Configuring CEF Network Accounting

This module contains information about and instructions for configuring network accounting for Cisco Express Forwarding. Accounting produces the statistics that enable you to better understand Cisco Express Forwarding patterns in your network. For example, you might want to find out the number of packets and bytes switched to a destination or the number of packets switched through a destination.

Cisco Express Forwarding is an advanced Layer 3 IP switching technology. It optimizes network performance and scalability for all kinds of networks: those that carry small amounts of traffic and those that carry large amounts of traffic in complex patterns, such as the Internet and networks characterized by intensive web-based applications or interactive sessions.

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 CEF Network Accounting

Cisco Express Forwarding must be up and running on the networking device before you can configure network accounting for Cisco Express Forwarding. See the Cisco Platform Support for Central CEF and dCEF section for information on how to determine if Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled on your networking device.

Information About CEF Network Accounting

For links to information about other Cisco Express Forwarding and distributed Cisco Express Forwarding features that you can configure, go to the Additional References.

Cisco Platform Support for Central CEF and dCEF

Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled by default on most Cisco platforms running Cisco IOS software Release 12.0 or later. When Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled on a router, the Route Processor (RP) performs the express forwarding.

To find out if Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled on your platform, enter the show ip cef command. If Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled, you receive output that looks like this:


Router# show ip cef 
Prefix              Next Hop            Interface
[...]
10.2.61.8/24        192.168.100.1       FastEthernet1/0/0
                    192.168.101.1       FastEthernet6/1
[...]

If Cisco Express Forwarding is not enabled on your platform, the output for the show ip cef command looks like this:


Router# show ip cef
%CEF not running

Distributed Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled by default on the Catalyst 6500 series switch, the Cisco 7500 series router, and the Cisco 12000 Series Internet Router. When distributed Cisco Express Forwarding is enabled on your platform, the line cards perform the express forwarding.

If Cisco Express Forwarding is not enabled on your platform, use the ip cef command to enable (central) Cisco Express Forwarding or the ip cef distributed command to enable distributed Cisco Express Forwarding.

Traffic Matrix Statistics

The traffic matrix statistics (TMS) feature allows an administrator to gather the following data:

  • The number of packets and number of bytes that travel across the backbone from internal and external sources. The counts of packets and bytes are called TMS and are useful for determining how much traffic a backbone handles. You can analyze TMS using the following methods:
    • Collecting and viewing TMS through the application of the Network Data Analyzer (NDA)
    • Reading the TMS that reside on the backbone router
  • The neighbor autonomous systems of a Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) destination. You can view these systems by reading the tmasinfo_ascii file on the backbone router.

The following sections explain how to collect and view the TMS using the command-line interface (CLI) and the NDA. For detailed instructions on using the NDA, see the Network Data Analyzer Installation and User Guide .

TMS and CEF Nonrecursive Accounting

TMS enables an administrator to capture and analyze data on traffic entering a backbone that is running BGP. The TMS feature also allows an administrator to determine the neighbor autonomous systems of a BGP destination. TMS are counted during packet forwarding by Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting.

By enabling a backbone router to gather TMS, you can determine the amount of traffic that enters the backbone from sites outside of the backbone. You can also determine the amount of traffic that is generated within the backbone. This information helps you optimize and manage traffic across the backbone.

The following paragraphs explain how Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting aggregates packet statistics for Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) routes and their dependent BGP routes.

A BGP network deployed by a service provider might have the following components:

  • IGP routes that describe the next hop to which traffic should be sent

  • BGP routes that specify an intermediate address to which traffic should be sent

The intermediate address specified for the BGP route might be several hops away from the provider edge (PE) router. The next hop for the BGP route is the next hop for the intermediate address of the BGP route. The BGP route is called recursive, because it points through an intermediate address to an IGP route that provides the next hop for forwarding. However, a route lookup results in a next hop that is not directly reachable, as is the case with the BGP route’s intermediate address. A recursive lookup to an IGP route is used to decide how to reach the indirect next hop.

Cisco Express Forwarding represents IGP routes as nonrecursive entries and BGP routes as recursive entries that resolve through nonrecursive entries.

Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting counts the packets for all of the Cisco Express Forwarding recursive entries (from BGP routes) that resolve through a Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive entry and the packets for the nonrecursive entry (from IGP routes). The number of packets is totalled in one location.

The packets forwarded based on a nonrecursive Cisco Express Forwarding entry can be split into two bins based on whether the input interface of the backbone router is configured as internal or external. Thus, all packets that arrive on external interfaces (external to the region of interest) and are forwarded based on a given IGP route (either directly or through a recursive BGP route) are counted together.

