Licensing Requirements
For a complete explanation of Cisco NX-OS licensing recommendations and how to obtain and apply licenses, see the Cisco NX-OS Licensing Guide.
The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.
For a complete explanation of Cisco NX-OS licensing recommendations and how to obtain and apply licenses, see the Cisco NX-OS Licensing Guide.
The Ethernet ports can operate as standard Ethernet interfaces connected to servers or to a LAN.
The Ethernet interfaces are enabled by default.
You can enable the various capabilities of the Ethernet interfaces on a per-interface basis using the interface command. When you enter the interface command, you specify the following information:
Interface type—All physical Ethernet interfaces use the ethernet keyword.
Slot number:
Slot 1 includes all the fixed ports.
Slot 2 includes the ports on the upper expansion module (if populated).
Slot 3 includes the ports on the lower expansion module (if populated).
Slot 4 includes the ports on the lower expansion module (if populated).
Port number— Port number within the group.
The interface numbering convention is extended to support use with a Cisco Nexus Fabric Extender as follows:
switch(config)# interface ethernet [chassis/]slot/port
The chassis ID is an optional entry that you can use to address the ports of a connected Fabric Extender. The chassis ID is configured on a physical Ethernet or EtherChannel interface on the switch to identify the Fabric Extender discovered through the interface. The chassis ID ranges from 100 to 199.
You can enable 40-Gigabits per second (Gbps) speed on up to 12 interfaces. You enable 40-Gbps speed on the first port of a group of four adjacent ports. For example, you enable 40-Gbps speed on port 1 of port group 1-4, port 5 of port group 5-8, and port 9 of port group 9-12, and so on. The 40-Gbps port numbering is Ethernet interface 1/1, 1/5, 1/9, 1/13, 1/17, and so on.
The configuration is applied to the first port, not on the remaining three ports in the group. The remaining ports act like the ports without an enhanced small form-factor pluggable (SFP+) transceiver inserted. The configuration takes effect immediately. You do not need to reload the switch.
An SFP+ transceiver security check is performed only on the first port of the group.
The Cisco-proprietary Unidirectional Link Detection (UDLD) protocol allows ports that are connected through fiber optics or copper (for example, Category 5 cabling) Ethernet cables to monitor the physical configuration of the cables and detect when a unidirectional link exists. When the switch detects a unidirectional link, UDLD shuts down the affected LAN port and alerts the user. Unidirectional links can cause a variety of problems, including spanning tree topology loops.
UDLD is a Layer 2 protocol that works with the Layer 1 protocols to determine the physical status of a link. At Layer 1, autonegotiation takes care of physical signaling and fault detection. UDLD performs tasks that autonegotiation cannot perform, such as detecting the identities of neighbors and shutting down misconnected LAN ports. When you enable both autonegotiation and UDLD, Layer 1 and Layer 2 detections work together to prevent physical and logical unidirectional connections and the malfunctioning of other protocols.
A unidirectional link occurs whenever traffic transmitted by the local device over a link is received by the neighbor but traffic transmitted from the neighbor is not received by the local device. If one of the fiber strands in a pair is disconnected, and if autonegotiation is active, the link does not stay up. In this case, the logical link is undetermined, and UDLD does not take any action. If both fibers are working normally at Layer 1, then UDLD at Layer 2 determines whether those fibers are connected correctly and whether traffic is flowing bidirectionally between the correct neighbors. This check cannot be performed by autonegotiation, because autonegotiation operates at Layer 1.
A Cisco Nexus device periodically transmits UDLD frames to neighbor devices on LAN ports with UDLD enabled. If the frames are echoed back within a specific time frame and they lack a specific acknowledgment (echo), the link is flagged as unidirectional and the LAN port is shut down. Devices on both ends of the link must support UDLD in order for the protocol to successfully identify and disable unidirectional links.
The following figure shows an example of a unidirectional link condition. Device B successfully receives traffic from Device A on the port. However, Device A does not receive traffic from Device B on the same port. UDLD detects the problem and disables the port.
The following table shows the default UDLD configuration.
Feature |
Default Value |
---|---|
UDLD global enable state |
Globally disabled |
UDLD aggressive mode |
Disabled |
UDLD per-port enable state for fiber-optic media |
Enabled on all Ethernet fiber-optic LAN ports |
UDLD per-port enable state for twisted-pair (copper) media |
Enabled |
UDLD aggressive mode is disabled by default. You can configure UDLD aggressive mode only on point-to-point links between network devices that support UDLD aggressive mode. If UDLD aggressive mode is enabled, when a port on a bidirectional link that has a UDLD neighbor relationship established stops receiving UDLD frames, UDLD tries to reestablish the connection with the neighbor. After eight failed retries, the port is disabled.
