- Configuring Cisco Networking Services
- CNS Configuration Agent
- CNS Image Agent
- CNS Event Agent
- Cisco Networking Services Config Retrieve Enhancement with Retry and Interval
- Cisco Networking Services Enhanced Results Message
- Cisco Networking Services Flow-Through Provisioning
- CNS Frame-Relay Zero Touch
- Cisco Networking Services Security Enhancement
- Command Scheduler (Kron)
- DHCP Zero Touch
- Network Configuration Protocol
- NETCONF over SSHv2
- NETCONF Access for Configurations over BEEP
Contents
- Configuring Cisco Networking Services
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for Cisco Networking Services
- Restrictions for Cisco Networking Services
- Information About Cisco Networking Services
- Cisco Networking Services
- Cisco Networking Services EXEC Agent
- Cisco Networking Services Results Messages
- Cisco Networking Services Message Formats
- Cisco Networking Services IDs
- Cisco Networking Services Password
- Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch
- How to Configure Cisco Networking Services
- Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
- Configuring Advanced Cisco Networking Services Features
- Troubleshooting Cisco Networking Services Agents
- Configuration Examples for Cisco Networking Services
- Example: Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
- Example: Using the Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch Solution
- Additional References
- Feature Information for Cisco Networking Services
Configuring Cisco Networking Services
The Cisco Networking Services (CNS) feature is a collection of services that can provide remote event-driven configuring of Cisco IOS networking devices and remote execution of some command-line interface (CLI) commands.
- Finding Feature Information
- Prerequisites for Cisco Networking Services
- Restrictions for Cisco Networking Services
- Information About Cisco Networking Services
- How to Configure Cisco Networking Services
- Configuration Examples for Cisco Networking Services
- Additional References
- Feature Information for Cisco Networking Services
Finding Feature Information
Your software release may not support all the features documented in this module. For the latest caveats and feature information, see Bug Search Tool and the release notes for your platform and software release. To find information about the features documented in this module, and to see a list of the releases in which each feature is supported, see the feature information table at the end of this module.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Prerequisites for Cisco Networking Services
- Configure the remote device to support the Cisco Networking Services configuration agent and the Cisco Networking Services event agent.
- Configure a transport protocol on the remote device that is compatible with the remote device’s external interface. The following table lists the supported transport protocols that can be used depending on the device interface.
- Create the configuration template in the Cisco Networking Services configuration-engine provisioning database. (This task is best done by a senior network designer.)
Device Interface |
SLARP Transport Protocol |
ATM InARP Transport Protocol |
PPP (IPCP) Transport Protocol |
---|---|---|---|
T1 |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
ADSL |
No |
Yes |
Yes |
Serial |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
Restrictions for Cisco Networking Services
Cisco Networking Services Configuration Engine
- The Cisco Networking Services configuration engine must be the Cisco Intelligence Engine 2100 (Cisco IE2100) series and must be running software version 1.3.
- The configuration engine must have access to an information database of attributes for building a configuration. This database can reside on the Cisco IE2100 itself.
- Configuration templates must be prepared on the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine before installation of the remote device.
- The user of Cisco Networking Services Flow-Through Provisioning and the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine must be familiar with designing network topologies, designing configuration templates, and using the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine.
Remote Device
- The remote device must run a Cisco IOS image that supports the Cisco Networking Services configuration agent and Cisco Networking Services event agent.
- Ports must be prepared on the remote device for connection to the network.
- You must ensure that the remote device is configured using Cisco Configuration Express.