The following example shows how Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting counts packets when BGP routes resolve to one IGP route and when they do not.

A multiaccess network access point (NAP) has BGP routes referring to hosts on the NAP network.

  • If the network is advertised as a single IGP route, all of the BGP routes to the various hosts at that NAP resolve to a single IGP route. Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting counts the number of packets sent to all BGP destinations.

  • If a network administrator instead advertises individual host routes from the NAP network to the IGP, Cisco Express Forwarding nonrecursive accounting counts packets to those hosts separately.

How Backbone Routers Collect TMS

You can determine the amount of traffic that enters the backbone from sites outside of the backbone if you enable a backbone router to gather TMS. You can also determine the amount of traffic that is generated within the backbone. This information helps you optimize and manage traffic across the backbone. The figures below help illustrate the traffic statistics you can gather using TMS.

The figure below shows a sample network with backbone routers and links. The traffic that travels through the backbone is the area of interest for TMS collection. TMS are collected during packet forwarding. The backbone is represented by the darkly shaded routers and bold links. The lighter shaded and unshaded routers are outside the backbone.

Figure 1. Sample Network with Backbone Routers and Links

The figure below shows an exploded view of the backbone router that links the Los Angeles point of presence (POP) in the figure above to the Atlanta POP. The bold line represents the backbone link going to the Atlanta POP.

The figure below shows the following types of traffic that travel through the backbone router:

  • The dotted line marked A represents traffic entering the backbone from a router that is not part of the backbone. This is called external traffic.

  • The dotted lines marked B and D represent traffic that is exiting the backbone. This is called internal traffic.

  • The dotted line marked C represents traffic that is not using the backbone and is not of interest to TMS.

Figure 2. Types of Traffic That Travel Through a Backbone Router

You can determine the amount of traffic the backbone handles by enabling a backbone router to track the number of packets and bytes that travel through the backbone router. You can separate the traffic into the categories "internal" and "external." You separate the traffic by designating incoming interfaces on the backbone router as internal or external.

Once you enable a backbone router to collect TMS, the router starts counters, which dynamically update when network traffic passes through the backbone router. You can retrieve a snapshot of the TMS, either through a command to the backbone router or through the NDA.

External traffic (path A in the figure above) is the most important for determining the amount of traffic that travels through a backbone router. Internal traffic (paths B and D in the figure above) is useful for ensuring that you are capturing all of the TMS data. When you receive a snapshot of the TMS, the packets and bytes are displayed in internal and external categories.

TMS Viewing Options

Once TMS are collected, you have three options for viewing the data:

This section contains the following information about the display of accounting data:

TMS Displayed with the NDA Display Module

The NDA collects TMS from the backbone router and displays the data through the NDA Display module. The TMS can look similar to the data shown in the two figures below. The display format depends on the aggregation scheme you select. See the Network Data Analyzer Installation and User Guide for more information.

(The view of data that the NDA Display module provides is wide. Slide the scroll bar to the right and left to see all of the data. The two figures below taken together show all of the columns of data.)

Figure 3. Displaying TMS Through the NDA (Part 1)
Figure 4. Displaying TMS Through the NDA (Part 2)

Nonrecursive Accounting Information Displayed

You can use the show ip cef command to display nonrecursive accounting information, including the counts of internal and external packets and bytes that have traveled through the IP prefix address/mask (in the format a.b.c.d/len) for an IGP route. Here is an example that shows 0 packets and 0 bytes of external traffic and 1144 packets and 742 bytes of internal traffic for the router with the IP address 10.102.102.102:


Router# show ip cef 10.102.102.102
10.102.102.10/32, version 34, epoch 0, per-destination sharing
0 packets, 0 bytes
 tag information set
  local tag: 19
 via 10.1.1.100, FastEthernet0/0/0, 0 dependencies
  next hop 10.1.1.100, FastEthernet0/0/0
  valid adjacency
  tag rewrite with FE0/0/0, 10.1.1.100, tags imposed {17}
 0 packets, 0 bytes switched through the prefix
 tmstats: external 0 packets, 0 bytes
      internal 1144 packets, 742 bytes
 30 second output rate 0 Kbits/sec

Statistics in the timestats File

Before you perform the task to interpret the statistics in the tmstats_ascii file (an optional procedure described in the Interpreting the tmstats File section), you need to understand the following:

Virtual Files on the Backbone Router

You can read TMS that reside on the backbone router and are stored in the following virtual files:

  • tmstats_ascii--TMS in ASCII (human readable) format

  • tmstats_binary--TMS in binary (space-efficient) format

The binary file tmstats_binary contains the same information as the ASCII file, except in a space-efficient format. You can copy this file from the router and read it with any utility that accepts files in binary format.

tmstats File Header Description

The tmstats_ascii file header provides the address of the backbone router and information about how much time the router used to collect and export the TMS data. The header occupies one line and uses the following format:


VERSION 1|ADDR
<address>
|AGGREGATION
TrafficMatrix.ascii|SYSUPTIME
<seconds>|
routerUTC
<routerUTC>
|NTP
<synchronized|unsynchronized>|DURATION
<aggregateTime>
|

The table below describes the fields in the file header of the tmstats_ascii file.

