2]

rmon collection stats

Use the rmon collection stats interface configuration command on the switch stack or on a standalone switch to collect Ethernet group statistics, which include usage statistics about broadcast and multicast packets, and error statistics about cyclic redundancy check (CRC) alignment errors and collisions. Use the no form of this command to return to the default setting.

rmon collection stats index [owner name]

no rmon collection stats index [owner name]

Syntax Description

index

Remote Network Monitoring (RMON) collection control index. The range is 1 to 65535.

owner name

(Optional) Owner of the RMON collection.


Defaults

The RMON statistics collection is disabled.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The RMON statistics collection command is based on hardware counters.

Examples

This example shows how to collect RMON statistics for the owner root:

Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet2/0/1
Switch(config-if)# rmon collection stats 2 owner root

You can verify your setting by entering the show rmon statistics privileged EXEC command.

Related Commands

Command
Description

show rmon statistics

Displays RMON statistics.

For syntax information, select Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2 > System Management Commands > RMON Commands.


sdm prefer

Use the sdm prefer global configuration command on the switch stack or on a standalone switch to configure the template used in Switch Database Management (SDM) resource allocation. You can use a template to allocate system resources to best support the features being used in your application. Use a template to provide maximum system usage for unicast routing or for VLAN configuration, to change an aggregator template (Catalyst 3750-12S only) to a desktop template, or to select the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template to support IPv6 forwarding (supported only when the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image). Use the no form of this command to return to the default template.

sdm prefer {access | default | dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | routing | vlan} | routing | vlan} [desktop]

no sdm prefer

Syntax Description

access

Provide maximum system usage for access control lists (ACLs). Use this template if you have a large number of ACLs.

default

Sets the switch to use the default template. On Catalyst 3750-12S switches, use with the desktop keyword to set the switch to the default desktop template. (Use the no sdm prefer command to set a desktop switch to the default desktop template or to set an aggregator switch to the default aggregator template.)

dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | routing | vlan}

Select a template that supports both IPv4 and IPv6 routing.

default—Provide balance to IPv4 and IPv6 Layer 2 and Layer 3 functionality.

routing—Provide maximum system usage for IPv4 and IPv6 routing, including IPv4 policy-based routing.

vlan—Provide maximum system usage for IPv4 and IPv6 VLANs.

Note Though visible on all switches, this option is supported only if the switch stack or switch is running the advanced IP services image.

routing

Provide maximum system usage for unicast routing. You would typically use this template for a router or aggregator in the middle of a network.

vlan

Provide maximum system usage for VLANs. This template maximizes system resources for use as a Layer 2 switch with no routing.

desktop

Use only on a Catalyst 3750-12S switch (where aggregator templates are the default) to select the desktop default, routing, or vlan template.


Defaults

The default template provides a balance to all features.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The aggregator templates were added.

12.2(25)SEA

The dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 templates were added.

12.2(25)SED

The access templates were added.

12.2(25)SEE

The dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 routing template was added.


Usage Guidelines

You must reload the switch for the configuration to take effect. If you enter the show sdm prefer command before you enter the reload privileged EXEC command, the show sdm prefer command shows the template currently in use and the template that will become active after a reload.

Desktop switches support only desktop templates; an aggregator switch (Catalyst 3750-12S) supports both desktop and aggregator templates. On an aggregator switch, if you do not enter the desktop keyword, the aggregator templates are selected.

All stack members use the same SDM desktop or aggregator template, stored on the stack master. When a new switch member is added to a stack, as with the switch configuration file and VLAN database file, the SDM configuration that is stored on the stack master overrides the template configured on an individual switch.

To route IPv6 packets in a stack of switches, all switches in the stack should be running the advanced IP services image. The IPv6 packets are routed in hardware across the stack, as long as the packet does not have exceptions (IPv6Options) and the switches have not run out of hardware resources.

If a stack member cannot support the template that is running on the master switch, the switch goes into SDM mismatch mode, the master switch does not attempt to change the SDM template, and the switch cannot be a functioning member of the stack.

If the master switch is a Catalyst 3750-12S, and you change the template from an aggregator template to a desktop template and reload the switch, the entire stack operates with the selected desktop template. This could cause configuration losses if the number of ternary content addressable memory (TCAM) entries exceeds the desktop template sizes.

If you change the template on a Catalyst 3750-12S master from a desktop template to an aggregator template and reload the switch, any desktop switches that were part of the stack go into SDM mismatch mode.

If you add a Catalyst 3750-12S switch that is running the aggregator template to a stack that has a desktop switch as the stack master, the stack operates with the desktop template selected on the stack master. This could cause configuration losses on the Catalyst 3750-12S stack member if the number of TCAM entries on it exceeds desktop template sizes.

For more information about stacking, see the "Managing Switch Stacks" chapter in the software configuration guide.

The access template maximizes system resources for access control lists (ACLs) as required to accommodate a large number of ACLs.

The default templates balance the use of system resources.

Use the sdm prefer vlan [desktop] global configuration command only on switches intended for Layer 2 switching with no routing. When you use the VLAN template, no system resources are reserved for routing entries, and any routing is done through software. This overloads the CPU and severely degrades routing performance.

Do not use the routing template if you do not have routing enabled on your switch. Entering the sdm prefer routing [desktop] global configuration command prevents other features from using the memory allocated to unicast routing in the routing template.

Do not use the ipv4-and-ipv6 templates if you do not plan to enable IPv6 routing on the switch. Entering the sdm prefer ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | routing | vlan} [desktop] global configuration command divides resources between IPv4 and IPv6, limiting those allocated to IPv4 forwarding.

Table 2-15 lists the approximate number of each resource supported in each of the IPv4-only templates for a desktop or aggregator switch. The values in the template are based on eight routed interfaces and approximately one thousand VLANs and represent the approximate hardware boundaries set when a template is selected. If a section of a hardware resource is full, all processing overflow is sent to the CPU, seriously impacting switch performance.

Table 2-15 Approximate Number of Feature Resources Allowed by IPv4Templates 

Resource
Desktop Templates
Aggregator Templates
Access
Default
Routing
VLAN
Access
Default
Routing
VLAN

Unicast MAC addresses

4 K

6 K

3 K

12 K

6 K

6 K

6 K

12 K

Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) groups and multicast routes

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

Unicast routes

6 K

8 K

11 K

0

12 K

12 K

20 K

0

Directly connected hosts

4 K

6 K

3 K

0

6 K

6 K

6 K

0

Indirect routes

2 K

2 K

8 K

0

6 K

6 K

14 K

0

Policy-based routing access control entries (ACEs)

512

0

512

0

512

0

512

0

Quality of service (QoS) classification ACEs

512

512

512

512

896

896

512

896

Security ACEs

2 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

4 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

Layer 2 VLANs

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K

1 K


Table 2-16lists the approximate number of each resource supported in each of the dual IPv4-and IPv6 templates for a desktop or aggregator switch.

Table 2-16 Approximate Feature Resources Allowed by Dual IPv4-IPv6 Templates 

Resource
Desktop IPv4-and-IPv6 Templates
Aggregator IPv4-and-IPv6 Templates
Default
Routing
VLAN
Default
Routing
VLAN

Unicast MAC addresses

2 K

1536

8 K

2 K

2K

8 K

IPv4 IGMP groups and multicast routes

1 K

1K

1 K

1 K

1 K

0

Total IPv4 unicast routes:

3 K

2816

0

3 K

8K

0

Directly connected IPv4 hosts

2 K

1536

0

2 K

2K

0

Indirect IPv4 routes

1 K

1280

0

1 K

6K

1 K

IPv6 multicast groups

1 K

1152

1 K

1 K

2176

1 K

Total IPv6 unicast routes:

3 K

2816

0

3 K

8K

0

Directly connected IPv6 addresses

2 K

1536

0

2 K

2K

0

Indirect IPv6 unicast routes

1 K

1280

0

1 K

6K

0

IPv4 policy-based routing ACEs

0

256

0

0

512

0

IPv4 or MAC QoS ACEs (total)

512

512

512

876

896

876

IPv4 or MAC security ACEs (total)

1 K

512

1 K

512

1K

1 K

IPv6 policy-based routing ACEs1

0

255

0

0

510

0

IPv6 QoS ACEs

510

510

510

876

510

876

IPv6 security ACEs

510

510

510

876

510

876

1 IPv6 policy-based routing is not supported in this release.


Examples

This example shows how to configure the access template on a desktop switch:

Switch(config)# sdm prefer access
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

This example shows how to configure the routing template on a desktop switch:

Switch(config)# sdm prefer routing
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

This example shows how to configure the desktop routing template on an aggregator switch:

Switch(config)# sdm prefer routing desktop
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

This example shows how to configure the dual IPv4-and-IPv6 default template on a desktop switch:

Switch(config)# sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 default
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

This example shows how to change a switch template to the default template. On an aggregator switch, this is the default aggregator template; on a desktop switch, this is the default desktop template.

Switch(config)# no sdm prefer
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

This example shows how to configure the desktop default template on an aggregator switch:

Switch(config)# sdm prefer default desktop
Switch(config)# exit
Switch# reload

You can verify your settings by entering the show sdm prefer privileged EXEC command.

