp timers command.
This clear command is not synchronized to the standby CPM. Consequently, if the operator configures this command with a large hold-time value and a CPM switchover occurs during this time, the operator must reconfigure this clear command on the newly active CPM.
All
This command displays information about the TCP transport session of an LDP peer.
All
This command displays TCP validation policy information.
When the mda-id parameter is included, only TCP validation policy information for the specified adapter card is displayed.
The following output is an example of TCP validation policy information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays information about configured TDM satellites. If a sat-id is specified, this command displays information only about the specified TDM satellite.
The following output is an example of TDM satellite information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e
Commands in this context dump the traffic engineering database.
The following output is an example of traffic engineering database information.
All
This command displays Traffic Engineering (TE) link information.
This command displays Traffic Engineering (TE) link information.
The following output is an example of TE link information, and Table 543 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Admin State | The administrative state of the TE link. |
Oper State | The operational state of the TE link. |
Remote Id | The remote ID of the TE link. |
Peer Node Id | The LMP peer node ID. |
Received | The total number of received packets of a specific type. |
Sent | The total number of sent packets of a specific type. |
Retransmitted | The total number of retransmitted packets of a specific type. |
7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command dumps information about TE links. Configuring the te-link-id parameter will only dump information about the specified TE link.
The following output is an example of TE link information.
7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command dumps information about a TE link.
The following output is an example of TE link information.
7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays TE LSP information for MPLS.
The following output is an example of MPLS TE LSP information.
All
Commands in this context display telemetry information.
All
All
This command displays http-error-redirect template information.
The following is an example show output for the policer command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays http-notification template information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command shows the BIER template information.
The following displays an example of a BIER template. Table 544 provides BIER template field descriptions.
Label | Description |
Bier Admin State | The BIER administrative state |
Oper State | The BIER operational state |
Template Name | The BIER template name |
SD-Range | The BIER SD-Range |
Prefix | The prefix |
Total number of templates | The total number of templates |
Total number of subdomains | The total number of subdomains |
All
This command displays route next-hop policy templates.
The following output is an example of route next-hop policy template information.
All
Commands in this context display service template information.
All
Commands in this context display test oam information.
All
Commands in this context clear test oam information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
Commands in this context dump test oam information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
Commands in this context perform test OAM functions.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays a list of OAM-PM test types and associated test IDs. The output provides an ordered list by type and ID to help locate available test IDs that may be configured within a specific type. Filters are available to refine the output to the operational need. Multiple filters can be included to further refine the output. The combination of the filters is an AND function. All filters must be true to provide tests output.
The following is an example of OAM-PM test type and test ID information. Table 545 describes test fields.
Label | Description |
Test Type | The OAM-PM protocol specific test |
Test ID | The numerical value, between 0 to 2147483647, that is assigned to the protocol specific test |
Admin | The administrative state of the test Up – The test has been enabled by configuration Down – The test was not enabled by configuration |
Oper | The operational state of the test Up – The test is administrative Up and currently transmitting, attempting to transmit packets, or ready to transmit packets Down – The test is administratively down or an oam-pm session has been configured with session-type on-demand and has not been enabled using the global CLI oam oam-pm session start command |
TxE | no – There has been no error detected yes – The has been an error detected |
Sess Type | The session type, proactive and on-demand |
Session | The name of the session, up to 32 characters |
All
This command displays AA current subscribers’ tethering statistics.
The following is an example show output for the tethering command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears the counters from the tethering statistics.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays information about threshold crossing alerts.
The following output example shows application assurance threshold crossing alert information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays system monitoring thresholds. The Threshold Events Log table will keep only the last 201 entries.