To prevent spanning tree loops, nonaggressive UDLD with the default interval of 15 seconds is fast enough to shut down a unidirectional link before a blocking port transitions to the forwarding state (with default spanning tree parameters).
When you enable the UDLD aggressive mode, the following occurs:
One side of a link has a port stuck (both transmission and receive)
One side of a link remains up while the other side of the link is down
In these cases, the UDLD aggressive mode disables one of the ports on the link, which prevents traffic from being discarded.
The Switch Virtual Interface (SVI) represents a logical interface between the bridging function and the routing function of a VLAN in the device. By default, when a VLAN interface has multiple ports in the VLAN, the SVI goes to the down state when all the ports in the VLAN go down.
Autostate behavior is the operational state of an interface that is governed by the state of the various ports in its corresponding VLAN. An SVI interface on a VLAN comes up when there is at least one port in that vlan that is in STP forwarding state. Similarly, this interface goes down when the last STP forwarding port goes down or goes to another STP state.
By default, Autostate calculation is enabled. You can disable Autostate calculation for an SVI interface and change the default value.
Note |
Nexus 3000 Series switches do not support bridging between two VLANs when an SVI for one VLAN exists on the same device as the bridging link. Traffic coming into the device and bound for the SVI is dropped as a IPv4 discard. This is because the BIA MAC address is shared across VLANs/SVIs with no option to modify the MAC of the SVI. |
The Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) is a device discovery protocol that runs over Layer 2 (the data link layer) on all Cisco-manufactured devices (routers, bridges, access servers, and switches) and allows network management applications to discover Cisco devices that are neighbors of already known devices. With CDP, network management applications can learn the device type and the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) agent address of neighboring devices that are running lower-layer, transparent protocols. This feature enables applications to send SNMP queries to neighboring devices.
CDP runs on all media that support Subnetwork Access Protocol (SNAP). Because CDP runs over the data-link layer only, two systems that support different network-layer protocols can learn about each other.
Each CDP-configured device sends periodic messages to a multicast address, advertising at least one address at which it can receive SNMP messages. The advertisements also contain time-to-live, or holdtime information, which is the length of time a receiving device holds CDP information before discarding it. Each device also listens to the messages sent by other devices to learn about neighboring devices.
The switch supports both CDP Version 1 and Version 2.
The following table shows the default CDP configuration.
Feature |
Default Setting |
---|---|
CDP interface state |
Enabled |
CDP timer (packet update frequency) |
60 seconds |
CDP holdtime (before discarding) |
180 seconds |
CDP Version-2 advertisements |
Enabled |
An interface is in the error-disabled (err-disabled) state when the inteface is enabled administratively (using the no shutdown command) but disabled at runtime by any process. For example, if UDLD detects a unidirectional link, the interface is shut down at runtime. However, because the interface is administratively enabled, the interface status displays as err-disabled. Once an interface goes into the err-disabled state, you must manually reenable it or you can configure an automatic timeout recovery value. The err-disabled detection is enabled by default for all causes. The automatic recovery is not configured by default.
When an interface is in the err-disabled state, use the errdisable detect cause command to find information about the error.
You can configure the automatic err-disabled recovery timeout for a particular err-disabled cause by changing the time variable.
The errdisable recovery cause command provides automatic recovery after 300 seconds. To change the recovery period, use the errdisable recovery interval command to specify the timeout period. You can specify 30 to 65535 seconds.
To disable recovery of an interface from the err-disabled state, use the no errdisable recovery cause command.
all—Enables a timer to recover from all causes.
bpduguard—Enables a timer to recover from the bridge protocol data unit (BPDU) Guard error-disabled state.
failed-port-state—Enables a timer to recover from a Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) set port state failure.
link-flap—Enables a timer to recover from linkstate flapping.
pause-rate-limit—Enables a timer to recover from the pause rate limit error-disabled state.
udld—Enables a timer to recover from the Unidirectional Link Detection (UDLD) error-disabled state.
loopback—Enables a timer to recover from the loopback error-disabled state.
If you do not enable the err-disabled recovery for the cause, the interface stays in the err-disabled state until you enter the shutdown and no shutdown commands. If the recovery is enabled for a cause, the interface is brought out of the err-disabled state and allowed to retry operation once all the causes have timed out. Use the show interface status err-disabled command to display the reason behind the error.