Related Commands

Command
Description

show sdm prefer

Displays the current SDM template in use or displays the templates that can be used, with approximate resource allocation per feature.


service password-recovery

Use the service password-recovery global configuration command on the switch stack or on a standalone switch to enable the password-recovery mechanism (the default). This mechanism allows an end user with physical access to the switch to hold down the Mode button and interrupt the boot process while the switch is powering up and to assign a new password. Use the no form of this command to disable part of the password-recovery functionality. When the password-recovery mechanism is disabled, interrupting the boot process is allowed only if the user agrees to set the system back to the default configuration.

service password-recovery

no service password-recovery

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

The password-recovery mechanism is enabled.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

As a system administrator, you can use the no service password-recovery command to disable some of the functionality of the password recovery feature by allowing an end user to reset a password only by agreeing to return to the default configuration.

The password-recovery mechanism has been triggered, but
is currently disabled.  Access to the boot loader prompt
through the password-recovery mechanism is disallowed at
this point.  However, if you agree to let the system be
reset back to the default system configuration, access
to the boot loader prompt can still be allowed.

Would you like to reset the system back to the default configuration (y/n)?

If the user chooses not to reset the system to the default configuration, the normal boot process continues, as if the Mode button had not been pressed. If you choose to reset the system to the default configuration, the configuration file in flash memory is deleted, and the VLAN database file, flash:vlan.dat (if present), is deleted.


Note If you use the no service password-recovery command to control end user access to passwords, we recommend that you save a copy of the config file in a location away from the switch in case the end user uses the password recovery procedure and sets the system back to default values. Do not keep a backup copy of the config file on the switch.

If the switch is operating in VTP transparent mode, we recommend that you also save a copy of the vlan.dat file in a location away from the switch.


When you enter the service password-recovery or no service password-recovery command on the stack master, it is propagated throughout the stack and applied to all switches in the stack.

You can verify if password recovery is enabled or disabled by entering the show version privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to disable password recovery on a switch or switch stack so that a user can only reset a password by agreeing to return to the default configuration.

Switch(config)# no service-password recovery
Switch(config)# exit

Related Commands

Command
Description

show version

Displays version information for the hardware and firmware.


service-policy

Use the service-policy interface configuration command on the switch stack or on a standalone switch to apply a policy map defined by the policy-map command to the input of a physical port or a switch virtual interface (SVI). Use the no form of this command to remove the policy map and port association.

service-policy input policy-map-name

no service-policy input policy-map-name

Syntax Description

input policy-map-name

Apply the specified policy map to the input of a physical port or an SVI.



Note Though visible in the command-line help strings, the history keyword is not supported, and you should ignore the statistics that it gathers. The output keyword is also not supported.


Defaults

No policy maps are attached to the port.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SE

A policy map can now be applied to a physical port or an SVI.

12.2(25)SED

Hierarchical policy-maps can now be applied to an SVI.


Usage Guidelines

Only one policy map per ingress port is supported. In software releases earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SE, policy maps can be configured only on physical ports.

In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SE or later, policy maps can be configured on physical ports or on SVIs. When VLAN-based quality of service (QoS) is disabled by using the no mls qos vlan-based interface configuration command on a physical port, you can configure a port-based policy map on the port. If VLAN-based QoS is enabled by using the mls qos vlan-based interface configuration command on a physical port, the switch removes the previously configured port-based policy map. After a hierarchical policy map is configured and applied on an SVI, the interface-level policy map takes effect on the interface.

In software releases earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SE, you can apply a policy map only to the incoming traffic on a physical port. In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SE or later, you can apply a policy map to incoming traffic on a physical port or on an SVI. In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SED or later, you can configure different interface-level policy maps for each class defined in the VLAN-level policy map. For more information about hierarchical policy maps, see the "Configuring QoS" chapter in the software configuration guide for this release.

Classification using a port trust state (for example, mls qos trust [cos | dscp | ip-precedence] and a policy map (for example, service-policy input policy-map-name) are mutually exclusive. The last one configured overwrites the previous configuration.

Policy maps that use the police aggregate command fail when applied to a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

Examples

This example shows how to apply plcmap1 to an physical ingress port:

Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet2/0/1
Switch(config-if)# service-policy input plcmap1

This example shows how to remove plcmap2 from a physical port:

Switch(config)# interface gigabitethernet2/0/2
Switch(config-if)# no service-policy input plcmap2

This example shows how to apply plcmap1 to an ingress SVI when VLAN-based QoS is enabled:

Switch(config)# interface vlan 10
Switch(config-if)# service-policy input plcmap1

This example shows how to create a hierarchical policy map and attach it to an SVI:

Switch>enable
Switch#config t
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Switch(config)#access-list 101 permit ip any any 
Switch(config)#class-map cm-1 
Switch(config-cmap)#match access 101 
Switch(config-cmap)#exit 
Switch(config)#exit 
Switch#
Switch# 
Switch#config t 
Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
Switch(config)#class-map cm-interface-1
Switch(config-cmap)#match input g3/0/1 - g3/0/2 
Switch(config-cmap)#exit
Switch(config)#policy-map port-plcmap 
Switch(config-pmap)#class-map cm-interface-1 
Switch(config-pmap-c)#police 900000 9000 exc policed-dscp-transmit 
Switch(config-pmap-c)#exit 
Switch(config-pmap)#exit
Switch(config)#policy-map vlan-plcmap 
Switch(config-pmap)#class-map cm-1 
Switch(config-pmap-c)#set dscp 7 
Switch(config-pmap-c)#service-policy port-plcmap-1 
Switch(config-pmap-c)#exit 
Switch(config-pmap)#class-map cm-2
Switch(config-pmap-c)#match ip dscp 2
Switch(config-pmap-c)#service-policy port-plcmap-1
Switch(config-pmap)#exit
Switch(config-pmap)#class-map cm-3
Switch(config-pmap-c)#match ip dscp 3
Switch(config-pmap-c)#service-policy port-plcmap-2
Switch(config-pmap)#exit
Switch(config-pmap)#class-map cm-4
Switch(config-pmap-c)#trust dscp 
Switch(config-pmap)#exit
Switch(config)#int vlan 10
Switch(config-if)# 
Switch(config-if)#ser input vlan-plcmap 
Switch(config-if)#exit 
Switch(config)#exit 
Switch#

You can verify your settings by entering the show running-config privileged EXEC command.

Related Commands

Command
Description

policy-map

Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to multiple ports to specify a service policy.

show policy-map

Displays QoS policy maps.

show running-config

Displays the running configuration on the switch. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2 > File Management Commands > Configuration File Management Commands.


session

Use the session privileged EXEC command on the stack master to access a specific stack member.

session stack-member-number

Syntax Description

stack-member-number

Specify the stack member number. The range is 1 to 9.


Defaults

No default is defined.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

When you access the stack member, its stack member number is appended to the system prompt.

Examples

This example shows how to access stack member 6:

Switch# session 6
Switch-6#

Related Commands

Command
Description

reload

Reloads the stack member and puts a configuration change into effect.

switch priority

Changes the stack member priority value.

switch renumber

Changes the stack member number.

show switch

Displays information about the switch stack and its stack members.


set

Use the set policy-map class configuration command on the switch stack or on a standalone switch to classify IP traffic by setting a Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) or an IP-precedence value in the packet. Use the no form of this command to remove traffic classification.

set {dscp new-dscp | [ip] precedence new-precedence}

no set {dscp new-dscp | [ip] precedence new-precedence}

Syntax Description

dscp new-dscp

New DSCP value assigned to the classified traffic. The range is 0 to 63. You also can enter a mnemonic name for a commonly used value.

[ip] precedence new-precedence

New IP-precedence value assigned to the classified traffic. The range is 0 to 7. You also can enter a mnemonic name for a commonly used value.


Defaults

No traffic classification is defined.

Command Modes

Policy-map class configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SE

The ip dscp new-dscp keyword was changed to dscp new-dscp.

The set dscp new-dscp command replaces the set ip dscp new-dscp command.

12.2(25)SEC

The ip keyword is optional.


Usage Guidelines

In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SE or later, if you have used the set ip dscp command, the switch changes this command to set dscp in the switch configuration. If you enter the set ip dscp command, this setting appears as set dscp in the switch configuration.

In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)SEC or later, you can use the set ip precedence or the set precedence command. This setting appears as set ip precedence in the switch configuration.

The set command is mutually exclusive with the trust policy-map class configuration command within the same policy map.

For the set dscp new-dscp or the set ip precedence new-precedence command, you can enter a mnemonic name for a commonly used value. For example, you can enter the set dscp af11 command, which is the same as entering the set dscp 10 command. You can enter the set ip precedence critical command, which is the same as entering the set ip precedence 5 command. For a list of supported mnemonics, enter the set dscp ? or the set ip precedence ? command to see the command-line help strings.

To return to policy-map configuration mode, use the exit command. To return to privileged EXEC mode, use the end command.

Examples

This example shows how to assign DSCP 10 to all FTP traffic without any policers:

Switch(config)# policy-map policy_ftp
Switch(config-pmap)# class ftp_class
Switch(config-pmap-c)# set dscp 10
Switch(config-pmap)# exit

You can verify your settings by entering the show policy-map privileged EXEC command.