Information About Cisco Networking Services
- Cisco Networking Services
- Cisco Networking Services EXEC Agent
- Cisco Networking Services Results Messages
- Cisco Networking Services Message Formats
- Cisco Networking Services IDs
- Cisco Networking Services Password
- Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch
Cisco Networking Services
Cisco Networking Services is a foundation technology for linking users to networking services and provides the infrastructure for the automated configuration of large numbers of network devices. Many IP networks are complex with many devices, and each device must currently be configured individually. When standard configurations do not exist or have been modified, the time involved in initial installation and subsequent upgrading is considerable. The volume of smaller, more standardized, customer networks is also growing faster than the number of available network engineers. Internet service providers (ISPs) now need a method for sending out partial configurations to introduce new services. To address all these issues, Cisco Networking Services has been designed to provide “plug-and-play” network services using a central directory service and distributed agents. Cisco Networking Services features include Cisco Networking Services configuration and event agents and a Flow-Through Provisioning structure. The configuration and event agents use a Cisco Networking Services configuration engine to provide methods for automating initial Cisco device configurations, incremental configurations, and synchronized configuration updates, and the configuration engine reports the status of the configuration load as an event to which a network monitoring or workflow application can subscribe. The Cisco Networking Services Flow-Through Provisioning uses the Cisco Networking Services configuration and event agents to provide an automated workflow, eliminating the need for an on-site technician.
Cisco Networking Services EXEC Agent
The CNS EXEC agent allows a remote application to execute an EXEC mode CLI command on a Cisco device by sending an event message that contains the command. A restricted set of EXEC show commands is supported.
Cisco Networking Services Results Messages
When a partial configuration has been received by the device, each line of the configuration will be applied in the same order as it was received. If the Cisco parser has an error with one of the lines of the configuration, then all the configuration up to this point will be applied to the device, but none of the configuration beyond the error will be applied. If an error occurs, the cns config partial command will retry until the configuration successfully completes. In the pull mode, the command will not retry after an error. By default, NVRAM will be updated except when the no-persist keyword is configured.
A message will be published on the Cisco Networking Services event bus after the partial configuration is complete. The Cisco Networking Services event bus will display one of the following status messages:
- cisco.mgmt.cns.config.complete—Cisco Networking Services configuration agent successfully applied the partial configuration.
- cisco.mgmt.cns.config.warning—Cisco Networking Services configuration agent fully applied the partial configuration, but encountered possible semantic errors.
- cisco.mgmt.cns.config.failure (CLI syntax)—Cisco Networking Services configuration agent encountered a command line interface (CLI) syntax error and was not able to apply the partial configuration.
- cisco.mgmt.cns.config.failure (CLI semantic)—Cisco Networking Services configuration agent encountered a CLI semantic error and was not able to apply the partial configuration.
With the CNS Enhanced Results Messages feature, a second message is sent to the subject “cisco.cns.config.results” in addition to the appropriate message above. The second message contains both overall and line-by-line information about the configuration that was sent and the result of the action requested in the original message. If the action requested was to apply the configuration, then the information in the results message is semantic in nature. If the action requested was to check syntax only, then the information in the results message is syntactical in nature.
Cisco Networking Services Message Formats
SOAP Message Format
Using the Service-Oriented Access Protocol (SOAP) protocol provides a way to format the layout of Cisco Networking Services messages in a consistent manner. SOAP is a lightweight protocol intended for exchanging structured information in a decentralized, distributed environment. SOAP uses extensible markup language (XML) technologies to define an extensible messaging framework that provides a message format that can be exchanged over a variety of underlying protocols.
Within the SOAP message structure, there is a security header that enables Cisco Networking Services notification messages to authenticate user credentials.
Cisco Networking Services messages are classified into three message types: request, response and notification. The formats of these three message types are defined below.