The switch does not fragment frames. As a result, the switch cannot have two ports in the same Layer 2 domain with different maximum transmission units (MTUs). A per-physical Ethernet interface MTU is not supported. Instead, the MTU is set according to the QoS classes. You modify the MTU by setting class and policy maps.
Note |
When you show the interface settings, a default MTU of 1500 is displayed for physical Ethernet interfaces. |
You can configure an MTU size of up to 9216 bytes on management interfaces. The change in configuration might trigger a temporary link flap at the end device.
The debounce timer delays notification of a link change, which can decrease traffic loss due to network reconfiguration. You can configure the debounce timer separately for each Ethernet port and specify the delay time in milliseconds. The delay time can range from 0 milliseconds to 5000 milliseconds. By default, this parameter is set for 100 milliseconds, which results in the debounce timer not running. When this parameter is set to 0 milliseconds, the debounce timer is disabled.
Caution |
Enabling the debounce timer causes the link-down detections to be delayed, which results in a loss of traffic during the debounce period. This situation might affect the convergence and reconvergence of some Layer 2 and Layer 3 protocols. |
40-Gbps Ethernet interfaces do not support the following features:
Switched Port Analyzer (SPAN)
Encapsulated Remote Switched Port Analyzer (ERSPAN)
Warp SPAN
Private Virtual Local Area Network (PVLAN)
Active buffer monitoring
Latency monitoring
Link level flow control
Precession Time Protocol (PTP)
Image downgrade after 40-Gbps interface configuration
Configuration rollback
If you set the 40-Gbps interface speed on an interface and the link is up, the CLI shows the first port as up and the remaining three ports as down. If any of the four links are down, the CLI shows all of the links as down.
The section includes the following topics:
You can configure normal or aggressive unidirectional link detection (UDLD) modes for Ethernet interfaces on devices configured to run UDLD. Before you can enable a UDLD mode for an interface, you must make sure that UDLD is already enabled on the device that includes the interface. UDLD must also be enabled on the other linked interface and its device.
To use the normal UDLD mode, you must configure one of the ports for normal mode and configure the other port for the normal or aggressive mode. To use the aggressive UDLD mode, you must configure both ports for the aggressive mode.
Note |
Before you begin, UDLD must be enabled for the other linked port and its device. |
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# feature udld |
Enables UDLD for the device. |
Step 3 |
switch(config)# no feature udld |
Disables UDLD for the device. |
Step 4 |
switch(config)# show udld global |
Displays the UDLD status for the device. |
Step 5 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Specifies an interface to configure, and enters interface configuration mode. |
Step 6 |
switch(config-if)# udld {enable | disable | aggressive} |
Enables the normal UDLD mode, disables UDLD, or enables the aggressive UDLD mode. |
Step 7 |
switch(config-if)# show udld interface |
Displays the UDLD status for the interface. |
This example shows how to enable UDLD for the switch:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# feature udld
This example shows how to enable the normal UDLD mode for an Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# udld enable
This example shows how to enable the aggressive UDLD mode for an Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# udld aggressive
This example shows how to disable UDLD for an Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# udld disable
This example shows how to disable UDLD for the switch:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# no feature udld
Note |
If the interface and transceiver speed is mismatched, the SFP validation failed message is displayed when you enter the show interface ethernet slot/port command. For example, if you insert a 1-Gigabit SFP transceiver into a port without configuring the speed 1000 command, you will get this error. By default, all ports are 10 Gbps. |
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified interface. This interface must have a 1-Gigabit Ethernet SFP transceiver inserted into it. |
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# speed speed |
Sets the speed on the interface.
|
This example shows how to set the speed for a 1-Gigabit Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# speed 1000
To achieve 40-Gbps port speed, each of the four ports in an adjacent port group must have a 10-Gbps SFP installed. All four SFP+ must be capable of 10-Gbps speed and must be the same type of port. By default, all ports are 10-Gbps ports.