Related Commands

Command
Description

class

Defines a traffic classification match criteria (through the police, set, and trust policy-map class configuration commands) for the specified class-map name.

police

Defines a policer for classified traffic.

policy-map

Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to multiple ports to specify a service policy.

show policy-map

Displays QoS policy maps.

trust

Defines a trust state for traffic classified through the class policy-map configuration command or the class-map global configuration command.


setup

Use the setup privileged EXEC command to configure the switch with its initial configuration.

setup

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

When you use the setup command, make sure that you have this information:

IP address and network mask

Password strategy for your environment

Whether the switch will be used as the cluster command switch and the cluster name

When you enter the setup command, an interactive dialog, called the System Configuration Dialog, appears. It guides you through the configuration process and prompts you for information. The values shown in brackets next to each prompt are the default values last set by using either the setup command facility or the configure privileged EXEC command.

Help text is provided for each prompt. To access help text, press the question mark (?) key at a prompt.

To return to the privileged EXEC prompt without making changes and without running through the entire System Configuration Dialog, press Ctrl-C.

When you complete your changes, the setup program shows you the configuration command script that was created during the setup session. You can save the configuration in NVRAM or return to the setup program or the command-line prompt without saving it.

Examples

This is an example of output from the setup command:

Switch# setup
--- System Configuration Dialog ---

Continue with configuration dialog? [yes/no]: yes

At any point you may enter a question mark '?' for help.
Use ctrl-c to abort configuration dialog at any prompt.
Default settings are in square brackets '[]'.

Basic management setup configures only enough connectivity
for management of the system, extended setup will ask you
to configure each interface on the system.

Would you like to enter basic management setup? [yes/no]: yes
Configuring global parameters:

Enter host name [Switch]:host-name

  The enable secret is a password used to protect access to
  privileged EXEC and configuration modes. This password, after
  entered, becomes encrypted in the configuration.
  Enter enable secret: enable-secret-password

  The enable password is used when you do not specify an
  enable secret password, with some older software versions, and
  some boot images.
  Enter enable password: enable-password

  The virtual terminal password is used to protect
  access to the router over a network interface.
  Enter virtual terminal password: terminal-password

  Configure SNMP Network Management? [no]: yes
  Community string [public]: 

Current interface summary
Any interface listed with OK? value "NO" does not have a valid configuration

Interface                  IP-Address      OK? Method Status                Protocol
Vlan1                      172.20.135.202  YES NVRAM  up                    up

GigabitEthernet6/0/1         unassigned      YES unset  up                    up

GigabitEthernet6/0/2         unassigned      YES unset  up                    down

<output truncated>

Port-channel1              unassigned      YES unset  up                    down

Enter interface name used to connect to the
management network from the above interface summary: vlan1

Configuring interface vlan1:
Configure IP on this interface? [yes]: yes 
IP address for this interface: ip_address
Subnet mask for this interface [255.0.0.0]: subnet_mask

Would you like to enable as a cluster command switch? [yes/no]: yes

Enter cluster name: cluster-name

The following configuration command script was created:

hostname host-name
enable secret 5 $1$LiBw$0Xc1wyT.PXPkuhFwqyhVi0
enable password enable-password
line vty 0 15
password terminal-password
snmp-server community public
!
no ip routing
!
interface GigabitEthernet6/0/1
no ip address
!
interface GigabitEthernet6/0/2
no ip address
! 

cluster enable cluster-name
!
end
Use this configuration? [yes/no]: yes
!
[0] Go to the IOS command prompt without saving this config.

[1] Return back to the setup without saving this config.

[2] Save this configuration to nvram and exit.

Enter your selection [2]:

Related Commands

Command
Description

show running-config

Displays the running configuration on the switch. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2 > File Management Commands > Configuration File Management Commands.

show version

Displays version information for the hardware and firmware.


setup express

Use the setup express global configuration command to enable Express Setup mode on the switch stack or on a standalone switch. Use the no form of this command to disable Express Setup mode.

setup express

no setup express

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Defaults

Express Setup is enabled.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

When Express Setup is enabled on a new (unconfigured) switch, pressing the Mode button for 2 seconds activates Express Setup. You can access the switch through an Ethernet port by using the IP address 10.0.0.1 and then can configure the switch with the web-based Express Setup program or the command-line interface (CLI)-based setup program.

When you press the Mode button for 2 seconds on a configured switch, the LEDs above the Mode button start blinking. If you press the Mode button for a total of 10 seconds, the switch configuration is deleted, and the switch reboots. The switch can then be configured like a new switch, either through the web-based Express Setup program or the CLI-based setup program.


Note As soon as you make any change to the switch configuration (including entering no at the beginning of the CLI-based setup program), configuration by Express Setup is no longer available. You can only run Express Setup again by pressing the Mode button for 10 seconds. This deletes the switch configuration and reboots the switch.


If Express Setup is active on the switch, entering the write memory or copy running-configuration startup-configuration privileged EXEC commands deactivates Express Setup. The IP address 10.0.0.1 is no longer valid on the switch, and your connection using this IP address ends.

The primary purpose of the no setup express command is to prevent someone from deleting the switch configuration by pressing the Mode button for 10 seconds.

Examples

This example shows how to enable Express Setup mode:

Switch(config)# setup express

You can verify that Express Setup mode is enabled by pressing the Mode button:

On an unconfigured switch, the LEDs above the Mode button turn solid green after 3 seconds.

On a configured switch, the mode LEDs begin blinking after 2 seconds and turn solid green after 10 seconds.


Caution If you hold the Mode button down for a total of 10 seconds, the configuration is deleted, and the switch reboots.

This example shows how to disable Express Setup mode:

Switch(config)# no setup express

You can verify that Express Setup mode is disabled by pressing the Mode button. The mode LEDs do not turn solid green or begin blinking green if Express Setup mode is not enabled on the switch.

Related Commands

Command
Description

show setup express

Displays if Express Setup mode is active.


show access-lists

Use the show access-lists privileged EXEC command to display access control lists (ACLs) configured on the switch.

show access-lists [name | number | hardware counters | ipc] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

name

(Optional) Name of the ACL.

number

(Optional) ACL number. The range is 1 to 2699.

hardware counters

(Optional) Display global hardware ACL statistics for switched and routed packets.

ipc

(Optional) Display Interprocess Communication (IPC) protocol access-list configuration download information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.



Note Though visible in the command-line help strings, the rate-limit keywords are not supported.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The ipc keyword was added.


Usage Guidelines

The switch supports only IP standard and extended access lists. Therefore, the allowed numbers are only 1 to 199 and 1300 to 2699.

This command also displays the MAC ACLs that are configured.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show access-lists command:

Switch# show access-lists
Standard IP access list 1
    10 permit 1.1.1.1
    20 permit 2.2.2.2
    30 permit any
    40 permit 0.255.255.255, wildcard bits 12.0.0.0
Standard IP access list videowizard_1-1-1-1
    10 permit 1.1.1.1
Standard IP access list videowizard_10-10-10-10
    10 permit 10.10.10.10
Extended IP access list 121
    10 permit ahp host 10.10.10.10 host 20.20.10.10 precedence routine
Extended IP access list CMP-NAT-ACL
    Dynamic Cluster-HSRP deny   ip any any
    10 deny ip any host 19.19.11.11
    20 deny ip any host 10.11.12.13
    Dynamic Cluster-NAT permit ip any any
    10 permit ip host 10.99.100.128 any
    20 permit ip host 10.46.22.128 any
    30 permit ip host 10.45.101.64 any
    40 permit ip host 10.45.20.64 any
    50 permit ip host 10.213.43.128 any
    60 permit ip host 10.91.28.64 any
    70 permit ip host 10.99.75.128 any
    80 permit ip host 10.38.49.0 any 

This is an example of output from the show access-lists hardware counters command:

Switch# show access-lists hardware counters
L2 ACL INPUT Statistics
     Drop:                All frame count: 855
     Drop:                All bytes count: 94143
     Drop And Log:        All frame count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All bytes count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All bytes count: 0
     Forwarded:           All frame count: 2121
     Forwarded:           All bytes count: 180762
     Forwarded And Log:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarded And Log:   All bytes count: 0

 L3 ACL INPUT Statistics
     Drop:                All frame count: 0
     Drop:                All bytes count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All frame count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All bytes count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All bytes count: 0
     Forwarded:           All frame count: 13586
     Forwarded:           All bytes count: 1236182
     Forwarded And Log:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarded And Log:   All bytes count: 0

 L2 ACL OUTPUT Statistics
     Drop:                All frame count: 0
     Drop:                All bytes count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All frame count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All bytes count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All bytes count: 0
     Forwarded:           All frame count: 232983
     Forwarded:           All bytes count: 16825661
     Forwarded And Log:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarded And Log:   All bytes count: 0

 L3 ACL OUTPUT Statistics
     Drop:                All frame count: 0
     Drop:                All bytes count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All frame count: 0
     Drop And Log:        All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only:         All bytes count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All frame count: 0
     Bridge Only And Log: All bytes count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarding To CPU:   All bytes count: 0
     Forwarded:           All frame count: 514434
     Forwarded:           All bytes count: 39048748
     Forwarded And Log:   All frame count: 0
     Forwarded And Log:   All bytes count: 0

Related Commands

Command
Description

access-list

Configures a standard or extended numbered access list on the switch. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS IP Command Reference, Volume 1 of 3:Addressing and Services, Release 12.2 > IP Services Commands.

ip access list

Configures a named IP access list on the switch. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS IP Command Reference, Volume 1 of 3:Addressing and Services, Release 12.2 > IP Services Commands.

mac access-list extended

Configures a named or numbered MAC access list on the switch.


show archive status

Use the show archive status privileged EXEC command to display the status of a new image being downloaded to a switch with the HTTP or the TFTP protocol.

show archive status [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If you use the archive download-sw privileged EXEC command to download an image to a TFTP server, the output of the archive download-sw command shows the status of the download.