Table 1. Fields in tmstats_ascii File Header

Maximum Field Length

Field

Description

10

VERSION

File format version

21

ADDR

The IP address of the router

32

AGGREGATION

The type of data being aggregated

21

SYSUPTIME

The time of export (in seconds) since the router booted

21

routerUTC

The time of export (in seconds) since 1900-01-01 (Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)), as determined by the router

19

NTP

An indication of whether or not the UTC of the router has been synchronized by the Network Time Protocol (NTP) with an authoritative time source, such as a radio clock or an atomic clock attached to a time server

20

DURATION

The time needed to capture the data (in seconds) (trailing |)

Destination Prefix Record Description

The destination prefix record displays the internal and external packets and bytes for the IGP route and uses the following format:


p|
<destPrefix/Mask>
|
<creationSysUpTime>
|
<internalPackets>
|
<internalBytes>
|
<externalPackets>
|
<externalBytes>

The per-prefix records display information only about label switched traffic data. Label forwarding across a backbone router or switch, is based on either dynamic label switching or traffic engineered paths.

The table below describes the fields in the destination prefix record.

Table 2. Destination Prefix Record Fields

Maximum Field Length

Field

Description

2

<recordType >

p means that the record represents dynamic label switching (for example, LDP) data or headend traffic engineering (TE) tunnel traffic data.

t means that the record contains TE tunnel midpoint data.

19

destPrefix/Mask

The IP prefix address/mask (in the format a.b.c.d/len) for this IGP route.

11

creationSysUpTime

How long the system had been running when the record was first created.

21

internalPackets

Internal packet count.

21

internalBytes

Internal byte count.

21

externalPackets

External packet count.

20

externalBytes

External byte count (no trailing |).

Tunnel Midpoint Record Description

The tunnel midpoint record displays the internal and external packets and bytes for the tunnel head and uses the following format:


t|
<headAddr><tun_id>
|
<creationSysUpTime>
|

<internalPackets>
|
<internalBytes>
|
<externalPackets>
|
<externalBytes>

The table below describes the fields in the tunnel midpoint record.

Table 3. Tunnel Midpoint Record Fields

Maximum Field Length

Field

Description

2

<recordType >

t means that the record contains TE tunnel midpoint data.

27

headAddr<space> tun_id

The IP address of the tunnel head and tunnel interface number.

11

creationSysUpTime

How long the system had been running when the record was first created.

21

internalPackets

Internal packet count.

21

internalBytes

Internal byte count.

21

externalPackets

External packet count.

20

externalBytes

External byte count (no trailing |).

Statistics in the tmsasinfo File

Before viewing the statistics in thetmsasinfo file (an optional procedure described in the Viewing Information in the tmsasinfo File), you need to understand the following:

Header Format for the tmsasinfo File

The file header provides the address of the router and indicates how much time the router used to collect and export the data. The file header uses the following format:


VERSION 1|ADDR
<address>
|AGGREGATION 
ASList.ascii|SYSUPTIME
<seconds>|routerUTC
 
<routerUTC>
|DURATION
<aggregateTime>
|

The table below describes the fields in the file header.

Table 4. Fields in the tmsasinfo File Header

Maximum Field Length

Field

Description

5

VERSION

File format version

15

ADDR

The IP address of the router

20

AGGREGATION

The type of data being aggregated

10

SYSUPTIME

The time of export (in seconds) since router booted

10

routerUTC

The time of export (in seconds) since 1900-01-01, as determined by the router

10

DURATION

The time needed to capture the data (in seconds)

Neighbor AS Record in the tmsasinfo File

The neighbor AS record displays the neighbor AS and the underlying prefix/mask for each BGP route. The record uses the following format:


<nonrecursivePrefix/Mask>
|
<AS>
|
<destinationPrefix/Mask>

The table below describes the fields in the neighbor AS record.