Request Message
The following is the format of a Cisco Networking Services request message to the Cisco device:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope"> <SOAP:Header> <wsse:Security xmlns:wsse="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2002/04/secext" SOAP:mustUnderstand="0"> <wsse:usernameToken> <wsse:Username>john</wsse:Username> <wsse:Password>cisco</wsse:Password> </wsse:usernameToken> </wsse:Security> <cns:cnsHeader version="1.0" xmlns:cns="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/envelope"> <cns:Agent>CNS_CONFIG</cns:Agent> <cns:Request> <cns:correlationID>IDENTIFIER</cns:correlationID> <cns:ReplyTo> <cns:URL>http://10.1.36.9:80/cns/ResToServer</cns:URL> </cns:ReplyTo> </cns:Request> <cns:Time>2003-04-23T20:27:19.847Z</cns:Time> </cns:cnsHeader> </SOAP:Header> <SOAP:Body xmlns="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/config"> <config-event config-action="read" no-syntax-check="TRUE"> <config-data> <config-id>AAA</config-id> <cli>access-list 1 permit any</cli> </config-data> </config-event> </SOAP:Body> </SOAP:Envelope>
Note | The ReplyTo field is optional. In the absence of the ReplyTo field, the response to the request will be sent to the destination where the request originated. The body portion of this message contains the payload and is processed by the Cisco Networking Services agent mentioned in the Agent field. |
Response Message
The following is the format of a Cisco Networking Services response message from the Cisco device as a response to a request:
?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" SOAP:Header wsse:Security xmlns:wsse="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2002/04/secext" SOAP:mustUnderstand="true" wsse:UsernameToken wsse:Username infysj-7204-8 /wsse:Username wsse:Password NTM3NTg2NzIzOTg2MTk2MjgzNQ==/wsse:Password /wsse:UsernameToken /wsse:Security CNS:cnsHeader Version="2.0" xmlns:CNS="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/envelope" CNS:Agent CNS_CONFIG /CNS:Agent CNS:Response CNS:correlationID IDENTIFIER /CNS:correlationID /CNS:Response CNS:Time 2005-06-23T16:27:36.185Z /CNS:Time /CNS:cnsHeader /SOAP:Header SOAP:Body xmlns="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/config" config-success config-id AAA /config-id /config-success /SOAP:Body /SOAP:Envelope
Note | The value of CorrelationId is echoed from the corresponding request message. |
The body portion of this message contains the response from the Cisco device to a request. If the request is successfully processed, the body portion contains the value of the response put in by the agent that processed the request. If the request cannot be successfully processed, then the body portion will contain an error response.
Notification Message
The following is the format of a Cisco Networking Services notification message sent from the Cisco device:
?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" SOAP:Header wsse:Security xmlns:wsse="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2002/04/secext" SOAP:mustUnderstand="true" wsse:UsernameToken wsse:Username dvlpr-7200-2 /wsse:Username wsse:Password /wsse:Password /wsse:UsernameToken /wsse:Security CNS:cnsHeader version="2.0" xmlns:CNS="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/envelope" CNS:Agent CNS_CONFIG_CHANGE/CNS:Agent CNS:Notify /CNS:Notify CNS:Time 2006-01-09T18:57:08.441Z/CNS:Time /CNS:cnsHeader /SOAP:Header SOAP:Body xmlns="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/config-change" configChanged version="1.1" sessionData="complete" sequence lastReset="2005-12-11T20:18:39.673Z" 7 /sequence changeInfo user/user async port con_0 /port /async when absoluteTime 2006-01-09T18:57:07.973Z /absoluteTime /when /changeInfo changeData changeItem context /context enteredCommand cli access-list 2 permit any /cli /enteredCommand oldConfigState cli access-list 1 permit any /cli /oldConfigState newConfigState cli access-list 1 permit any /cli cli access-list 2 permit any /cli /newConfigState /changeItem /changeData /configChanged /SOAP:Body /SOAP:Envelope
A notification message is sent from the Cisco device without a corresponding request message when a configuration change is made. The body of the message contains the payload of the notification and it may also contain error information. If the request message sent to the Cisco device fails in XML parsing and the CorrelationId field cannot be parsed, then an error notification message will be sent instead of an error response.
Error Reporting
Error is reported in the body of the response or a notification message in the SOAP Fault element. The following is the format for reporting errors.