The following output is an example of system threshold information, and Table 546 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Variable | Displays the variable OID. |
Alarm Id | Displays the numerical identifier for the alarm. |
Last Value | Displays the last threshold value. |
Rising Event Id | Displays the identifier of the RMON rising event. |
Threshold | Displays the identifier of the RMON rising threshold. |
Falling Event Id | Displays the identifier of the RMON falling event. |
Threshold | Displays the identifier of the RMON falling threshold. |
Sample Interval | Displays the polling interval, in seconds, over which the data is sampled and compared with the rising and falling thresholds. |
SampleType | Displays the method of sampling the selected variable and calculating the value to be compared against the thresholds. |
Startup Alarm | Displays the alarm that may be sent when this alarm is first created. |
Owner | Displays the owner of this alarm. |
Description | Displays the event cause. |
Event Id | Displays the identifier of the threshold event. |
Last Sent | Displays the date and time the alarm was sent. |
Action Type | log — An entry is made in the RMON-MIB log table for each event occurrence. trap — An SR OS logger event is generated. The SR OS logger utility then distributes the notification of this event to its configured log destinations, which may be CONSOLE, telnet session, memory log, cflash file, syslog, or SNMP trap destinations logs. both — Both an entry in the RMON-MIB logTable and an SR OS logger event are generated. none — No action is taken. |
Owner | Displays the owner of the event. |
All
This command displays throughput statistics for the specified tunnel types and scope.
The following scopes are supported:
The statistics include the following information:
Syntax notes:
The system collects stats every 10 minutes for last the 24 hour per the wall clock. A current value is also included in the output. The value is an average derived value of 10 minutes. The start time indicates the starting timestamp of measurement. The sampling duration indicates the duration of measurement.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
The following is an example output of the show isa statistics throughput ip-tunnel-stats command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays IPsec throughput statistics for the specified scope.
The system collects statistics every 10 minutes for the last 24 hours per wall clock. A current value is included in the output.
This command supports following the scopes:
The statistics include:
Syntax notes:
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
The following output is an example of the show isa statistics ipsec-stats throughput command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays the system time and zone configuration parameters.
The following output is an example of system time information, and Table 547 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Date & Time | The system date and time using the current time zone. |
DST Active | Yes — Daylight Savings Time is currently in effect. No — Daylight Savings Time is not currently in effect. |
Zone | The zone names for the current zone, the non-DST zone, and the DST zone if configured. |
Current Time Zone | Indicates the process currently controlling the system time. SNTP, NTP, PTP or NONE. |
Zone type | Non-standard — The zone is user-defined. Standard — The zone is system defined. |
Offset from UTC | The number of hours and minutes added to universal time for the zone, including the DST offset for a DST zone. |
Offset from Non-DST | The number of hours (always 0 to 1) and minutes (0 to 59) added to the time at the beginning of Daylight Saving Time and subtracted at the end Daylight Saving Time. |
Starts | The date and time Daylight Saving Time begins. |
Ends | The date and time Daylight Saving Time ends. |
All
This command displays the current day, date, time and time zone.
The time is displayed either in the local time zone or in UTC depending on the setting of the root level time-display command for the console session.
The following output is an example of time information.
All
This command dumps information for LDP timers.
All
Commands in this context display TLS-related information.
All
Commands in this context enable useful tools for debugging purposes.
All
This command displays and optionally clears the most active MEPs on the system.
top-active-meps
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays the top 20 (highest traffic volume) flows for IPv4, IPv6 or MPLS traffic types collected since the cflowd top-flow table was last cleared or initialized.
The following output is an example of cflowd top flow information, and Table 548 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Ingress | Displays the ingress interface ID |
Src IP | Displays the source IP address of the flow (IPv4 or IPv6) |
Egress | Displays the egress interface ID |
Dest IP | Displays the destination IP address of the flow (IPv4 or IPv6) |
Pr Proto | Displays the protocol type for flow |
TOS | Displays the Type-of-Service/DSCP buts filed markings |
Flgs | Displays the protocol flag markings |
Pkts | Displays the total number of packets sampled for this flow (since stats were last cleared) |
vRtr-ID | Displays the vRouter context the flow was sample in |
S-Port Src Port | Displays the source protocol port number |
Msk | Displays the route prefix length for route to source IP address |
AS | Displays the Autonomous Systems number for the source route (the AS is either originating AS or peer AS depending on cflowd configuration) |
D-Port Dst Port | Displays the destination protocol port number |
Msk | Displays the route prefix length for route to destination IP address (Forwarding route) |
AS | Displays the Autonomous Systems number for the destination route (the AS is either originating AS or peer AS depending on cflowd configuration) |
Nexthop | Displays the next-hop address used to forward traffic associated with the flow |
Avg pkt size | Displays the average packet size of a sampled traffic associated with this flow (total number of packets sampled/total number of packets sampled) |
Active | Displays the number of seconds the flow has been active |
All
This command displays the summary information for the top 20 protocol traffic seen in the cflowd cache. All statistics are calculated based on the data collected since the last clearing of the cflowd stats with clear keyword for this command.