Command or Action | Purpose | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
||
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port-range |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified range of interfaces. |
||
Step 3 |
switch(config-if-rang)# shut |
Shuts down the range of interfaces that you specified. |
||
Step 4 |
switch(config-if-rang)# exit |
Exits the current configuration mode. |
||
Step 5 |
switch(config-if)# interface type slot/port |
|
||
Step 6 |
switch(config-if)# speed 40000 |
Sets the speed on the interface for 40 Gbps. |
||
Step 7 |
switch(config-if)# no shut |
Brings up the range of interfaces. |
This example shows how to set the speed to 40 Gbps on Ethernet interface 1/33:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/33-36
switch(config-if-rang)# shut
switch(config-if-rang)# exit
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/33
switch(config-if)# speed 40000
switch(config-if)# no shut
You can disable link negotiation using the no negotiate auto command. By default, auto-negotiation is enabled on 1-Gigabit ports and disabled on 10-Gigabit ports. The no negotiate auto command is supported on 100M port with full duplex setting.
This command is equivalent to the Cisco IOS speed non-negotiate command.
Note |
|
Command or Action | Purpose | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
||
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface ethernet slot/port |
Selects the interface and enters interface mode. |
||
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# no negotiate auto |
Disables link negotiation on the selected Ethernet interface (1-Gigabit port). |
||
Step 4 |
(Optional) switch(config-if)# negotiate auto |
(Optional)
Enables link negotiation on the selected Ethernet interface. The default for 1-Gigabit ports is enabled.
|
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/5
switch(config-if)# negotiate auto
switch(config-if)#
You can configure a SVI to remain active even if no interfaces are up in the corresponding VLAN. This enhancement is called Autostate Disable.
When you enable or disable autostate behavior, it is applied to all the SVIs in the switch unless you configure autostate per SVI .
Note |
Autostate behavior is enabled by default. |
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# feature interface-vlan |
Enables the interface-vlan feature. |
Step 3 |
switch(config)# system default interface-vlan [no] autostate |
Configures the system to enable or disable the Autostate default behavior. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) switch(config)# interface vlan interface-vlan-number |
(Optional)
Creates a VLAN interface. The number range is from 1 to 4094. |
Step 5 |
(Optional) switch(config-if)# [no] autostate |
(Optional)
Enables or disables Autostate behavior per SVI. |
Step 6 |
(Optional) switch(config)# show interface-vlan interface-vlan |
(Optional)
Displays the enabled or disabled Autostate behavior of the SVI. |
Step 7 |
(Optional) switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config |
(Optional)
Saves the change persistently through reboots and restarts by copying the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
This example shows how to disable the systems Autostate default for all the SVIs on the switch:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# feature interface-vlan
switch(config)# system default interface-vlan no autostate
switch(config)# interface vlan 50
switch(config-if)# no autostate
switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config
This example shows how to enable the systems autostate configuration:
switch(config)# show interface-vlan 2
Vlan2 is down, line protocol is down, autostate enabled
Hardware is EtherSVI, address is 547f.ee40.a17c
MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit, DLY 10 usec
You can configure the frequency of Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) updates, the amount of time to hold the information before discarding it, and whether or not to send Version-2 advertisements.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
(Optional) switch(config)# [no] cdp advertise {v1 | v2 } |
(Optional)
Configures the version to use to send CDP advertisements. Version-2 is the default state. Use the no form of the command to return to its default setting. |
Step 3 |
(Optional) switch(config)# [no] cdp format device-id {mac-address | serial-number | system-name} |
(Optional)
Configures the format of the CDP device ID. The default is the system name, which can be expressed as a fully qualified domain name. Use the no form of the command to return to its default setting. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) switch(config)# [no] cdp holdtime seconds |
(Optional)
Specifies the amount of time a receiving device should hold the information sent by your device before discarding it. The range is 10 to 255 seconds; the default is 180 seconds. Use the no form of the command to return to its default setting. |
Step 5 |
(Optional) switch(config)# [no] cdp timer seconds |
(Optional)
Sets the transmission frequency of CDP updates in seconds. The range is 5 to 254; the default is 60 seconds. Use the no form of the command to return to its default setting. |
This example shows how to configure CDP characteristics:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# cdp timer 50
switch(config)# cdp holdtime 120
switch(config)# cdp advertise v2
You can enable or disable CDP for Ethernet interfaces. This protocol works only when you have it enabled on both interfaces on the same link.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified interface. |
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# cdp enable |
Enables CDP for the interface. To work correctly, this parameter must be enabled for both interfaces on the same link. |
Step 4 |
switch(config-if)# no cdp enable |
Disables CDP for the interface. |
This example shows how to enable CDP for an Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# cdp enable
This command can only be applied to a physical Ethernet interface.