?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? SOAP:Envelope xmlns:SOAP="http://www.w3.org/2003/05/soap-envelope" SOAP:Header wsse:Security xmlns:wsse="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2002/04/secext" SOAP:mustUnderstand="true" wsse:UsernameToken wsse:Username dvlpr-7200-2 /wsse:Username wsse:Password /wsse:Password /wsse:UsernameToken /wsse:Security CNS:cnsHeader version="2.0" xmlns:CNS="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/envelope" CNS:Agent CNS_CONFIG /CNS:Agent CNS:Response CNS:correlationID SOAP_IDENTIFIER /CNS:correlationID /CNS:Response CNS:Time 2006-01-09T19:10:10.009Z /CNS:Time /CNS:cnsHeader /SOAP:Header SOAP:Body xmlns="http://www.cisco.com/management/cns/config" SOAP:Detail config-failure config-id AAA /config-id error-info line-number 1 /line-number error-message CNS_INVALID_CLI_CMD /error-message /error-info /config-failure /SOAP:Detail /SOAP:Fault /SOAP:Body /SOAP:Envelope
Cisco Networking Services IDs
The Cisco Networking Services ID is a text string that is used exclusively with a particular Cisco Networking Services agent. The Cisco Networking Services ID is used by the Cisco Networking Services agent to identify itself to the server application with which it communicates. For example, the Cisco Networking Services configuration agent will include the configuration ID when communicating between the networking device and the configuration server. The configuration server uses the Cisco Networking Services configuration ID as a key to locate the attribute containing the Cisco CLI configuration intended for the device that originated the configuration pull.
The network administrator must ensure a match between the Cisco Networking Services agent ID as defined on the routing device and the Cisco Networking Services agent ID contained in the directory attribute that corresponds to the configuration intended for the routing device. Within the routing device, the default value of the Cisco Networking Services agent ID is always set to the hostname. If the hostname changes, the Cisco Networking Services agent ID also changes. If the Cisco Networking Services agent ID is set using the CLI, any change will be followed by a message sent to syslog or an event message will be sent.
The Cisco Networking Services agent ID does not address security issues.
Cisco Networking Services Password
The Cisco Networking Services password is used to authenticate the Cisco Networking Services device. You must configure the Cisco Networking Services password the first time a device is deployed, and the Cisco Networking Services password must be the same as the bootstrap password set on the Configuration Engine (CE). If both the device and the CE bootstrap password use their default settings, a newly deployed device will be able to connect to the CE. Once connected, the CE manages the Cisco Networking Services password. Network administrators must ensure not to change the Cisco Networking Services password. If the Cisco Networking Services password is changed, connectivity to the CE will be lost.
Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch
The Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch feature provides a zero touch deployment solution where the device contacts a Cisco Networking Services configuration engine to retrieve its full configuration automatically. This capability is made possible through a single generic bootstrap configuration file common across all service provider end customers subscribing to the services. Within the Cisco Networking Services framework, customers can create this generic bootstrap configuration without device-specific or network-specific information such as interface type, line type, or controller type (if applicable).
The Cisco Networking Services connect functionality is configured with a set of Cisco Networking Services connect templates. A Cisco Networking Services connect profile is created for connecting to the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine and to implement the Cisco Networking Services connect templates on a Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) device. Cisco Networking Services connect variables can be used as placeholders within a Cisco Networking Services connect template configuration. These variables, such as the active DLCI, are substituted with real values before the Cisco Networking Services connect templates are sent to the device’s parser.
To use the zero touch functionality, the device that is to be initialized must have a generic bootstrap configuration. This configuration includes Cisco Networking Services connect templates, Cisco Networking Services connect profiles, and the cns config initial command. This command initiates the Cisco Networking Services connect function.
The Cisco Networking Services connect functionality performs multiple ping iterations through the device’s interfaces and lines, as well as any available controllers. For each iteration, the Cisco Networking Services connect function attempts to ping the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine. If the ping is successful, the pertinent configuration information can be downloaded from the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine. If connectivity to the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine is unsuccessful, the Cisco Networking Services connect function removes the configuration applied to the selected interface, and the Cisco Networking Services connect process restarts with the next available interface specified by the Cisco Networking Services connect profile.
The Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch feature provides the following benefits:
How to Configure Cisco Networking Services
- Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
- Configuring Advanced Cisco Networking Services Features
- Troubleshooting Cisco Networking Services Agents
Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
Incremental or partial configuration allows the remote device to be incrementally configured after its initial configuration. You must perform these configurations manually through the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine. The registrar allows you to change the configuration templates, edit parameters, and submit the new configuration to the device without a software or hardware restart.