Table 5. Neighbor AS Record Fields

Maximum Field Length

Field

Description

18

nonrecursivePrefix/Mask

The IP prefix address/mask (a.b.c.d/len format) for this IGP route

5

AS

The neighbor AS

18

destinationPrefix/Mask

The prefix/mask for the Forwarding Information Base (FIB) entry (typically BGP route)

How to Configure CEF Network Accounting

Configuring CEF Network Accounting

Perform the following task to enable network accounting for Cisco Express Forwarding.

When you enable network accounting for Cisco Express Forwarding from the global configuration mode, accounting information is collected on the RP.

When you enable network accounting for distributed Cisco Express Forwarding from the global configuration mode, accounting information grouped by IP prefix (recursive or nonrecursive) is not sent to the RP, but is collected on the line card.

After accounting information is collected for Cisco Express Forwarding or distributed Cisco Express Forwarding, you can display the statistics using the show ip cef command. To verify the statistics on a line card, use the show cef interface statistics command.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. ip cef accounting {[non-recursive ] [per-prefix ] [prefix-length ]}
  4. exit

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:


Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:


Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

ip cef accounting {[non-recursive ] [per-prefix ] [prefix-length ]}

Example:


Router(config)# ip cef accounting per-prefix

Enables Cisco Express Forwarding network accounting.

  • The non-recursive keyword enables you to count the number of packets and bytes express forwarded through nonrecursive prefixes.

This keyword is optional when the command is used in global configuration mode.

  • The per-prefix keyword enables you to count the number of packets and bytes express forwarded to a destination IP address (or prefix).

  • The prefix-length keyword enables accounting based on prefix length.

Step 4

exit

Example:


Router(config)# exit

Exits to privileged EXEC mode.

Enabling a Backbone Router to Collect TMS

This section contains information about and instructions for enabling a backbone router to collect TMS for Cisco Express Forwarding. Enabling a backbone router to collect TMS requires enabling nonrecursive accounting and setting the interfaces on the router to collect internal or external TMS. The internal and external settings are used only for TMS collection. The interfaces are set to internal by default.


Note

Make sure you configure the collection of internal and external TMS on the incoming interface of the backbone router.


You can perform these tasks either through the CLI or through the NDA. The following sections explain each procedure:

Using the CLI to Enable a Backbone Router to Collect TMS

Perform the following task to use the CLI to enable a backbone router to collect TMS.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. configure terminal
  3. ip cef
  4. ip cef accounting {[non-recursive [per-prefix ] [prefix-length ]}
  5. interface type slot / subslot / port [.subinterface-number ]
  6. ip cef accounting non-recursive
  7. exit
  8. Repeat Steps 5, 6, and 7 for each incoming interface that you want to configure for TMS.
  9. end

DETAILED STEPS

  Command or Action Purpose
Step 1

enable

Example:

Router> enable

Enables privileged EXEC mode.

  • Enter your password if prompted.

Step 2

configure terminal

Example:

Router# configure terminal

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 3

ip cef

Example:

Router(config)# ip cef

Enables Cisco Express Forwarding on the route processor card.

Step 4

ip cef accounting {[non-recursive [per-prefix ] [prefix-length ]}

Example:

Router(config)# ip cef accounting non-recursive

Enables Cisco Express Forwarding network accounting.

  • The non-recursive keyword enables you to count the number of packets and bytes express forwarded through nonrecursive prefixes.

This keyword is optional when the command is used in global configuration mode.

  • The per-prefix keyword enables you to count the number of packets and bytes express forwarded to a destination (or prefix).

  • The prefix-length keyword enables accounting based on prefix length.

Step 5

interface type slot / subslot / port [.subinterface-number ]

Example:

Router(config)# interface fastethernet 1/1/0
Example:

Configures an interface type and enters interface configuration mode.

  • The type argument is the type of interface to be configured.

  • The slot argument is the chassis slot number. Refer to the appropriate hardware manual for slot information. For SIPs, refer to the platform-specific SPA hardware installation guide or the corresponding "Identifying Slots and Subslots for SIPs and SPAs" topic in the platform-specific SPA software configuration guide.

  • The / subslot keyword and argument pair is the secondary slot number on a SIP where a SPA is installed. The slash (/) is required.

Refer to the platform-specific SPA hardware installation guide and the corresponding "Specifying the Interface Address on a SPA" topic in the platform-specific SPA software configuration guide for subslot information.

  • The / port keyword and argument pair is the port or interface number. The slash (/) is required.

Refer to the appropriate hardware manual for port information. For SPAs, refer to the corresponding "Specifying the Interface Address on a SPA" topics in the platform-specific SPA software configuration guide

  • The . subinterface-number keyword and argument pair is the subinterface number in the range 1 to 4294967293. The number that precedes the period (.) must match the number to which this subinterface belongs.

This command specifies the interface on the backbone router that you intend to configure.