If the clear optional keyword is given, then the top-flows are displayed, and then this cache is cleared.
The following output is an example of cflowd top protocol traffic information, and Table 549 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Protocol ID | Displays the IPv4 or IPv6 protocol type; this will either print the well-known protocol name or the decimal protocol number |
Total Flows | Displays the total number of flows recorded since the last clearing of cflowd statistics with this protocol type. |
Flows/Sec | Displays the average number of flows detected for the associated protocol type (Total flows/number of seconds since last clear) |
Packets/Flow | Displays the average number of packets per flow (Total number of packets/total flows) |
Bytes/Pkts | Displays the average number of bytes per packet for the associated protocol type (Total number of bytes for the associated protocol/total number of packets seen for the associated protocol) |
Packets/Sec | Displays the average number of packets seen for the associated protocol type (Number of packets/time since last clear) |
Duration/Flow | Displays the average lifetime of a flow for the associated protocol type (Number of seconds since last clear/total flows) |
Bandwidth Total (%) | Displays the percentage of bandwidth consumed by the associated protocol type (Total protocol bytes/total bytes of all flows) |
All
This command shows IS-IS topology information.
The following output is an example of router IS-IS topology output, and Table 550 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Node | Displays the IP address. |
Interface | Displays the interface name. |
Nexthop | Displays the nexthop IP address. |
LFA Interface | Displays the LFA interface name. |
LFA Nexthop | Displays the LFA nexthop IP address. |
All
This command displays MPLS-TP interface information.
The following output is an example of MPLS TP interface information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays TP LSP information.
The following output is an example of MPLS TP LSP information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays MPLS-TP tunnel information.
The following output is an example of MPLS TP interface information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
Commands in this context perform Linear Protection operations on an MPLS-TP LSP.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays information about all traces and associated parameters that are currently enabled on the system. Including the trace-name parameter limits the output to the specified trace only.
The following output displays call trace information.
Table 551 describes call trace IPoE trace output fields.
Field | Description |
Trace name | The name of the trace profile |
Type | The type of the call trace |
SAP ID | The SAP ID of the session to match by this trace |
IEEE address | The IEEE address of the session that matches this trace |
Maximum jobs | The maximum number of call trace jobs that are started by this trace |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-2s, 7750 SR-7s, 7750 SR-14s
This command clears all trace jobs started by the specified trace. This command does not affect the trace command itself, and new jobs can still be executed for new sessions.
After a session is cleared, tracing for the session will not be restarted by any configured trace. Only explicitly starting a new trace with the trace-existing-sessions parameter can restart tracing for the session.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-2s, 7750 SR-7s, 7750 SR-14s
This command provides an overview of all configured profiles or details of a specific profile. If the detail option is specified the full information for all configured profiles are displayed.
The following output displays call-trace trace-profile information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR-7/12/12e, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-2s, 7750 SR-7s, 7750 SR-14s
This command displays application-assurance traffic-capture information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays traffic forward statistics for the specified tunnel-type on the specified ISA.
The statistics includes the following information:
In the output, 1 kilobyte equals 210 bytes.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
The following is an example output of the show router statistics ip-tunnel-stats traffic-forward command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays traffic forward statistics of the specified scope.
This command supports following scopes:
The statistics include:
1 kilobyte equals 210 bytes
The start time indicates the starting timestamp of the measurement. The sampling duration indicates the duration of the measurement.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
The following output is an example of the show isa stats ipsec-stats traffic forward isa command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays BGP-LU traffic statistics.