If you do not have a TFTP server, you can use Network Assistant or the embedded device manager to download the image by using HTTP. The show archive status command shows the progress of the download.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

These are examples of output from the show archive status command:

Switch# show archive status
IDLE: No upgrade in progress

Switch# show archive status
LOADING: Upgrade in progress

Switch# show archive status
EXTRACT: Extracting the image

Switch# show archive status
VERIFY: Verifying software

Switch# show archive status
RELOAD: Upgrade completed. Reload pending

Related Commands

Command
Description

archive download-sw

Downloads a new image from a TFTP server to the switch.


show arp access-list

Use the show arp access-list user EXEC command to display detailed information about Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) access control (lists).

show arp access-list [acl-name] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

This command is available only if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

Syntax Description

acl-name

(Optional) Name of the ACL.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show arp access-list command:

Switch> show arp access-list
ARP access list rose
    permit ip 10.101.1.1 0.0.0.255 mac any
    permit ip 20.3.1.0 0.0.0.255 mac any

Related Commands

Command
Description

arp access-list

Defines an ARP ACL.

deny (ARP access-list configuration)

Denies an ARP packet based on matches against the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) bindings.

ip arp inspection filter vlan

Permits ARP requests and responses from a host configured with a static IP address.

permit (ARP access-list configuration)

Permits an ARP packet based on matches against the DHCP bindings.


show auto qos

Use the show auto qos user EXEC command to display the quality of service (QoS) commands entered on the interfaces on which automatic QoS (auto-QoS) is enabled.

show auto qos [interface [interface-id]]

Syntax Description

interface [interface-id]

(Optional) Display auto-QoS information for the specified port or for all ports. Valid interfaces include physical ports.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.

12.2(20)SE

The information in the command output changed, and the user guidelines were updated.


Usage Guidelines

In releases earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.2(20)SE, the show auto qos [interface [interface-id]] command output shows the initial generated auto-QoS configuration.

In Cisco IOS Release 12.2(20)SE or later, the show auto qos command output shows only the auto-QoS command entered on each interface. The show auto qos interface interface-id command output shows the auto-QoS command entered on a specific interface.

Use the show running-config privileged EXEC command to display the auto-QoS configuration and the user modifications.

To display information about the QoS configuration that might be affected by auto-QoS, use one of these commands:

show mls qos

show mls qos maps cos-dscp

show mls qos interface [interface-id] [buffers | queueing]

show mls qos maps [cos-dscp | cos-input-q | cos-output-q | dscp-cos | dscp-input-q | dscp-output-q]

show mls qos input-queue

show running-config

Examples

This is an example of output from the show auto qos command after the auto qos voip cisco-phone and the auto qos voip cisco-softphone interface configuration commands are entered:

Switch> show auto qos 
GigabitEthernet2/0/4
auto qos voip cisco-softphone

GigabitEthernet2/0/5
auto qos voip cisco-phone

GigabitEthernet2/0/6
auto qos voip cisco-phone

This is an example of output from the show auto qos interface interface-id command when 
the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command is entered:

Switch> show auto qos interface gigabitethernet 2/0/5
GigabitEthernet2/0/5
auto qos voip cisco-phone

This is an example of output from the show running-config privileged EXEC command when the auto qos voip cisco-phone and the auto qos voip cisco-softphone interface configuration commands are entered:

Switch# show running-config
Building configuration...
...
mls qos map policed-dscp  24 26 46 to 0
mls qos map cos-dscp 0 8 16 26 32 46 48 56
mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth 90 10
mls qos srr-queue input threshold 1 8 16
mls qos srr-queue input threshold 2 34 66
mls qos srr-queue input buffers 67 33
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue 1 threshold 2  1
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue 1 threshold 3  0
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue 2 threshold 1  2
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue 2 threshold 2  4 6 7
mls qos srr-queue input cos-map queue 2 threshold 3  3 5
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 1 threshold 2  9 10 11 12 13 14 15
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 1 threshold 3  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 1 threshold 3  32
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 1  16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 2  33 34 35 36 37 38 39 48
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 2  49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 2  57 58 59 60 61 62 63
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3  24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3  40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 1 threshold 3  5
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 2 threshold 3  3 6 7
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 3 threshold 3  2 4
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 4 threshold 2  1
mls qos srr-queue output cos-map queue 4 threshold 3  0
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 1 threshold 3  40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3  24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3  48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 2 threshold 3  56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 3 threshold 3  16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 3 threshold 3  32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 1  8
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 2  9 10 11 12 13 14 15
mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map queue 4 threshold 3  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 1 100 100 100 100
mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 2 75 75 75 250
mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 3 75 150 100 300
mls qos queue-set output 1 threshold 4 50 100 75 400
mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 1 100 100 100 100
mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 2 35 35 35 35
mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 3 55 82 100 182
mls qos queue-set output 2 threshold 4 90 250 100 400
mls qos queue-set output 1 buffers 15 20 20 45
mls qos queue-set output 2 buffers 24 20 26 30
mls qos
...
!
class-map match-all AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
  match ip dscp ef
class-map match-all AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
  match ip dscp cs3  af31
!
policy-map AutoQoS-Police-SoftPhone
  class AutoQoS-VoIP-RTP-Trust
   set dscp ef
    police 320000 8000 exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
  class AutoQoS-VoIP-Control-Trust
   set dscp cs3
    police 32000 8000 exceed-action policed-dscp-transmit
!
...
!
interface GigabitEthernet2/0/4
 switchport mode access
 switchport port-security maximum 400
 service-policy input AutoQoS-Police-SoftPhone
 speed 100
 duplex half
 srr-queue bandwidth share 10 10 60 20
 srr-queue bandwidth shape  10  0  0  0
 auto qos voip cisco-softphone
!
interface GigabitEthernet2/0/5
 switchport mode access
 switchport port-security maximum 1999
 speed 100
 duplex full
 srr-queue bandwidth share 10 10 60 20
 srr-queue bandwidth shape  10  0  0  0
 mls qos trust device cisco-phone
 mls qos trust cos
 auto qos voip cisco-phone
!
interface GigabitEthernet2/0/6
 switchport trunk encapsulation dot1q
 switchport trunk native vlan 2
 switchport mode access
 speed 10
 srr-queue bandwidth share 10 10 60 20
 srr-queue bandwidth shape  10  0  0  0
 mls qos trust device cisco-phone
 mls qos trust cos
 auto qos voip cisco-phone
!
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show auto qos interface interface-id command when the auto qos voip cisco-phone interface configuration command is entered:

Switch> show auto qos interface fastethernet1/0/2
FastEthernet1/0/2
auto qos voip cisco-phone

These are examples of output from the show auto qos command when auto-QoS is disabled on the switch:

Switch> show auto qos
AutoQoS not enabled on any interface

These are examples of output from the show auto qos interface interface-id command when auto-QoS is disabled on an interface:

Switch> show auto qos interface gigabitethernet3/0/1
AutoQoS is disabled

Related Commands

Command
Description

auto qos voip

Automatically configures QoS for VoIP within a QoS domain.

debug auto qos

Enables debugging of the auto-QoS feature.


show boot

Use the show boot privileged EXEC command to display the settings of the boot environment variables.

show boot [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show boot command for all stack members. Table 2-17 describes each field in the display.

Switch# show boot
BOOT path-list      :flash:/c3750-ipservices-mz
Config file         :flash:/config.text
Private Config file :flash:/private-config.text
Enable Break        :no
Manual Boot         :yes
HELPER path-list    :
Auto upgrade        :yes
-------------------
Switch 1
-------------------
BOOT path-list      :flash:/c3750-ipservices-mz
Config file         :flash:/config.text
Private Config file :flash:/private-config.text
Enable Break        :no
Manual Boot         :yes
HELPER path-list    :

Auto upgrade        :no

<output truncated>

Table 2-17 show boot Field Descriptions

Field
Description

BOOT path-list

Displays a semicolon separated list of executable files to try to load and execute when automatically booting.

If the BOOT environment variable is not set, the system attempts to load and execute the first executable image it can find by using a recursive, depth-first search through the flash file system. In a depth-first search of a directory, each encountered subdirectory is completely searched before continuing the search in the original directory.

If the BOOT variable is set but the specified images cannot be loaded, the system attempts to boot the first bootable file that it can find in the flash file system.

Config file

Displays the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the system configuration.

Private Config file

Displays the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the system configuration.

Enable Break

Displays whether a break during booting is enabled or disabled. If it is set to yes, on, or 1, you can interrupt the automatic boot process by pressing the Break key on the console after the flash file system is initialized.

Manual Boot

Displays whether the switch automatically or manually boots. If it is set to no or 0, the boot loader attempts to automatically boot the system. If it is set to anything else, you must manually boot the switch from the boot loader mode.