Step 6

ip cef accounting non-recursive

Example:

Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive 

Enables nonrecursive accounting on the router.

Step 7

exit

Example:

Router(config-if)# exit 

Exits to global configuration mode.

Step 8

Repeat Steps 5, 6, and 7 for each incoming interface that you want to configure for TMS.

--

Step 9

end

Example:

Router(config-if)# end

Exits to privileged EXEC mode.

Enabling the NDA to Collect TMS on a Backbone Router

Perform the following task to enable the NDA to collect TMS on a backbone router.

You can use the NDA to enable TMS collection and to set the incoming interfaces on the backbone router to collect internal or external traffic data.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. Open the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window in the NDA.
  2. Click the New button in the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window.
  3. Specify the new TMS collection parameters, using the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window.
  4. Click OK in the New Collection panel.
  5. Select the TMS tab in the Router Configuration window in the NDA.
  6. Set internal and external interfaces on the router.
  7. Click Apply in the Router Configuration window.

DETAILED STEPS


Step 1

Open the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window in the NDA.

For specific instructions, refer to the Network Data Analyzer Installation and User Guide.

Step 2

Click the New button in the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window.

If a valid directory of router configuration files exists on a designated UtilityServer host in the network, the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window shown in the first figure below appears.

Step 3

Specify the new TMS collection parameters, using the Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window.

The window incorporates a New Collection panel that enables you to define a new TMS collection process. To use the NDA for TMS collection, you must specify the following information:

  • The name of the collection (Collection ID)--Enter an alphanumeric name of any length without embedded spaces for the TMS collection process on the selected router (see next bullet).

  • The router from which you want to collect TMS--Use the drop-down box to choose the name of a network device where you want to collect TMS.

  • How often and how long to collect TMS--Specify each of the following in minutes:
    • How much time is to elapse before the TMS collection process begins ("Start in" field)
    • The overall duration of the TMS collection process ("collect for" field)
    • How often "snapshots" of the traffic counters in the selected router are to be exported to the designated TMS data repository ("every" field)

The window for entering this information on the NDA is similar to the one shown in the figure below.

Figure 5. Setting the NDA Traffic Matrix Statistics Control Window Collection Parameters
Step 4

Click OK in the New Collection panel.

The Traffic Matrix Statistics Control window confirms the information you entered, and the new collection name appears at the top left corner of the window.

Step 5

Select the TMS tab in the Router Configuration window in the NDA.

The TMS Router Configuration panel shown in the figure below appears. This panel enables you to configure network devices to export TMS data. (For instructions on locating the Router Configuration window, refer to the Network Data Analyzer Installation and User Guide .)

Step 6

Set internal and external interfaces on the router.

The Router Configuration window allows you to set the interfaces on the backbone router to collect internal and external packet and byte data. By default, all interfaces are set to collect internal data. Single-selection buttons allow you to associate the interface with either internal data or external data. You can select only one radio button for an interface at one time. Set the interface to collect internal or external data by clicking the appropriate radio button.

The window for selecting this information on the NDA is similar to the one shown in the figure below.

Figure 6. Setting the NDA Configuration Window
Step 7

Click Apply in the Router Configuration window.

Any changes that you have made to the configuration parameters in the TMS Router Configuration panel are applied to the currently selected device. The Apply button affects only changes made in the panel where the button is located. When the NDA asks if you want to enable Cisco Express Forwarding, click Yes .


Interpreting the tmstats File

This section contains instructions for interpreting the statistics in the tmstats_ascii file. For conceptual information about the tmstats_ascii file, see the Statistics in the timestats File.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. more system:/vfiles/tmstats_ascii
  2. Interpret the header and record information in the tmstats_ascii file.

DETAILED STEPS


Step 1

more system:/vfiles/tmstats_ascii

Enter this command on the backbone router to view the statistics in the ASCII file. For example:

Example:


Router# more system:/vfiles/tmstats_ascii
VERSION 1|ADDR 172.27.32.24|AGGREGATION TrafficMatrix.ascii|SYSUPTIME 41428|routerUTC 3104467160|NTP unsynchronized|DURATION 1|
p|10.1.0.0/16|242|1|50|2|100
p|172.27.32.0/22|242|0|0|0|0

This is an example of a tmstats_ascii file. The example contains a header information and two records. The header information and each record begin on a separate line. A bar (|) separates consecutive fields within a header or record. The first field in a record specifies the type of record.

Step 2

Interpret the header and record information in the tmstats_ascii file.

Each tmstats_ascii file displayed consists of header information and records. The file in the example in Step 1 contains header information and two destination prefix records.

