Examples
The following is sample output from the
show
glbp command:
Router# show glbp
FastEthernet0/0 - Group 10
State is Active
2 state changes, last state change 23:50:33
Virtual IP address is 10.21.8.10
Hello time 5 sec, hold time 18 sec
Next hello sent in 4.300 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 7200 sec
Authentication MD5, key-string
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local
Standby is unknown
Priority 254 (configured)
Weighting 105 (configured 110), thresholds: lower 95, upper 105
Track object 2 state Down decrement 5
Load balancing: host-dependent
There is 1 forwarder (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 23:50:15
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (default)
Owner ID is 0005.0050.6c08
Redirection enabled
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local, weighting 105
The following is sample output from the
show
glbp command with the
brief keyword specified:
Router# show glbp brief
Interface Grp Fwd Pri State Address Active router Standby router
Fa0/0 10 - 254 Active 10.21.8.10 local unknown
Fa0/0 10 1 7 Active 0007.b400.0101 local -
The following is sample output from the
show
glbp command that displays GLBP group 10:
Router# show glbp 10
FastEthernet0/0 - Group 10
State is Active
2 state changes, last state change 23:50:33
Virtual IP address is 10.21.8.10
Hello time 5 sec, hold time 18 sec
Next hello sent in 4.300 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 7200 sec
Authentication MD5, key-string
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local
Standby is unknown
Priority 254 (configured)
Weighting 105 (configured 110), thresholds: lower 95, upper 105
Track object 2 state Down decrement 5
Load balancing: host-dependent
There is 1 forwarder (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 23:50:15
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (default)
Owner ID is 0005.0050.6c08
Redirection enabled
Preemption enabled, min delay 60 sec
Active is local, weighting 105
The following output shows that the redundancy name has been assigned to the “glbp1” group:
Router# show glbp ethernet0/1 1
Ethernet0/1 - Group 1
State is Listen
64 state changes, last state change 00:00:54
Virtual IP address is 10.1.0.7
Hello time 50 msec, hold time 200 msec
Next hello sent in 0.030 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Authentication text, string “authword”
Preemption enabled, min delay 0 sec
Active is 10.1.0.2, priority 105 (expires in 0.184 sec)
Standby is 10.1.0.3, priority 100 (expires in 0.176 sec)
Priority 96 (configured)
Weighting 100 (configured 100), thresholds: lower 95, upper 100
Track object 1 state Up decrement 10
Load balancing: round-robin
IP redundancy name is "glbp1"
Group members:
0004.4d83.4801 (10.0.0.0)
0010.7b5a.fa41 (10.0.0.1)
00d0.bbd3.bc21 (10.0.0.2) local
The following output shows GLBP support for SSO mode on an active RP:
Router# show glbp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Standby
1 state change, last state change 00:00:20
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Next hello sent in 0.232 secs
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Preemption disabled
Active is 172.24.1.2, priority 100 (expires in 7.472 sec)
Standby is local
Priority 100 (default)
Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100
Load balancing: round-robin
Group members:
aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local
aabb.cc00.0200 (172.24.1.2)
There are 2 forwarders (1 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Listen
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200
Time to live: 14397.472 sec (maximum 14400 sec)
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is 172.24.1.2 (primary), weighting 100 (expires in 9.540 sec)
Forwarder 2
State is Active
1 state change, last state change 00:00:28
MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is local, weighting 100
The following output shows GLBP support for SSO mode on a standby RP:
RouterRP-standby# show glbp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Standby)
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Preemption disabled
Active is unknown
Standby is unknown
Priority 100 (default)
Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100
Load balancing: round-robin
Group members:
aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local
aabb.cc00.0200 (172.24.1.2)
There are 2 forwarders (0 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Listen)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
Forwarder 2
State is Init (standby RP, peer state is Active)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
GLBP support for Stateful Switchover (SSO) mode is enabled by default but may be disabled by the
no
glbp
sso command. If GLBP support for SSO mode is disabled, the output of the
show
glbp command on the standby RP will display a warning:
RouterRP-standby# show glbp
Ethernet0/0 - Group 1
State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled) <------ GLBP SSO is disabled.