Helper path-list

Displays a semicolon separated list of loadable files to dynamically load during the boot loader initialization. Helper files extend or patch the functionality of the boot loader.

Auto upgrade

Displays whether the switch stack is set to automatically copy its software version to an incompatible switch so that it can join the stack.

A switch in version-mismatch (VM) mode is a switch that has a different stack protocol version than the version on the switch stack. Switches in VM mode cannot join the switch stack. If the switch stack has an image that can be copied to a switch in VM mode, and if the boot auto-copy-sw feature is enabled, the switch stack automatically copies the image from another stack member to the switch in VM mode. The switch then exits VM mode, reboots, and joins the switch stack.


Related Commands

Command
Description

boot auto-copy-sw

Enables the automatic upgrade (auto-upgrade) process to automatically upgrade a switch in version-mismatch (VM) mode.

boot config-file

Specifies the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the system configuration.

boot enable-break

Enables interrupting the automatic boot process.

boot manual

Enables manually booting the switch during the next boot cycle.

boot private-config-file

Specifies the filename that Cisco IOS uses to read and write a nonvolatile copy of the private configuration.

boot system

Specifies the Cisco IOS image to load during the next boot cycle.


show cable-diagnostics tdr

Use the show cable-diagnostics tdr privileged EXEC command to display the Time Domain Reflector (TDR) results.

show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

Specify the interface on which TDR was run.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

TDR is supported only on 10/100/100 copper Ethernet ports. It is not supported on 10/100 ports, 10-Gigabit module ports, or on SFP module ports. For more information about TDR, see the software configuration guide for this release.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command on a switch other than a Catalyst 3750G-24PS or 3750G-48PS switch:

Switch# show cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
TDR test last run on: March 01 20:15:40
Interface Speed Local pair Pair length        Remote pair Pair status
--------- ----- ---------- ------------------ ----------- --------------------
Gi1/0/2   auto  Pair A     0    +/- 2  meters N/A         Open
                
                Pair B     0    +/- 2  meters N/A         Open
                Pair C     0    +/- 2  meters N/A         Open
                Pair D     0    +/- 2  meters N/A         Open

This is an example of output from the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command on a Catalyst 3750G-24PS or 3750G-48PS switch:

Switch# show cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
TDR test last run on: March 01 20:15:40
Interface Speed Local pair Pair length        Remote pair Pair status
--------- ----- ---------- ------------------ ----------- --------------------
Gi1/0/2   auto  Pair A     0    +/- 4 meters  N/A         Open
                
                Pair B     0    +/- 4 meters  N/A         Open
                Pair C     0    +/- 4 meters  N/A         Open
                Pair D     0    +/- 4 meters  N/A         Open

Table 2-18 lists the descriptions of the fields in the show cable-diagnostics tdr command output.

Table 2-18 Fields Descriptions for the show cable-diagnostics tdr Command Output 

Field
Description

Interface

Interface on which TDR was run.

Speed

Speed of connection.

Local pair

Name of the pair of wires that TDR is testing on the local interface.

Pair length

Location on the cable where the problem is, with respect to your switch. TDR can only find the location in one of these cases:

The cable is properly connected, the link is up, and the interface speed is 1000 Mbps.

The cable is open.

The cable has a short.

Remote pair

Name of the pair of wires to which the local pair is connected. TDR can learn about the remote pair only when the cable is properly connected and the link is up.

Pair status

The status of the pair of wires on which TDR is running:

Normal—The pair of wires is properly connected.

Not completed—The test is running and is not completed.

Not supported—The interface does not support TDR.

Open—The pair of wires is open.

Shorted—The pair of wires is shorted.


This is an example of output from the show interface interface-id command when TDR is running:

Switch# show interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
gigabitethernet1/0/2 is up, line protocol is up (connected: TDR in Progress)

This is an example of output from the show cable-diagnostics tdr interface interface-id command when TDR is not running:

Switch# show cable-diagnostics tdr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
% TDR test was never issued on Gi1/0/2

If an interface does not support TDR, this message appears:

% TDR test is not supported on switch 1

Related Commands

Command
Description

test cable-diagnostics tdr

Enables and runs TDR on an interface.


show class-map

Use the show class-map user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) class maps, which define the match criteria to classify traffic.

show class-map [class-map-name] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

class-map-name

(Optional) Display the contents of the specified class map.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show class-map command:

Switch> show class-map 
Class Map match-all videowizard_10-10-10-10 (id 2)
   Match access-group name videowizard_10-10-10-10

 Class Map match-any class-default (id 0)
   Match any
 Class Map match-all dscp5 (id 3)
   Match ip dscp 5

Related Commands

Command
Description

class-map

Creates a class map to be used for matching packets to the class whose name you specify.

match (class-map configuration)

Defines the match criteria to classify traffic.


show cluster

Use the show cluster user EXEC command to display the cluster status and a summary of the cluster to which the switch belongs. This command can be entered on the cluster command switch and cluster member switches.

show cluster [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If you enter this command on a switch that is not a cluster member, the error message Not a management cluster member appears.

On a cluster member switch, this command displays the identity of the cluster command switch, the switch member number, and the state of its connectivity with the cluster command switch.

On a cluster command switch stack or cluster command switch, this command displays the cluster name and the total number of members. It also shows the cluster status and time since the status changed. If redundancy is enabled, it displays the primary and secondary command-switch information.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output when the show cluster command is entered on the active cluster command switch:

Switch> show cluster
Command switch for cluster "Ajang"
        Total number of members:        7
        Status:                         1 members are unreachable
        Time since last status change:  0 days, 0 hours, 2 minutes
        Redundancy:                     Enabled
                Standby command switch: Member 1
                Standby Group:          Ajang_standby
                Standby Group Number:   110
        Heartbeat interval:             8
        Heartbeat hold-time:            80
        Extended discovery hop count:   3 

This is an example of output when the show cluster command is entered on a cluster member switch:

Switch1> show cluster
Member switch for cluster "hapuna"
        Member number:                  3
        Management IP address:          192.192.192.192
        Command switch mac address:     0000.0c07.ac14
        Heartbeat interval:             8
        Heartbeat hold-time:            80 

This is an example of output when the show cluster command is entered on a cluster member switch that is configured as the standby cluster command switch:

Switch> show cluster
Member switch for cluster "hapuna"
        Member number:                  3 (Standby command switch)
        Management IP address:          192.192.192.192
        Command switch mac address:     0000.0c07.ac14
        Heartbeat interval:             8
        Heartbeat hold-time:            80 

This is an example of output when the show cluster command is entered on the cluster command switch that has lost connectivity with member 1:

Switch> show cluster
Command switch for cluster "Ajang"
        Total number of members:        7
        Status:                         1 members are unreachable
        Time since last status change:  0 days, 0 hours, 5 minutes
        Redundancy:                     Disabled
        Heartbeat interval:             8
        Heartbeat hold-time:            80
        Extended discovery hop count:   3 

This is an example of output when the show cluster command is entered on a cluster member switch that has lost connectivity with the cluster command switch:

Switch> show cluster
Member switch for cluster "hapuna"
        Member number:                  <UNKNOWN>
        Management IP address:          192.192.192.192
        Command switch mac address:     0000.0c07.ac14
        Heartbeat interval:             8
        Heartbeat hold-time:            80 

Related Commands

Command
Description

cluster enable

Enables a command-capable switch as the cluster command switch, assigns a cluster name, and optionally assigns a member number to it.

show cluster candidates

Displays a list of candidate switches.

show cluster members

Displays information about the cluster members.


show cluster candidates

Use the show cluster candidates privileged EXEC command on a switch stack or on a cluster command switch to display a list of candidate switches.

show cluster candidates [detail | mac-address H.H.H.] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

detail

(Optional) Display detailed information for all candidates.

mac-address H.H.H.

(Optional) MAC address of the cluster candidate.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

This command is available only on the cluster command switch stack or cluster command switch.

If the switch is not a cluster command switch, the command displays an empty line at the prompt.