Refer to the following sections for a description of header and record information:


Viewing Information in the tmsasinfo File

Perform the following task to view information in the tmsasinfo file about BGP neighbor autonomous systems (ASs) for IGP destinations.

The TMS feature also displays the BGP neighbor ASs associated with each IGP destination. You can display all the neighbor ASs for any IGP destination. The tmsasinfo file is in ASCII format. It is the only format provided for this data.

For conceptual information about the tmsasinfofile, see the Statistics in the tmsasinfo File.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. more system:/vfiles/tmsasinfo
  2. View the header and record information in the tmasinfo file.

DETAILED STEPS


Step 1

more system:/vfiles/tmsasinfo

Enter this command on the backbone router to view the statistics in the tmsasinfo ASCII file. For example:

Example:


Router# more system:/vfiles/tmsasinfo
 
VERSION 1|ADDR 10.10.10.10|AGGREGATION ASList.ascii|SYSUPTIME 619855|routerUTC 3334075555|DURATION 0
10.1.1.2/32|65535|192.168.1.0/24
This is an example of a tmsasinfo file. The example contains a header information and one record. The header information and each record begin on a separate line. A bar (|) separates consecutive fields within a header or record.
Step 2

View the header and record information in the tmasinfo file.

Refer to the following sections for a description of header and record information:


Verifying CEF Network Accounting Information

Perform the following task to verify that Cisco Express Forwarding networking accounting information is as you expected.

SUMMARY STEPS

  1. enable
  2. show ip cef summary
  3. show ip cef interface - type slot / subslot / port [. subinterface-number ] detail
  4. disable

DETAILED STEPS


Step 1

enable

Use this command to enable privileged EXEC mode. Enter your password if prompted. For example:

Example:


Router> enable
Router#
Step 2

show ip cef summary

Use this command to display the collected Cisco Express Forwarding network accounting information. For example:

Example:


Router# show ip cef summary
IP CEF with switching (Table Version 19), flags=0x0
  19 routes, 0 reresolve, 0 unresolved (0 old, 0 new), peak 1
  19 leaves, 17 nodes, 19960 bytes, 58 inserts, 39 invalidations
  0 load sharing elements, 0 bytes, 0 references
  universal per-destination load sharing algorithm, id E3296D5B
  3(1) CEF resets, 0 revisions of existing leaves
  Resolution Timer: Exponential (currently 1s, peak 1s)
  0 in-place/0 aborted modifications
  refcounts:  4628 leaf, 4608 node
Adjacency Table has 7 adjacencies

This command shows sample accounting information on a router with Central Cisco Express Forwarding enabled. In this example, the Cisco Express Forwarding table contains a total or 19 entries, 0 entries need to be reresolved, 0 entries do not have resolved recursions, and the highest number of unresolved entries is 1. The Cisco Express Forwarding Trie contains 19 leaves and 17 nodes, which take up 19960 bytes of memory. The number of routes inserted into the table is 58 and 39 routes have been invalidated. This command shows no load sharing elements. The per-destination load sharing algorithm is configured and the identifier is E3296D5D.

Example:


The following command is sample output for a router with distributed Cisco Express Forwarding enabled:

Example:


Router# show ip cef summary
IP Distributed CEF with switching (Table Version 36), flags=0x0
  16 routes, 0 reresolve, 0 unresolved (0 old, 0 new), peak 1
  19 leaves, 17 nodes, 19960 bytes, 39 inserts, 20 invalidations
  0 load sharing elements, 0 bytes, 0 references
  universal per-destination load sharing algorithm, id E3296D5B
  2(0) CEF resets, 0 revisions of existing leaves
  Resolution Timer: Exponential (currently 1s, peak 1s)
  0 in-place/0 aborted modifications
  refcounts:  4628 leaf, 4608 node
Step 3

show ip cef interface - type slot / subslot / port [. subinterface-number ] detail

Use this command to show detailed Cisco Express Forwarding network accounting information for a specified interface type and number. The following is sample output from the show ip cef detail command for interface FastEthernet 0/0/0. It shows all the prefixes resolving through adjacency pointing to next hop interface FastEthernet 0/0/0 and next hop interface IP address 172.29.233.33.