Perform this task to manually install an initial Cisco Networking Services configuration.
Your remote device arrives from the factory with a bootstrap configuration. Upon initial power-on, the device automatically pulls a full initial configuration from the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine, although you can optionally arrange for this manually as well. After initial configuration, you can optionally arrange for periodic incremental (partial) configurations for synchronization purposes.
For more details on using the Cisco CNS configuration engine to automatically install the initial CNS configuration, see the Cisco CNS Configuration Engine Administrator's Guide at http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/net_mgmt/configuration_engine/1.3/administration/guide/ag13.html
Initial Cisco Networking Services Configuration
Initial configuration of the remote device occurs automatically when the device is initialized on the network. Optionally, you can perform this configuration manually.
Cisco Networking Services assigns the remote device a unique IP address or hostname. After resolving the IP address (using Serial Line Address Resolution Protocol (SLARP), ATM Inverse ARP (ATM InARP), or PPP protocols), the system optionally uses Domain Name System (DNS) reverse lookup to assign a hostname to the device and invokes the Cisco Networking Services agent to download the initial configuration from the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine.
Incremental Configuration
Before you can configure an incremental configuration, Cisco Networking Services must be operational and the required Cisco Networking Services agents configured.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
cns
template
connect
name
4.
cli
config-text
5. Repeat Step 4 to add all required CLI commands.
6.
exit
7.
cns
connect
name
[retry-interval
interval-seconds] [retries
number-retries] [timeout
timeout-seconds] [sleep
sleep-seconds]
9.
exit
10.
cns
config
initial
{host-name
|
ip-address} [encrypt] [port-number] [page
page] [syntax-check] [no-persist] [source
interface
name] [status
url] [event] [inventory]
11.
exit
DETAILED STEPS
Configuring Advanced Cisco Networking Services Features
Perform this task to configure more advanced Cisco Networking Services features. After the Cisco Networking Services agents are operational, you can configure some other features. You can enable the Cisco Networking Services inventory agent--that is, send an inventory of the device’s line cards and modules to the Cisco Networking Services configuration engine--and enter Cisco Networking Services inventory mode.
Some other advanced features allow you to use the Software Developer’s Toolkit (SDK) to specify how Cisco Networking Services notifications should be sent or how to access MIB information. Two encapsulation methods can be used: either nongranular (SNMP) encapsulation or granular (XML) encapsulation.
1.
enable
2.
configure
terminal
3.
cns
mib-access
encapsulation
{snmp
|
xml[size
bytes]}
4.
cns
notifications
encapsulation
{snmp
|
xml}
5.
cns
inventory
6.
transport
event
7.
exit
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
configure
terminal
Example: Device# configure terminal |
Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 3 |
cns
mib-access
encapsulation
{snmp
|
xml[size
bytes]}
Example: Device(config)# cns mib-access encapsulation snmp |
(Optional) Specifies the type of encapsulation to use when accessing MIB information.
|
Step 4 |
cns
notifications
encapsulation
{snmp
|
xml}
Example: Device(config)# cns notifications encapsulation xml |
(Optional) Specifies the type of encapsulation to use when sending Cisco Networking Services notifications. |
Step 5 |
cns
inventory
Example: Device(config)# cns inventory |
Enables the Cisco Networking Services inventory agent and enters Cisco Networking Services inventory mode. |
Step 6 |
transport
event
Example: Device(cns-inv)# transport event |
Specifies that inventory requests are sent out with each Cisco Networking Services inventory agent message. |
Step 7 |
exit
Example: Device(cns-inv)# exit |
Exits Cisco Networking Services inventory mode and returns to global configuration mode. |
Troubleshooting Cisco Networking Services Agents
This section explains how to troubleshoot Cisco Networking Services agent issues.