The following is an example of traffic statistics information.
All
This command clears BGP-LU traffic statistics.
All
This command displays per traffic type statistics.
The following is an example of traffic type information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays per traffic type statistics.
The following is an example of traffic type information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays information of the specified IPsec transform or lists all configured IKE transform information when the IKE transform ID is not specified.
The following is an example output for the show ipsec transform command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays transit IP policy information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays MPLS-TP tunnel information.
The following output is an example of MPLS OAM transit path information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command displays transit prefix policy information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command modifies thresholds for trap suppression. The time-interval parameter is used to suppress traps after a certain number of traps have been raised within the time-interval period of time. By executing this command, there will be no more than number-of-traps within time-interval.
All
This command displays trust anchor profile information.
The following is an example output for the show ipsec trust-anchor-profile command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays information about server and client profiles that are using the specified TLS trust anchor profile.
The following output is an example of trust anchor profile information.
All
This command displays IPsec traffic-selector list (TS-list) information.
Entering this command without a parameter will list all configured TS-lists.
Entering this command with the association parameter will list all IPsec gateways that use the specified TS-list.
Entering this command with the local or local-entry parameter will list all or specified local entries of the specified TS-list.
Entering this command with the remote or remote-entry parameter will list all or specified remote entries of the specified TS-list.
The following output is an example of TS-list information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays L2TP tunnel operational information.
ipv4-address | a.b.c.d (host bits must be 0) |
ipv6-address | x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x[-interface] |
x:x:x:x:x:x:d.d.d.d[-interface] | |
x: [0 to FFFF]H | |
d: [0 to 255]D | |
interface: 32 characters maximum, mandatory for link local addresses |
The following output is an example of L2TP tunnel operational information.
On LNS after switchover
On LNS after switchover (433324032 is the recovered tunnel, 1169424384 is the recovery tunnel)
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears L2TP tunnel data.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears L2TP data.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
Commands in this context configure performance tools for a specified L2TP tunnel.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays IPsec tunnel information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command clears static IPsec tunnel states.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command shows the BIER tunnel table used for MVPN.
The following is an example of a BIER tunnel table. Table 552 provides BIER tunnel table descriptions.
Label | Description |
Tunnel-id | The tunnel ID allocated for this tunnel |
Type | The tunnel type, indicated if it is a terminating tunnel or an originating one |
Oper | The operational status of the tunnel |
No. of Leaves | The number of leaves associated with the tunnel if the tunnel type is tx or BFIR. This field represents the number of leafs associated with it. If the tunnel type is rx or BFER, this field is zero. |
BFR Prefix | The BFR prefix associated with the root of the tunnel |
Bfr-ID | The BFR ID associated with the root of the tunnel |
Mpls Label | If the tunnel type is tx or BFIR, this field represents the egress VPRN label allocated. If the tunnel type is rx or BFER, this field represents the ingress VPRN label allocated by the root. |
Sub-domain | The sub-domain associated with the root of the tunnel |
All
This command displays details about the P2MP tunnel.
The following is an example of a P2MP SR tree tunnel table. Table 553 provides the P2MP SR tree tunnel table descriptions.
Label | Description |
Tunnel-Id | The tunnel ID allocated for this tunnel |
Type | The tunnel type, indicated if it is a terminating tunnel or an originating one |
Oper | The operational status of the tunnel |
Num Leaves | The number of leaves associated with the tunnel |
TreeId | The tree ID associated with the root of the tunnel |
RootAddr | The address associated with the root of the tunnel |
SvcId | The service identifier |
All
This command displays segment routing tunnel information.
The following outputs are examples of segment routing tunnel operational information, and describes the output fields.
All
This command displays RIB-API tunnel information.
The following output is an example of RIB-API tunnel information.
All
Clears the egress statistics of the specified RIB-API tunnel.
All
This command configures the dump tools for RIB-API tunnel.
The following output is an example of RIB-API tunnel route information.
All
This command clears IP tunnel statistics.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
Commands in this context display tunnel information.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
The following is an example of the tunnel group information. Table 554 provides tunnel group descriptions.