The SN in the display means switch member number. If E appears in the SN column, it means that the switch is discovered through extended discovery. If E does not appear in the SN column, it means that the switch member number is the upstream neighbor of the candidate switch. The hop count is the number of devices the candidate is from the cluster command switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show cluster candidates command:

Switch> show cluster candidates
                                                             |---Upstream---|
MAC Address    Name         Device Type      PortIf  FEC Hops SN PortIf  FEC
00d0.7961.c4c0 StLouis-2    WS-C3750-12T     Gi6/0/1      2   1  Fa0/11 
00d0.bbf5.e900 ldf-dist-128 WS-C3524-XL      Fa0/7        1   0  Fa0/24      
00e0.1e7e.be80 1900_Switch  1900             3        0   1   0  Fa0/11      
00e0.1e9f.7a00 Surfers-24   WS-C2924-XL      Fa0/5        1   0  Fa0/3       
00e0.1e9f.8c00 Surfers-12-2 WS-C2912-XL      Fa0/4        1   0  Fa0/7       
00e0.1e9f.8c40 Surfers-12-1 WS-C2912-XL      Fa0/1        1   0  Fa0/9       

This is an example of output from the show cluster candidates command that uses the MAC address of a cluster member switch directly connected to the cluster command switch:

Switch> show cluster candidates mac-address 00d0.7961.c4c0
Device 'Tahiti-12' with mac address number 00d0.7961.c4c0
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3750-12T
        Upstream MAC address:   00d0.796d.2f00 (Cluster Member 0)
        Local port:             Gi6/0/1   FEC number:
        Upstream port:          GI6/0/11  FEC Number:
Hops from cluster edge: 1
        Hops from command device: 1

This is an example of output from the show cluster candidates command that uses the MAC address of a cluster member switch three hops from the cluster edge:

Switch> show cluster candidates mac-address 0010.7bb6.1cc0
Device 'Ventura' with mac address number 0010.7bb6.1cc0
        Device type:            cisco WS-C2912MF-XL
        Upstream MAC address:   0010.7bb6.1cd4
        Local port:             Fa2/1   FEC number: 
        Upstream port:          Fa0/24  FEC Number: 
        Hops from cluster edge: 3
        Hops from command device: -

This is an example of output from the show cluster candidates detail command:

Switch> show cluster candidates detail
Device 'Tahiti-12' with mac address number 00d0.7961.c4c0
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3512-XL
        Upstream MAC address:   00d0.796d.2f00 (Cluster Member 1)
        Local port:             Fa0/3   FEC number: 
        Upstream port:          Fa0/13  FEC Number: 
        Hops from cluster edge: 1
        Hops from command device: 2
Device '1900_Switch' with mac address number 00e0.1e7e.be80
        Device type:            cisco 1900
        Upstream MAC address:   00d0.796d.2f00 (Cluster Member 2)
        Local port:             3       FEC number: 0
        Upstream port:          Fa0/11  FEC Number: 
        Hops from cluster edge: 1
        Hops from command device: 2
Device 'Surfers-24' with mac address number 00e0.1e9f.7a00
        Device type:            cisco WS-C2924-XL
        Upstream MAC address:   00d0.796d.2f00 (Cluster Member 3)
        Local port:             Fa0/5   FEC number: 
        Upstream port:          Fa0/3   FEC Number: 
        Hops from cluster edge: 1
        Hops from command device: 2

Related Commands

Command
Description

show cluster

Displays the cluster status and a summary of the cluster to which the switch belongs.

show cluster members

Displays information about the cluster members.


show cluster members

Use the show cluster members privileged EXEC command on a switch stack or on a cluster command switch to display information about the cluster members.

show cluster members [n | detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

n

(Optional) Number that identifies a cluster member. The range is 0 to 15.

detail

(Optional) Display detailed information for all cluster members.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

This command is available only on the cluster command switch stack or cluster command switch.

If the cluster has no members, this command displays an empty line at the prompt.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show cluster members command. The SN in the display means switch number.

Switch# show cluster members
                                                |---Upstream---|
SN MAC Address    Name         PortIf FEC Hops   SN PortIf  FEC  State
0  0002.4b29.2e00 StLouis1                 0                    Up   (Cmdr)
1  0030.946c.d740 tal-switch-1 Fa0/13      1     0  Gi0/1       Up
2  0002.b922.7180 nms-2820     10      0   2     1  Fa0/18      Up
3  0002.4b29.4400 SanJuan2     Gi0/1       2     1  Fa0/11      Up
4  0002.4b28.c480 GenieTest    Gi0/2       2     1  Fa0/9       Up

This is an example of output from the show cluster members for cluster member 3:

Switch# show cluster members 3
Device 'SanJuan2' with member number 3
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3750
        MAC address:            0002.4b29.4400
        Upstream MAC address:   0030.946c.d740 (Cluster member 1)
        Local port:             Gi6/0/1   FEC number:
        Upstream port:          GI6/0/11  FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 2    

This is an example of output from the show cluster members detail command:

Switch# show cluster members detail
Device 'StLouis1' with member number 0 (Command Switch)
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3750
        MAC address:            0002.4b29.2e00
        Upstream MAC address:
        Local port:                     FEC number:
        Upstream port:                  FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 0                 
Device 'tal-switch-14' with member number 1
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3548-XL
        MAC address:            0030.946c.d740
        Upstream MAC address:   0002.4b29.2e00 (Cluster member 0)
        Local port:             Fa0/13  FEC number:
        Upstream port:          Gi0/1   FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 1                   
Device 'nms-2820' with member number 2
        Device type:            cisco 2820
        MAC address:            0002.b922.7180
        Upstream MAC address:   0030.946c.d740 (Cluster member 1)
        Local port:             10      FEC number: 0
        Upstream port:          Fa0/18  FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 2                        
Device 'SanJuan2' with member number 3
        Device type:            cisco WS-C3750
        MAC address:            0002.4b29.4400
        Upstream MAC address:   0030.946c.d740 (Cluster member 1)
        Local port:             Gi6/0/1   FEC number:
        Upstream port:          Fa6/0/11  FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 2
Device 'GenieTest' with member number 4
        Device type:            cisco SeaHorse
        MAC address:            0002.4b28.c480
        Upstream MAC address:   0030.946c.d740 (Cluster member 1)
        Local port:             Gi0/2   FEC number:
        Upstream port:          Fa0/9   FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 2
Device 'Palpatine' with member number 5
        Device type:            cisco WS-C2924M-XL
        MAC address:            00b0.6404.f8c0
        Upstream MAC address:   0002.4b29.2e00 (Cluster member 0)
        Local port:             Gi2/1   FEC number:
        Upstream port:          Gi0/7   FEC Number:
        Hops from command device: 1                            

Related Commands

Command
Description

show cluster

Displays the cluster status and a summary of the cluster to which the switch belongs.

show cluster candidates

Displays a list of candidate switches.


show controllers cpu-interface

Use the show controllers cpu-interface privileged EXEC command to display the state of the CPU network interface ASIC and the send and receive statistics for packets reaching the CPU.

show controllers cpu-interface [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

This display provides information that might be useful for Cisco technical support representatives troubleshooting the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is a partial output example from the show controllers cpu-interface command:

Switch# show controllers cpu-interface
cpu-queue-frames  retrieved  dropped    invalid    hol-block
----------------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------
rpc               4523063    0          0          0
stp               1545035    0          0          0
ipc               1903047    0          0          0
routing protocol  96145      0          0          0
L2 protocol       79596      0          0          0
remote console    0          0          0          0
sw forwarding     5756       0          0          0
host              225646     0          0          0
broadcast         46472      0          0          0
cbt-to-spt        0          0          0          0
igmp snooping     68411      0          0          0
icmp              0          0          0          0
logging           0          0          0          0
rpf-fail          0          0          0          0
queue14           0          0          0          0
cpu heartbeat     1710501    0          0          0

Supervisor ASIC receive-queue parameters
----------------------------------------
 queue 0 maxrecevsize 5EE pakhead 1419A20 paktail 13EAED4
 queue 1 maxrecevsize 5EE pakhead 15828E0 paktail 157FBFC
 queue 2 maxrecevsize 5EE pakhead 1470D40 paktail 1470FE4
 queue 3 maxrecevsize 5EE pakhead 19CDDD0 paktail 19D02C8

<output truncated>

Supervisor ASIC Mic Registers
------------------------------
MicDirectPollInfo               80000800
MicIndicationsReceived          00000000
MicInterruptsReceived           00000000
MicPcsInfo                      0001001F
MicPlbMasterConfiguration       00000000
MicRxFifosAvailable             00000000
MicRxFifosReady                 0000BFFF
MicTimeOutPeriod:       FrameTOPeriod: 00000EA6 DirectTOPeriod: 00004000

<output truncated>

MicTransmitFifoInfo:
Fifo0:   StartPtrs:     038C2800        ReadPtr:        038C2C38
        WritePtrs:      038C2C38        Fifo_Flag:      8A800800
        Weights:        001E001E
Fifo1:  StartPtr:       03A9BC00        ReadPtr:        03A9BC60
        WritePtrs:      03A9BC60        Fifo_Flag:      89800400
        writeHeaderPtr: 03A9BC60
Fifo2:  StartPtr:       038C8800        ReadPtr:        038C88E0
        WritePtrs:      038C88E0        Fifo_Flag:      88800200
        writeHeaderPtr: 038C88E0
Fifo3:  StartPtr:       03C30400        ReadPtr:        03C30638
        WritePtrs:      03C30638        Fifo_Flag:      89800400
        writeHeaderPtr: 03C30638
Fifo4:  StartPtr:       03AD5000        ReadPtr:        03AD50A0
        WritePtrs:      03AD50A0        Fifo_Flag:      89800400
        writeHeaderPtr: 03AD50A0
Fifo5:  StartPtr:       03A7A600        ReadPtr:        03A7A600
        WritePtrs:      03A7A600        Fifo_Flag:      88800200
        writeHeaderPtr: 03A7A600
Fifo6:  StartPtr:       03BF8400        ReadPtr:        03BF87F0
        WritePtrs:      03BF87F0        Fifo_Flag:      89800400 

<output truncated>

Related Commands

Command
Description

show controllers ethernet-controller

Displays per-interface send and receive statistics read from the hardware or the interface internal registers.

show interfaces

Displays the administrative and operational status of all interfaces or a specified interface.


show controllers ethernet-controller

Use the show controllers ethernet-controller privileged EXEC command without keywords to display per-interface send and receive statistics read from the hardware. Use with the phy keyword to display the interface internal registers or the port-asic keyword to display information about the port ASIC.

show controllers ethernet-controller [interface-id] [phy [detail]] [port-asic {configuration | statistics}] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

The physical interface (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

phy

(Optional) Display the status of the internal registers on the switch physical layer device (PHY) for the device or the interface. This display includes the operational state of the automatic medium-dependent interface crossover (auto-MDIX) feature on an interface.

detail

(Optional) Display details about the PHY internal registers.

port-asic

(Optional) Display information about the port ASIC internal registers.

configuration

Display port ASIC internal register configuration.

statistics

Display port ASIC statistics, including the Rx/Sup Queue and miscellaneous statistics.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (only supported with the interface-id keywords in user EXEC mode)

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(20)SE

The display was enhanced to show the XENPAK module serial EEPROM contents.