The show commands created for the Cisco Networking Services image agent display information that is reset to zero after a successful reload of the device. Depending on the configuration of the image distribution process, the new image may not reload immediately. When a reload is not immediate or has failed, use the Cisco Networking Services image agent show commands to determine whether the image agent has connected to the image distribution server over HTTP or whether the image agent is receiving events from an application over the Cisco Networking Services Event Bus.
1.
enable
2.
show
cns
image
status
3.
clear
cns
image
status
4.
show
cns
image
connections
5.
show
cns
image
inventory
6.
debug
cns
image
[agent|
all|
connection|
error]
7.
show
cns
event
connections
8.
show
cns
event
subject
[name]
DETAILED STEPS
Command or Action | Purpose | |
---|---|---|
Step 1 |
enable
Example: Device> enable |
Enables higher privilege levels, such as privileged EXEC mode. |
Step 2 |
show
cns
image
status
Example: Device# show cns image status |
(Optional) Displays information about the Cisco Networking Services image agent status. |
Step 3 |
clear
cns
image
status
Example: Device# clear cns image status |
(Optional) Clears Cisco Networking Services image agent status statistics. |
Step 4 |
show
cns
image
connections
Example: Device# show cns image connections |
(Optional) Displays information about Cisco Networking Services image management server HTTP or HTTPS connections. |
Step 5 |
show
cns
image
inventory
Example: Device# show cns image inventory |
(Optional) Displays inventory information about the Cisco Networking Services image agent. |
Step 6 |
debug
cns
image
[agent|
all|
connection|
error]
Example: Device# debug cns image all |
(Optional) Displays debugging messages for Cisco Networking Services image agent services. |
Step 7 |
show
cns
event
connections
Example: Device# show cns event connections |
(Optional) Displays the status of the Cisco Networking Services event agent connection--such as whether it is connecting to the gateway, connected, or active--and to display the gateway used by the event agent and its IP address and port number. |
Step 8 |
show
cns
event
subject
[name]
Example: Device# show cns event subject subject1 |
(Optional) Displays a list of subjects of the Cisco Networking Services event agent that are subscribed to by applications. |
Examples
In the following example, status information about the Cisco Networking Services image agent is displayed using the show cns image statusprivileged EXEC command:
Device# show cns image status Last upgrade started at 11:45:02.000 UTC Mon May 6 2003 Last upgrade ended at 11:56:04.000 UTC Mon May 6 2003 status SUCCESS Last successful upgrade ended at 11:56:04.000 UTC Mon May 6 2003 Last failed upgrade ended at 06:32:15.000 UTC Wed Apr 16 2003 Number of failed upgrades: 2 Number of successful upgrades: 6 messages received: 12 receive errors: 5 Transmit Status TX Attempts:4 Successes:3 Failures 2
In the following example, information about the status of the Cisco Networking Services image management HTTP connections is displayed using the show cns image connectionsprivileged EXEC command:
show cns image connections CNS Image Agent: HTTP connections Connection attempts 1 never connected:0 Abrupt disconnect:0 Last successful connection at 11:45:02.000 UTC Mon May 6 2003
In the following example, information about the Cisco Networking Services image agent inventory is displayed using the show cns image inventoryprivileged EXEC command:
show cns image inventory Inventory Report imageInventoryReport deviceName imageID Router /imageID hostName Router /ho IOS (tm) C2600 Software (C2600-I-M), Experimental Version 12.3(20030414:081500)] Copyright (c) 1986-2003 by cisco Systems, Inc. Compiled Mon 14-Apr-03 02:03 by engineer /versionString imageFile tftp://10.25.2.1.
In the following example, debugging messages for all Cisco Networking Services image agent services are displayed using the debug cns imageprivileged EXEC command. The Cisco Networking Services image agent in this example is connecting to an image server over HTTP. After connecting, the image server asks for an inventory of the Cisco device.