Label | Description |
ISA Group | The ISA group ID |
Admin State | The administrative state of the tunnel group |
Oper state | The operational state of the tunnel group |
Responder-Only | The tunnel setup under the specified tunnel group |
Non-Active Members | The non-active ESA and ESA VM |
Required Active Qty | The number of the required active members |
Active Members | The active ESA and ESA VM |
Reassembly (msecs) | The time of reassembly |
ISA Chassis | The number of ISA chassis |
Oper Flags | The operational status flag of the tunnel |
Grp IPsec Tnls | The number of group IPsec tunnels |
Grp IPsec Max Tnls | The maximum number of group IPsec tunnels |
Grp IP Tunnels | The number of group IP tunnels |
Grp IP Max Tunnels | The maximum number of group IP tunnels |
ISA Scale Mode | The number of tunnels on each ISA of the tunnel group |
Statistics Collection | Specifies whether statistics collection is enabled |
CPU Usage | Specifies whether the CPU usage of all the processes and protocols is enabled |
Gw Traffic Forward | Specifies whether the traffic forwarded on the GW is enabled |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays tunnel interface information.
The following is an example of IGMP tunnel interface information.
All
This command displays PIM tunnel interface information.
The following is an example of PIM tunnel interface information.
All
This command displays tunnel interface information.
The following is an example of router tunnel interface information.
All
Commands in this context display tunnel ISA statistics including ISA CPU usage and memory allocation failure rates.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays tunnel-QoS resource 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 |
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 soft GRE tunnel QoS information.
7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command purges tunnels from the L2TP tunnel selection denylist.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command purges peers from the L2TP tunnel selection denylist.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays IPsec tunnel setup rate statistics of the specified scope.
The system collects statistics every hour for the last 24 hour period per wall clock. A current value is also included in the output.
This command supports following scopes:
The statics include the following setup rates:
The start time indicates the starting timestamp of measurement. The sampling duration indicates the duration of measurement.
esa-vm: | esa-id/vm-id | |
esa-id | 1 to 16 | |
vm-id | 1 to 4 |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays tunnel table information.
Auto-bind GRE tunnels are not displayed in show command output. GRE tunnels are not the same as SDP tunnels that use the GRE encapsulation type. When the auto-bind-tunnel command is used when configuring a VPRN service, it means the MP-BGP NH resolution is referring to core routing instance for IP reachability. For a VPRN service this object specifies the lookup to be used by the routing instance if no SDP to the destination exists.
The following outputs are examples of tunnel table information, and Table 555 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
Destination | The route’s destination address and mask. |
Owner | Specifies the tunnel owner. |
Encap | Specifies the tunnel’s encapsulation type. |
Tunnel ID | Specifies the tunnel (SDP) identifier. |
Pref | Specifies the route preference for routes learned from the configured peer(s). |
Nexthop | The next hop for the route’s destination. |
Metric | The route metric value for the route. |
All
This command displays IPsec tunnel template information.
The following is an example output for the show ipsec tunnel-template command.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays tunnel operation information.
ip-address: | 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 |
ip-address: | 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 WLAN-GW tunnel information.
![]() | Note: The remote/local IP addresses are locally generated for VLAN tunnels. |
7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
This command displays all the WLAN-GW tunnels matching the specified criteria. Unlike the similar command in the show>router>vprn context, this command also includes information on tunnels containing ISA-only UEs such as migrant, DSM and l2-wholesale.
The following is an example of WLAN-GW tunnels.
7750 SR, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, VSR
Commands in this context display TWAMP information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command clears Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol statistics.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
This command dumps TWAMP information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
Commands in this context display TWAMP-Light information.
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS
The following output is an example of TWAMP Light information, and Table 556 describes the output fields.
Label | Description |
TWAMP Light Reflector | |
Admin State | Up — The server or prefix is administratively enabled (no shutdown) in configuration Down — The server or prefix is administratively disabled (shutdown) in configuration |
Up Time | |
Prefix | |
7450 ESS, 7750 SR, 7750 SR-a, 7750 SR-e, 7750 SR-s, 7950 XRS