Usage Guidelines

This display without keywords provides traffic statistics, basically the RMON statistics for all interfaces or for the specified interface.

When you enter the phy or port-asic keywords, the displayed information is useful primarily for Cisco technical support representatives troubleshooting the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show controllers ethernet-controller command for an interface. Table 2-19 describes the Transmit fields, and Table 2-20 describes the Receive fields.

Switch# show controllers ethernet-controller gigabitethernet6/0/1
Transmit GigabitEthernet6/0/1            Receive
         0 Bytes                             0 Bytes
         0 Unicast frames                    0 Unicast frames
         0 Multicast frames                  0 Multicast frames
         0 Broadcast frames                  0 Broadcast frames
         0 Too old frames                    0 Unicast bytes
         0 Deferred frames                   0 Multicast bytes
         0 MTU exceeded frames               0 Broadcast bytes
         0 1 collision frames                0 Alignment errors
         0 2 collision frames                0 FCS errors
         0 3 collision frames                0 Oversize frames
         0 4 collision frames                0 Undersize frames
         0 5 collision frames                0 Collision fragments
         0 6 collision frames
         0 7 collision frames                0 Minimum size frames
         0 8 collision frames                0 65 to 127 byte frames
         0 9 collision frames                0 128 to 255 byte frames
         0 10 collision frames               0 256 to 511 byte frames
         0 11 collision frames               0 512 to 1023 byte frames
         0 12 collision frames               0 1024 to 1518 byte frames
         0 13 collision frames               0 Overrun frames
         0 14 collision frames               0 Pause frames
         0 15 collision frames               0 Symbol error frames
         0 Excessive collisions
         0 Late collisions                   0 Invalid frames, too large
         0 VLAN discard frames               0 Valid frames, too large
         0 Excess defer frames               0 Invalid frames, too small
         0 64 byte frames                    0 Valid frames, too small
         0 127 byte frames
         0 255 byte frames                   0 Too old frames
         0 511 byte frames                   0 Valid oversize frames
         0 1023 byte frames                  0 System FCS error frames
         0 1518 byte frames                  0 RxPortFifoFull drop frame
         0 Too large frames
         0 Good (1 coll) frames

Table 2-19 Transmit Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Bytes

The total number of bytes sent on an interface.

Unicast Frames

The total number of frames sent to unicast addresses.

Multicast frames

The total number of frames sent to multicast addresses.

Broadcast frames

The total number of frames sent to broadcast addresses.

Too old frames

The number of frames dropped on the egress port because the packet aged out.

Deferred frames

The number of frames that are not sent after the time exceeds 2*maximum-packet time.

MTU exceeded frames

The number of frames that are larger than the maximum allowed frame size.

1 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after one collision occurs.

2 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after two collisions occur.

3 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after three collisions occur.

4 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after four collisions occur.

5 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after five collisions occur.

6 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after six collisions occur.

7 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after seven collisions occur.

8 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after eight collisions occur.

9 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after nine collisions occur.

10 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after ten collisions occur.

11 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after 11 collisions occur.

12 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after 12 collisions occur.

13 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after 13 collisions occur.

14 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after 14 collisions occur.

15 collision frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after 15 collisions occur.

Excessive collisions

The number of frames that could not be sent on an interface after 16 collisions occur.

Late collisions

After a frame is sent, the number of frames dropped because late collisions were detected while the frame was sent.

VLAN discard frames

The number of frames dropped on an interface because the CFI1 bit is set.

Excess defer frames

The number of frames that are not sent after the time exceeds the maximum-packet time.

64 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are 64 bytes.

127 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are from 65 to 127 bytes.

255 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are from 128 to 255 bytes.

511 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are from 256 to 511 bytes.

1023 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are from 512 to 1023 bytes.

1518 byte frames

The total number of frames sent on an interface that are from 1024 to 1518 bytes.

Too large frames

The number of frames sent on an interface that are larger than the maximum allowed frame size.

Good (1 coll) frames

The number of frames that are successfully sent on an interface after one collision occurs. This value does not include the number of frames that are not successfully sent after one collision occurs.

1 CFI = Canonical Format Indicator


Table 2-20 Receive Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Bytes

The total amount of memory (in bytes) used by frames received on an interface, including the FCS1 value and the incorrectly formed frames. This value excludes the frame header bits.

Unicast frames

The total number of frames successfully received on the interface that are directed to unicast addresses.

Multicast frames

The total number of frames successfully received on the interface that are directed to multicast addresses.

Broadcast frames

The total number of frames successfully received on an interface that are directed to broadcast addresses.

Unicast bytes

The total amount of memory (in bytes) used by unicast frames received on an interface, including the FCS value and the incorrectly formed frames. This value excludes the frame header bits.

Multicast bytes

The total amount of memory (in bytes) used by multicast frames received on an interface, including the FCS value and the incorrectly formed frames. This value excludes the frame header bits.

Broadcast bytes

The total amount of memory (in bytes) used by broadcast frames received on an interface, including the FCS value and the incorrectly formed frames. This value excludes the frame header bits.

Alignment errors

The total number of frames received on an interface that have alignment errors.

FCS errors

The total number of frames received on an interface that have a valid length (in bytes) but do not have the correct FCS values.

Oversize frames

The number of frames received on an interface that are larger than the maximum allowed frame size.

Undersize frames

The number of frames received on an interface that are smaller than 64 bytes.

Collision fragments

The number of collision fragments received on an interface.

Minimum size frames

The total number of frames that are the minimum frame size.

65 to 127 byte frames

The total number of frames that are from 65 to 127 bytes.

128 to 255 byte frames

The total number of frames that are from 128 to 255 bytes.

256 to 511 byte frames

The total number of frames that are from 256 to 511 bytes.

512 to 1023 byte frames

The total number of frames that are from 512 to 1023 bytes.

1024 to 1518 byte frames

The total number of frames that are from 1024 to 1518 bytes.

Overrun frames

The total number of overrun frames received on an interface.

Pause frames

The number of pause frames received on an interface.

Symbol error frames

The number of frames received on an interface that have symbol errors.

Invalid frames, too large

The number of frames received that were larger than maximum allowed MTU2 size (including the FCS bits and excluding the frame header) and that have either an FCS error or an alignment error.

Valid frames, too large

The number of frames received on an interface that are larger than the maximum allowed frame size.

Invalid frames, too small

The number of frames received that are smaller than 64 bytes (including the FCS bits and excluding the frame header) and that have either an FCS error or an alignment error.

Valid frames, too small

The number of frames received on an interface that are smaller than 64 bytes (or 68 bytes for VLAN-tagged frames) and that have valid FCS values. The frame size includes the FCS bits but excludes the frame header bits.

Too old frames

The number of frames dropped on the ingress port because the packet aged out.

Valid oversize frames

The number of frames received on an interface that are larger than the maximum allowed frame size and have valid FCS values. The frame size includes the FCS value but does not include the VLAN tag.

System FCS error frames

The total number of frames received on an interface that have a valid length (in bytes) but that do not have the correct FCS values.

RxPortFifoFull drop frames

The total number of frames received on an interface that are dropped because the ingress queue is full.

1 FCS = frame check sequence

2 MTU = maximum transmission unit


This is an example of output from the show controllers ethernet-controller phy command for a specific interface:

Switch# show controllers ethernet-controller gigabitethernet1/0/2 phy
Control Register                      :  0001 0001 0100 0000
 Control STATUS                        :  0111 1001 0100 1001
 Phy ID 1                              :  0000 0001 0100 0001
 Phy ID 2                              :  0000 1100 0010 0100
 Auto-Negotiation Advertisement        :  0000 0011 1110 0001
 Auto-Negotiation Link Partner         :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 Auto-Negotiation Expansion Reg        :  0000 0000 0000 0100
 Next Page Transmit Register           :  0010 0000 0000 0001
 Link Partner Next page Registe        :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 1000BASE-T Control Register           :  0000 1111 0000 0000
 1000BASE-T Status Register            :  0100 0000 0000 0000
 Extended Status Register              :  0011 0000 0000 0000
 PHY Specific Control Register         :  0000 0000 0111 1000
 PHY Specific Status Register          :  1000 0001 0100 0000
 Interrupt Enable                      :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 Interrupt Status                      :  0000 0000 0100 0000
 Extended PHY Specific Control         :  0000 1100 0110 1000
 Receive Error Counter                 :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 Reserved Register 1                   :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 Global Status                         :  0000 0000 0000 0000
 LED Control                           :  0100 0001 0000 0000
 Manual LED Override                   :  0000 1000 0010 1010
 Extended PHY Specific Control         :  0000 0000 0001 1010
 Disable Receiver 1                    :  0000 0000 0000 1011
 Disable Receiver 2                    :  1000 0000 0000 0100
 Extended PHY Specific Status          :  1000 0100 1000 0000
 Auto-MDIX                             :  On   [AdminState=1   Flags=0x00052248]
 
   

This is an example of output from the show controllers ethernet-controller tengigabitethernet1/0/1 phy command for the 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface. It shows the XENPAK module serial EEPROM contents.