Device# debug cns image all All cns image debug flags are on Device# cns image retrieve May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: set EXEC lock May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: received message from EXEC May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: set session lock 1 May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: attempting to send to destination(http://10.1.36.8:8080/imgsrv/xgate): ?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? cnsMessageversion="1.0" senderCredentials userName dvlpr-7200-6 /userName /senderCredentials messageID dvlpr-7200-6_2 /messageID sessionControl imageSessionStart version="1.0" initiatorInfotrigger EXEC/trigger initiatorCredentials userName dvlpr-7200-6/userName /initiatorCredentials /initiatorInfo /imageSessionStart /sessionControl /cnsMessage May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: clear EXEC lock May 7 06:11:42.175: CNS Image Agent: HTTP message sent url:http://10.1.36.8:8080/imgsrv/xgate May 7 06:11:42.191: CNS Image Agent: response data alloc 4096 bytes May 7 06:11:42.191: CNS Image Agent: HTTP req data free May 7 06:11:42.191: CNS Image Agent: response data freed May 7 06:11:42.191: CNS Image Agent: receive message ?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? cnsMessage version="1.0" senderCredentials userName myImageServer.cisco.com/userName passWord R0lGODlhcgGSALMAAAQCAEMmCZtuMFQxDS8b/passWord /senderCredentials messageID dvlpr-c2600-2-476456/messageID request replyTo serverReply http://10.1.36.8:8080/imgsrv/xgate /serverReply /replyTo imageInventory inventoryItemList all/ /inventoryItemList /imageInventory /request /cnsMessage
The following example displays the IP address and port number of the primary and backup gateways:
Device# show cns event connections The currently configured primary event gateway: hostname is 10.1.1.1. port number is 11011. Event-Id is Internal test1 Keepalive setting: none. Connection status: Connection Established. The currently configured backup event gateway: none. The currently connected event gateway: hostname is 10.1.1.1. port number is 11011.
The following sample displays a list of subjects of the Cisco Networking Services event agent that are subscribed to by applications:
Device# show cns event subject The list of subjects subscribed by applications. cisco.cns.mibaccess:request cisco.cns.config.load cisco.cns.config.reboot cisco.cns.exec.cmd
Configuration Examples for Cisco Networking Services
- Example: Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
- Example: Using the Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch Solution
Example: Deploying the Cisco Networking Services Device
The following example shows an initial configuration on a remote device. The hostname of the remote device is the unique ID. The Cisco Networking Services configuration engine IP address is 172.28.129.22.
cns template connect template1 cli ip address negotiated cli encapsulation ppp cli ip directed-broadcast cli no keepalive cli no shutdown exit cns connect host1 retry-interval 30 retries 3 exit hostname RemoteRouter ip route 172.28.129.22 255.255.255.0 10.11.11.1 cns id Ethernet 0 ipaddress cns config initial 10.1.1.1 no-persist exit
Example: Using the Cisco Networking Services Zero Touch Solution
Configuring PPP on a Serial Interface
The following example shows the bootstrap configuration for configuring PPP on a serial interface:
cns template connect ppp-serial cli ip address negotiated cli encapsulation ppp cli ip directed-broadcast cli no keepalive exit cns template connect ip-route cli ip route 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 ${next-hop} exit cns connect serial-ppp ping-interval 1 retries 1 discover interface serial template ppp-serial template ip-route exit hostname 26ML cns config initial 10.1.1.1 no-persist inventory
Configuring PPP on an Asynchronous Interface
The following example shows the bootstrap configuration for configuring PPP on an asynchronous interface:
cns template connect async cli modem InOut . . . exit cns template connect async-interface cli encapsulation ppp cli ip unnumbered FastEthernet0/0 cli dialer rotary-group 0 exit cns template connect ip-route cli ip route 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 ${next-hop} exit cns connect async discover line Async template async discover interface template async-interface template ip-route exit hostname async-example cns config initial 10.1.1.1 no-persist inventory
Configuring HDLC on a Serial Interface
The following example shows the bootstrap configuration for configuring High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC) on a serial interface:
cns template connect hdlc-serial cli ip address slarp retry 1 exit cns template connect ip-route cli ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 ${next-hop} exit cns connect hdlc-serial ping-interval 1 retries 1 discover interface serial template hdlc-serial template ip-route exit hostname host1 cns config initial 10.1.1.1 no-persist inventory
Configuring Aggregator Device Interfaces
The following examples show how to configure a standard serial interface and a serial interface bound to a controller on an aggregator device (also known as the DCE). In order for connectivity to be established, the aggregator device must have a point-to-point subinterface configured.