Virtual IP address is 172.24.1.254
Hello time 3 sec, hold time 10 sec
Redirect time 600 sec, forwarder time-out 14400 sec
Preemption disabled
Active is unknown
Standby is unknown
Priority 100 (default)
Weighting 100 (default 100), thresholds: lower 1, upper 100
Load balancing: round-robin
Group members:
aabb.cc00.0100 (172.24.1.1) local
There are 2 forwarders (0 active)
Forwarder 1
State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0101 (learnt)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0200
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
Forwarder 2
State is Init (GLBP SSO disabled)
MAC address is 0007.b400.0102 (default)
Owner ID is aabb.cc00.0100
Preemption enabled, min delay 30 sec
Active is unknown
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.
Table 1. show glbp Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
FastEthernet0/0 - Group
|
Interface type and number and GLBP group number for the interface.
|
State is
|
State of the virtual gateway or virtual forwarder. For a virtual gateway, the state can be one of the following:
-
Active--The gateway is the active virtual gateway (AVG) and is responsible for responding to Address Resolution Protocol
(ARP) requests for the virtual IP address.
-
Disabled--The virtual IP address has not been configured or learned yet, but another GLBP configuration exists.
-
Initial--The virtual IP address has been configured or learned, but virtual gateway configuration is not complete. An interface
must be up and configured to route IP, and an interface IP address must be configured.
-
Listen--The virtual gateway is receiving hello packets and is ready to change to the “speak” state if the active or standby
virtual gateway becomes unavailable.
-
Speak--The virtual gateway is attempting to become the active or standby virtual gateway.
-
Standby--The gateway is next in line to be the AVG.
|
|
For a virtual forwarder, the state can be one of the following:
-
Active--The gateway is the active virtual forwarder (AVF) and is responsible for forwarding packets sent to the virtual forwarder
MAC address.
-
Disabled--The virtual MAC address has not been assigned or learned. This is a transitory state because a virtual forwarder
changing to a disabled state is deleted.
-
Initial--The virtual MAC address is known, but virtual forwarder configuration is not complete. An interface must be up and
configured to route IP, an interface IP address must be configured, and the virtual IP address must be known.
-
Listen--The virtual forwarder is receiving hello packets and is ready to change to the “active” state if the AVF becomes
unavailable.
|
Virtual IP address is
|
The virtual IP address of the GLBP group. All secondary virtual IP addresses are listed on separate lines. If one of the
virtual IP addresses is a duplicate of an address configured for another device, it will be marked as “duplicate.” A duplicate
address indicates that the router has failed to defend its ARP cache entry.
|
Hello time, hold time
|
The hello time is the time between hello packets (in seconds or milliseconds). The hold time is the time (in seconds or milliseconds)
before other routers declare the active router to be down. All routers in a GLBP group use the hello- and hold-time values
of the current AVG. If the locally configured values are different, the configured values appear in parentheses after the
hello- and hold-time values.
|
Next hello sent in
|
The time until GLBP will send the next hello packet (in seconds or milliseconds).
|
Preemption
|
Whether GLBP gateway preemption is enabled. If enabled, the minimum delay is the time (in seconds) for which a higher-priority
nonactive router will wait before preempting the lower-priority active router.
This field is also displayed under the forwarder section where it indicates GLBP forwarder preemption.
|
Active is
|
The active state of the virtual gateway. The value can be “local,” “unknown,” or an IP address. The address (and the expiration
date of the address) is the address of the current AVG.
This field is also displayed under the forwarder section where it indicates the address of the current AVF.
|
Standby is
|
The standby state of the virtual gateway. The value can be “local,” “unknown,” or an IP address. The address (and the expiration
date of the address) is the address of the standby gateway (the gateway that is next in line to be the AVG).
|
Weighting
|
The initial weighting value with lower and upper threshold values.
|
Track object
|
The list of objects that are being tracked and their corresponding states.
|
IP redundancy name is
|
The name of the GLBP group.
|