You can enable error-disable (err-disabled) detection in an application. As a result, when a cause is detected on an interface, the interface is placed in an err-disabled state, which is an operational state that is similar to the link-down state.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# errdisable detect cause {all | link-flap | loopback} |
Specifies a condition under which to place the interface in an err-disabled state. The default is enabled. |
Step 3 |
switch(config)# shutdown |
Brings the interface down administratively. To manually recover the interface from the err-disabled state, enter this command first. |
Step 4 |
switch(config)# no shutdown |
Brings the interface up administratively and enables the interface to recover manually from the err-disabled state. |
Step 5 |
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled |
Displays information about err-disabled interfaces. |
Step 6 |
(Optional) switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config |
(Optional)
Saves the change persistently through reboots and restarts by copying the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
This example shows how to enable the err-disabled detection in all cases:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# errdisable detect cause all
switch(config)# shutdown
switch(config)# no shutdown
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled
switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config
You can specify the application to bring the interface out of the error-disabled (err-disabled) state and retry coming up. It retries after 300 seconds, unless you configure the recovery timer (see the errdisable recovery interval command).
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# errdisable recovery cause {all | udld | bpduguard | link-flap | failed-port-state | pause-rate-limit | loopback} |
Specifies a condition under which the interface automatically recovers from the err-disabled state, and the device retries bringing the interface up. The device waits 300 seconds to retry. The default is disabled. |
Step 3 |
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled |
Displays information about err-disabled interfaces. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config |
(Optional)
Saves the change persistently through reboots and restarts by copying the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
This example shows how to enable err-disabled recovery under all conditions:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# errdisable recovery cause loopback
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled
switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config
You can use this procedure to configure the err-disabled recovery timer value. The range is from 30 to 65535 seconds. The default is 300 seconds.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# errdisable recovery interval interval |
Specifies the interval for the interface to recover from the err-disabled state. The range is from 30 to 65535 seconds. The default is 300 seconds. |
Step 3 |
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled |
Displays information about err-disabled interfaces. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config |
(Optional)
Saves the change persistently through reboots and restarts by copying the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
This example shows how to enable err-disabled recovery under all conditions:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# errdisable recovery interval 32
switch(config)# show interface status err-disabled
switch(config)# copy running-config startup-config
You can provide textual interface descriptions for the Ethernet ports.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified interface. |
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# description test |
Specifies the description for the interface. |
This example shows how to set the interface description to Server 3 interface:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/3
switch(config-if)# description Server 3 Interface
You can shut down and restart an Ethernet interface. This action disables all of the interface functions and marks the interface as being down on all monitoring displays. This information is communicated to other network servers through all dynamic routing protocols. When shut down, the interface is not included in any routing updates.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified interface. |
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# shutdown |
Disables the interface. |
Step 4 |
switch(config-if)# no shutdown |
Restarts the interface. |
This example shows how to disable an Ethernet port:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# shutdown
This example shows how to restart an Ethernet interface:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 1/4
switch(config-if)# no shutdown
You can enable the debounce timer for Ethernet ports by specifying a debounce time, in milliseconds (ms), or disable the timer by specifying a debounce time of 0. By default, the debounce timer is set to 100 ms, which results in the debounce timer not running.
Note |
The link debounce feature is available for 10G and 40G interfaces only. |
You can show the debounce times for all of the Ethernet ports by using the show interface debounce command.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
switch# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
switch(config)# interface type slot/port |
Enters interface configuration mode for the specified interface. |
Step 3 |
switch(config-if)# link debounce time milliseconds |
Enables the debounce timer for the amount of time (1 to 5000 ms) specified. Disables the debounce timer if you specify 0 milliseconds. |
This example shows how to enable the debounce timer and set the debounce time to 1000 ms for an Ethernet interface:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 3/1
switch(config-if)# link debounce time 1000
This example shows how to disable the debounce timer for an Ethernet interface:
switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# interface ethernet 3/1
switch(config-if)# link debounce time 0
Use one of the following commands to verify the configuration:
Command |
Purpose |
||
---|---|---|---|
show interface ethernet slot/port brief |
Displays the Layer 2 interface operational status.
|
To view configuration information about the defined interfaces, perform one of these tasks:
Command |
Purpose |
---|---|
switch# show interface type slot/port |
Displays the detailed configuration of the specified interface. |
switch# show interface type slot/port capabilities |
Displays detailed information about the capabilities of the specified interface. This option is available only for physical interfaces. |
switch# show interface type slot/port transceiver |
Displays detailed information about the transceiver connected to the specified interface. This option is available only for physical interfaces. |
switch# show interface brief |
Displays the status of all interfaces. |
switch# show interface flowcontrol |
Displays the detailed listing of the flow control settings on all interfaces. |
The show interface command is invoked from EXEC mode and displays the interface configurations. Without any arguments, this command displays the information for all the configured interfaces in the switch.