For example, for FastEthernet interface 0/0/0, IP address 172.29.233.33:

Example:


Router# show ip cef fastethernet 0/0/0 detail
IP Distributed CEF with switching (Table Version 136808) 
 45800 routes, 8 unresolved routes (0 old, 8 new) 
 45800 leaves, 2868 nodes, 8444360 bytes,
 136808 inserts, 91008 invalidations 
 1 load sharing elements, 208 bytes, 1 references 
 1 CEF resets, 1 revisions of existing leaves 
 refcounts: 527343 leaf, 465638 node
 172.29.233.33/32, version 7417, cached adjacency 172.29.233.33 
 0 packets, 0 bytes, 
   Adjacency-prefix
   via 172.29.233.33, FastEthernet0/0/0, 0 dependencies 
 next hop 172.29.233.33, FastEthernet0/0/0
   valid cached adjacency
 0 packets, 0 bytes switched through the prefix
 tmstats: external 0 packets, 0 bytes
      internal 0 packets, 0 bytes
Step 4

disable

Use this command to exit to user EXEC mode. For example:

Example:


Router# disable
Router>

Configuration Examples for CEF Network Accounting

Example Configuring CEF Network Accounting

The following example shows how to enable the collection of Cisco Express Forwarding accounting information:


configure terminal
!
ip cef accounting
end

Example Enabling a Backbone Router to Collect TMS Data

The following example shows how to enable a backbone router to collect TMS data:


configure terminal
!
ip cef
ip cef accounting non-recursive
!
interface fe1/0/0
 ip cef accounting non-recursive external
 end

For a sample backbone configuration, see the Example IP CEF Nonrecursive Accounting section.

Example IP CEF Nonrecursive Accounting

The following example shows an IP Cisco Express Forwarding accounting configuration. The example shows how to enable routers to count the number of internal and external packets and bytes that travel through the backbone routers. The figure below shows the sample backbone configuration.

Figure 7. Sample Backbone Configuration

Router A Configuration


Router(config)# ip cef
Router(config)# ip cef accounting non-recursive
Router(config)# interface fe1/0/0
Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive external

Router B Configuration: fe1/1/0


Router(config)# ip cef
Router(config)# ip cef accounting non-recursive
Router(config)# interface fe1/1/0

Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive external 

Router B Configuration: fe1/0/0:


Router(config)# interface fe1/0/0
Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive internal

Router C Configuration: fe1/1/0:


Router(config)# ip cef
Router(config)# ip cef accounting non-recursive
Router(config)# interface fe1/1/0

Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive internal 

Router C Configuration: fe1/0/0:


Router(config)# interface fe1/0/0
Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive external

Router D Configuration


Router(config)# ip cef
Router(config)# ip cef accounting non-recursive
Router(config)# interface fe1/1/0

Router(config-if)# ip cef accounting non-recursive external 

Example Interpreting the tmstats_ascii File

The following example shows the contents of tmstats_ascii file:


Router# more system:/vfiles/tmstats_ascii
VERSION 1|ADDR 172.27.32.24|AGGREGATION TrafficMatrix.ascii|SYSUPTIME 41428|routerUTC 3104467160|NTP unsynchronized|DURATION 1|
p|10.1.0.0/16|242|1|50|2|100
p|172.27.32.0/22|242|0|0|0|0

This example contains header information and two destination prefix records. The records represent dynamic label switching or traffic engineering (TE) tunnel data indicated by the initial "p."

Additional References

Related Documents

Related Topic

Document Title

Cisco IOS commands

Cisco IOS Master Commands List, All Releases

Overview of the Cisco Express Forwarding feature

Cisco Express Forwarding Overview

Tasks for enabling or disabling Cisco Express Forwarding or distributed Cisco Express Forwarding

Enabling or Disabling Cisco Express Forwarding or Distributed Cisco Express Forwarding to Customize Switching and Forwarding for Dynamic Networks

Tasks for configuring load-balancing schemes for Cisco Express Forwarding

Configuring a Load-Balancing Scheme for Cisco Express Forwarding Traffic

Tasks for configuring Cisco Express Forwarding consistency checkers

Configuring Cisco Express Forwarding Consistency Checkers for Route Processors and Line Cards

Tasks for configuring epochs for Cisco Express Forwarding tables

Configuring Epochs to Clear and Rebuild Cisco Express Forwarding and Adjacency Tables

Commands for configuring and managing Cisco Express Forwarding

Cisco IOS IP Switching Command Reference

Tasks for customizing the display of Cisco Express Forwarding event trace messages

Customizing the Display of Cisco Express Forwarding Event Trace Messages

Standards

Standard

Title

No new or modified standards are supported by this feature, and support for existing standards has not been modified by this feature.

--

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 IOS XE software releases, and feature sets, use Cisco MIB Locator found at the following URL:

http://www.cisco.com/go/mibs

RFCs

RFC

Title

No new or modified RFCs are supported by this feature, and support for existing RFCs has not been modified by this feature.