Standard Serial Interface
interface Serial0/1 no ip address encapsulation frame-relay frame-relay intf-type dce exit interface Serial0/1.1 point-to-point 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 frame-relay interface-dlci 8
Serial Interface Bound to a Controller
controller T1 0 framing sf linecode ami channel-group 0 timeslots 1-24 exit interface Serial0:0 no ip address encapsulation frame-relay frame-relay intf-type dce exit interface Serial0:0.1 point-to-point ip address ip-address mask frame-relay interface-dlci dlci
Configuring IP over Frame Relay
The following example shows the bootstrap configuration for configuring IP over Frame Relay on a CPE device:
cns template connect setup-frame cli encapsulation frame-relay exit cns template connect ip-over-frame cli frame-relay interface-dlci ${dlci} cli ip address dynamic exit cns template connect ip-route cli ip route 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 ${next-hop} exit cns connect ip-over-frame discover interface Serial template setup-frame discover dlci template ip-over-frame template ip-route exit cns config initial 10.1.1.1
Configuring IP over Frame Relay over T1
The following example shows the bootstrap configuration for configuring IP over Frame Relay over T1 on a CPE device:
cns template connect setup-frame cli encapsulation frame-relay exit cns template connect ip-over-frame cli frame-relay interface-dlci ${dlci} cli ip address dynamic exit cns template connect ip-route cli ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 ${next-hop} exit cns template connect t1-controller cli framing esf cli linecode b8zs cli channel-group 0 timeslots 1-24 speed 56 exit cns connect ip-over-frame-over-t1 discover controller T1 template t1-controller discover interface template setup-frame discover dlci template ip-over-frame template ip-route exit cns config initial 10.1.1.1
Additional References
Related Documents
Related Topic |
Document Title |
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Cisco IOS commands |
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Cisco Networking Services commands: complete command syntax, command mode, command history, defaults, usage guidelines, and examples. |
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Cisco Networking Services Configuration Engine |
Standards and RFCs
Standard/RFC |
Title |
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No new or modified standards/RFCs are supported by this feature, and support for existing standards/RFCs has not been modified by this feature. |
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MIBs
MIB |
MIBs Link |
---|---|
No new or modified MIBs are supported by this feature, and support for existing MIBs has not been modified by this feature. |
To locate and download MIBs for selected platforms, Cisco software releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL: |
Technical Assistance
Description |
Link |
---|---|
The Cisco Support and Documentation website provides online resources to download documentation, software, and tools. Use these resources to install and configure the software and to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues with Cisco products and technologies. Access to most tools on the Cisco Support and Documentation website requires a Cisco.com user ID and password. |
Feature Information for Cisco Networking Services
The following table provides release information about the feature or features described in this module. This table lists only the software release that introduced support for a given feature in a given software release train. Unless noted otherwise, subsequent releases of that software release train also support that feature.
Use Cisco Feature Navigator to find information about platform support and Cisco software image support. To access Cisco Feature Navigator, go to www.cisco.com/go/cfn. An account on Cisco.com is not required.
Feature Name |
Releases |
Feature Information |
---|---|---|
Cisco Networking Services |
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1 12.2(25)S 12.2(33) SRA 12.2(33)SB 12.2(33)SXI |
The Cisco Networking Services feature is a collection of services that can provide remote event-driven configuring of Cisco IOS networking devices and remote execution of some CLI commands. The following commands were introduced or modified by this feature: clear cns config stats, clear cns counters, clear cns event stats, cli (cns), cns config cancel, cns config initial, cns config notify, cns config partial, cns config retrieve, cns connect, cns event, cns exec, cns id, cns template connect, cns trusted-server, debug cns config, debug cns exec, debug cns xml-parser, logging cns-events, show cns config stats, show cns event connections, show cns event stats, show cns event subject. |