This example shows how to display the physical Ethernet interface:
switch# show interface ethernet 1/1
Ethernet1/1 is up
Hardware is 1000/10000 Ethernet, address is 000d.eca3.5f08 (bia 000d.eca3.5f08)
MTU 1500 bytes, BW 10000000 Kbit, DLY 10 usec,
reliability 255/255, txload 190/255, rxload 192/255
Encapsulation ARPA
Port mode is trunk
full-duplex, 10 Gb/s, media type is 1/10g
Input flow-control is off, output flow-control is off
Auto-mdix is turned on
Rate mode is dedicated
Switchport monitor is off
Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
5 minute input rate 942201806 bytes/sec, 14721892 packets/sec
5 minute output rate 935840313 bytes/sec, 14622492 packets/sec
Rx
129141483840 input packets 0 unicast packets 129141483847 multicast packets
0 broadcast packets 0 jumbo packets 0 storm suppression packets
8265054965824 bytes
0 No buffer 0 runt 0 Overrun
0 crc 0 Ignored 0 Bad etype drop
0 Bad proto drop
Tx
119038487241 output packets 119038487245 multicast packets
0 broadcast packets 0 jumbo packets
7618463256471 bytes
0 output CRC 0 ecc
0 underrun 0 if down drop 0 output error 0 collision 0 deferred
0 late collision 0 lost carrier 0 no carrier
0 babble
0 Rx pause 8031547972 Tx pause 0 reset
This example shows how to display the physical Ethernet capabilities:
switch# show interface ethernet 1/1 capabilities
Ethernet1/1
Model: 734510033
Type: 10Gbase-(unknown)
Speed: 1000,10000
Duplex: full
Trunk encap. type: 802.1Q
Channel: yes
Broadcast suppression: percentage(0-100)
Flowcontrol: rx-(off/on),tx-(off/on)
Rate mode: none
QOS scheduling: rx-(6q1t),tx-(1p6q0t)
CoS rewrite: no
ToS rewrite: no
SPAN: yes
UDLD: yes
MDIX: no
FEX Fabric: yes
This example shows how to display the physical Ethernet transceiver:
switch# show interface ethernet 1/1 transceiver
Ethernet1/1
sfp is present
name is CISCO-EXCELIGHT
part number is SPP5101SR-C1
revision is A
serial number is ECL120901AV
nominal bitrate is 10300 MBits/sec
Link length supported for 50/125mm fiber is 82 m(s)
Link length supported for 62.5/125mm fiber is 26 m(s)
cisco id is --
cisco extended id number is 4
This example shows how to display a brief interface status (some of the output has been removed for brevity):
switch# show interface brief
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ethernet VLAN Type Mode Status Reason Speed Port
Interface Ch #
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eth1/1 200 eth trunk up none 10G(D) --
Eth1/2 1 eth trunk up none 10G(D) --
Eth1/3 300 eth access down SFP not inserted 10G(D) --
Eth1/4 300 eth access down SFP not inserted 10G(D) --
Eth1/5 300 eth access down Link not connected 1000(D) --
Eth1/6 20 eth access down Link not connected 10G(D) --
Eth1/7 300 eth access down SFP not inserted 10G(D) --
...
This example shows how to display the CDP neighbors:
switch# show cdp neighbors
Capability Codes: R - Router, T - Trans-Bridge, B - Source-Route-Bridge
S - Switch, H - Host, I - IGMP, r - Repeater,
V - VoIP-Phone, D - Remotely-Managed-Device,
s - Supports-STP-Dispute
Device ID Local Intrfce Hldtme Capability Platform Port ID
d13-dist-1 mgmt0 148 S I WS-C2960-24TC Fas0/9
n5k(FLC12080012) Eth1/5 8 S I s N5K-C5020P-BA Eth1/5
The following table lists the default settings for all physical Ethernet interfaces:
Parameter |
Default Setting |
---|---|
Duplex |
Auto (full-duplex) |
Encapsulation |
ARPA |
MTU1 |
1500 bytes |
Port Mode |
Access |
Speed |
Auto (10000) |
MIB |
MIB Link |
---|---|
IF-MIB |
To locate and download MIBs, go to the following URL: http://www.cisco.com/public/sw-center/netmgmt/cmtk/mibs.shtml |
MAU-MIB
|