--

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.

http://www.cisco.com/cisco/web/support/index.html

Feature Information for CEF Network Accounting

Table 6. Feature Information for Configuring Cisco Express Forwarding Network Accounting

Feature Name

Releases

Feature Configuration Information

This table is intentionally left blank because no features were introduced or modified in Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1 or later.

--

--

Glossary

adjacency --A relationship formed between selected neighboring routers and end nodes for the purpose of exchanging routing information. Adjacency is based upon the use of a common media segment by the routers and nodes involved.

Cisco Express Forwarding --A Layer 3 switching technology. Cisco Express Forwarding can also refer to central Cisco Express Forwarding mode, one of two modes of Cisco Express Forwarding operation. Cisco Express Forwarding enables a Route Processor to perform express forwarding. Distributed Cisco Express Forwarding is the other mode of Cisco Express Forwarding operation.

distributed Cisco Express Forwarding --A mode of Cisco Express Forwarding operation in which line cards (such as Versatile Interface Processor (VIP) line cards) maintain identical copies of the forwarding information base (FIB) and adjacency tables. The line cards perform the express forwarding between port adapters; this relieves the Route Switch Processor of involvement in the switching operation.

FIB --forwarding information base. A component of Cisco Express Forwarding that is conceptually similar to a routing table or information base. The router uses the FIB lookup table to make destination-based switching decisions during Cisco Express Forwarding operation. The router maintains a mirror image of the forwarding information in an IP routing table.

GRE --generic routing encapsulation. A tunneling protocol developed by Cisco that enables encapsulation of a wide variety of protocol packet types inside IP tunnels. GRE creates a virtual point-to-point link to Cisco routers at remote points over an IP internetwork. By connecting multiprotocol subnetworks in a single-protocol backbone environment, IP tunneling using GRE allows the expansion of a network across a single-protocol backbone environment.

IPC --interprocess communication. The mechanism that enables the distribution of Cisco Express Forwarding tables from the Route Switch Processor (RSP) to the line card when the router is operating in distributed Cisco Express Forwarding mode.

label disposition --The removal of Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) headers at the edge of a network. In MPLS label disposition, packets arrive on a router as MPLS packets and, with the header removed, are transmitted as IP packets.

label imposition --The action of putting a label on a packet.

LER --label edge router. A router that performs label imposition.

LFIB --Label Forwarding Information Base. The data structure used by switching functions to switch labeled packets.

LIB --Label information base. A database used by a label switch router (LSR) to store labels learned from other LSRs, as well as labels assigned by the local LSR.

line card --A general term for an interface processor that can be used in various Cisco products. For example, a Versatile Interface Processor (VIP) is a line card for the Cisco 7500 series router.

LSP --label switched path. A sequence of hops (Router 0...Router n). A packet travels from R0 to Rn by means of label switching mechanisms. An LSP can be chosen dynamically, based on normal routing mechanisms, or you can configure the LSP manually.

LSR --label switch router. A Layer 3 router that forwards a packet based on the value of a label encapsulated in the packet.

MPLS --Multiprotocol Label Switching. An emerging industry standard for the forwarding of packets along the normal routing paths (sometimes called MPLS hop-by-hop forwarding).

prefix --The network address portion of an IP address. A prefix is specified by a network and mask and is generally represented in the format network/mask. The mask indicates which bits are the network bits. For example, 1.0.0.0/16 means that the first 16 bits of the IP address are masked, making them the network bits. The remaining bits are the host bits. In this example, the network number is 10.0.

RIB --Routing Information Base. A central repository of routes that contains Layer 3 reachability information and destination IP addresses or prefixes. The RIB is also known as the routing table.

RP --Route Processor. The processor module in the Cisco 7000 series routers that contains the CPU, system software, and most of the memory components that are used in the router. It is sometimes called a supervisory processor.

RSP --Route Switch Processor. The processor module used in the Cisco 7500 series routers that integrates the functions of the Route Processor (RP) and the Switch Processor (SP).

SP --Switch Processor. Cisco 7000-series processor module that acts as the administrator for all CxBus activities. It is also sometimes called a CiscoBus controller.

VIP --Versatile Interface Processor. An interface card used in Cisco 7000 and Cisco 7500 series routers. The VIP provides multilayer switching and runs Cisco IOS software.

VPN --Virtual Private Network. The result of a router configuration that enables IP traffic to use tunneling to travel securely over a public TCP/IP network.

VRF --A Virtual Private Network (VPN) routing/forwarding instance. A VRF consists of an IP routing table, a derived forwarding table, a set of interfaces that use the forwarding table, and a set of rules and routing protocols that determine what goes into the forwarding table. In general, a VRF includes the routing information that defines a customer VPN site that is attached to a PE router.