For information about the EEPROM map and the field descriptions for the display, see the XENPAK multisource agreement (MSA) at these sites:

http://www.xenpak.org/MSA/XENPAK_MSA_R2.1.pdf

http://www.xenpak.org/MSA/XENPAK_MSA_R3.0.pdf

To determine which version of the XENPAK documentation to read, check the XENPAK MSA Version supported field in the display. Version 2.1 is 15 hexadecimal, and Version 3.0 is 1e hexadecimal.

Switch# show controllers ethernet-controller tengigabitethernet1/0/1 phy

TenGigabitEthernet1/0/1 (gpn:472, port-number:1)
-----------------------------------------------------------

XENPAK Serial EEPROM Contents:
Non-Volatile Register (NVR) Fields
 XENPAK MSA Version supported         :0x15
 NVR Size in bytes                    :0x100
 Number of bytes used                 :0xD0
 Basic Field Address                  :0xB
 Customer Field Address               :0x77
 Vendor Field Address                 :0xA7
 Extended Vendor Field Address        :0x100
 Reserved                             :0x0
 Transceiver type                     :0x1 =XENPAK
 Optical connector type               :0x1 =SC
 Bit encoding                         :0x1 =NRZ
 Normal BitRate in multiple of 1M b/s :0x2848
 Protocol Type                        :0x1 =10GgE

Standards Compliance Codes :
 10GbE Code Byte 0                    :0x2 =10GBASE-LR
 10GbE Code Byte 1                    :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 0                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 1                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 2                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 3                :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 0                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 1                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 2                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 3                    :0x0
 Transmission range in 10m            :0x3E8
Fibre Type :
 Fibre Type Byte 0                    :0x40 =NDSF only
 Fibre Type Byte 1                    :0x0 =Unspecified

 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 0 :0x1 0xFF 0xB8 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 1 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 2 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 3 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Package Identifier OUI  :0x41F420
 Transceiver Vendor OUI  :0x3400871
 Transceiver vendor name :CISCO-OPNEXT,INC
 Part number provided by transceiver vendor       :800-24558-01    
 Revision level of part number provided by vendor :01
 Vendor serial number           :ONJ0735003U     
 Vendor manufacturing date code :2003082700

 Reserved1 :00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 Basic Field Checksum :0x6C

 Customer Writable Area :
  0x00:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x10:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x20:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

 Vendor Specific :
  0x00:41 00 20 F4 88 84 28 94 C0 00 30 14 06 39 00 D9
  0x10:03 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x20:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x30:00 00 00 00 11 5E 19 E9 BF 1B AD 98 03 9B DF 87
  0x40:CC F6 45 FF 99 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 C0 48
  0x50:46 D2 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

This is an example of output from the show controllers ethernet-controller port-asic configuration command:

Switch# show controllers ethernet-controller port-asic configuration
========================================================================
Switch 1, PortASIC 0 Registers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DeviceType                         : 000101BC
Reset                              : 00000000
PmadMicConfig                      : 00000001
PmadMicDiag                        : 00000003
SupervisorReceiveFifoSramInfo      : 000007D0 000007D0 40000000
SupervisorTransmitFifoSramInfo     : 000001D0 000001D0 40000000
GlobalStatus                       : 00000800
IndicationStatus                   : 00000000
IndicationStatusMask               : FFFFFFFF
InterruptStatus                    : 00000000
InterruptStatusMask                : 01FFE800
SupervisorDiag                     : 00000000
SupervisorFrameSizeLimit           : 000007C8
SupervisorBroadcast                : 000A0F01
GeneralIO                          : 000003F9 00000000 00000004
StackPcsInfo                       : FFFF1000 860329BD 5555FFFF FFFFFFFF
                                     FF0FFF00 86020000 5555FFFF 00000000
StackRacInfo                       : 73001630 00000003 7F001644 00000003
                                     24140003 FD632B00 18E418E0 FFFFFFFF
StackControlStatus                 : 18E418E0
stackControlStatusMask             : FFFFFFFF
TransmitBufferFreeListInfo         : 00000854 00000800 00000FF8 00000000
                                     0000088A 0000085D 00000FF8 00000000
TransmitRingFifoInfo               : 00000016 00000016 40000000 00000000
                                     0000000C 0000000C 40000000 00000000
TransmitBufferInfo                 : 00012000 00000FFF 00000000 00000030
TransmitBufferCommonCount          : 00000F7A
TransmitBufferCommonCountPeak      : 0000001E
TransmitBufferCommonCommonEmpty    : 000000FF
NetworkActivity                    : 00000000 00000000 00000000 02400000
DroppedStatistics                  : 00000000
FrameLengthDeltaSelect             : 00000001
SneakPortFifoInfo                  : 00000000
MacInfo                            : 0EC0801C 00000001 0EC0801B 00000001
                                     00C0001D 00000001 00C0001E 00000001

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show controllers ethernet-controller port-asic statistics command:

Switch# show controllers ethernet-controller port-asic statistics
===========================================================================
 Switch 1, PortASIC 0 Statistics
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
         0 RxQ-0, wt-0 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-0 drop frames
   4118966 RxQ-0, wt-1 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-1 drop frames
         0 RxQ-0, wt-2 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-2 drop frames

         0 RxQ-1, wt-0 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-1, wt-0 drop frames
       296 RxQ-1, wt-1 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-1, wt-1 drop frames
   2836036 RxQ-1, wt-2 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-1, wt-2 drop frames

         0 RxQ-2, wt-0 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-2, wt-0 drop frames
         0 RxQ-2, wt-1 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-2, wt-1 drop frames
    158377 RxQ-2, wt-2 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-2, wt-2 drop frames

         0 RxQ-3, wt-0 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-3, wt-0 drop frames
         0 RxQ-3, wt-1 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-3, wt-1 drop frames
         0 RxQ-3, wt-2 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-3, wt-2 drop frames


        15 TxBufferFull Drop Count               0 Rx Fcs Error Frames
         0 TxBufferFrameDesc BadCrc16            0 Rx Invalid Oversize Frames
         0 TxBuffer Bandwidth Drop Cou           0 Rx Invalid Too Large Frames
         0 TxQueue Bandwidth Drop Coun           0 Rx Invalid Too Large Frames
         0 TxQueue Missed Drop Statist           0 Rx Invalid Too Small Frames
        74 RxBuffer Drop DestIndex Cou           0 Rx Too Old Frames
         0 SneakQueue Drop Count                 0 Tx Too Old Frames
         0 Learning Queue Overflow Fra           0 System Fcs Error Frames
         0 Learning Cam Skip Count

        15 Sup Queue 0 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 8 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 1 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 9 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 2 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 10 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 3 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 11 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 4 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 12 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 5 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 13 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 6 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 14 Drop Frames
         0 Sup Queue 7 Drop Frames               0 Sup Queue 15 Drop Frames
===========================================================================
 Switch 1, PortASIC 1 Statistics
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
         0 RxQ-0, wt-0 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-0 drop frames
        52 RxQ-0, wt-1 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-1 drop frames
         0 RxQ-0, wt-2 enqueue frames            0 RxQ-0, wt-2 drop frames

<output truncated>

Related Commands

Command
Description

show controllers cpu-interface

Displays the state of the CPU network ASIC and send and receive statistics for packets reaching the CPU.

show controllers tcam

Displays the state of registers for all ternary content addressable memory (TCAM) in the system and for TCAM interface ASICs that are CAM controllers.

show idprom

Displays the IDPROM information for the specified interface.


show controllers power inline

Use the show controllers power inline user EXEC command to display the values in the registers of the specified Power over Ethernet (PoE) controller.

show controllers power inline [instance] [module switch-number] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

instance

(Optional) Power controller instance, where each instance corresponds to four ports. See the "Usage Guidelines" section for more information. If no instance is specified, information for all instances appear.

module switch number

(Optional) Limit the display to ports on the specified stack member. The switch number is 1 to 9.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

For the Catalyst 3750-48PS switches, the instance range is 0 to 11.

For the Catalyst 3750-24PS switches, the instance range is 0 to 5.

For the Catalyst 3750G-48PS switches, the instance range is 0 to 2. For instances other than 0 to 2, the switches provides no output.

For the Catalyst 3750G-24PS switches, the instance range is 0 to 1. For instances other than 0 to 1, the switches provides no output.

Though visible on all switches, this command is valid only for PoE switches. It provides no information for switches that do not support PoE.

The output provides information that might be useful for Cisco technical support representatives troubleshooting the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show controllers power inline command on a switch other than a Catalyst 3750G-48PS or 3750G-24PS switch:

Switch> show controllers power inline
Module 1, Controller Instance 0, Address 0x40
  Interrupt           Reg 0x0  = 0x0
  Intr Mask           Reg 0x1  = 0xF6
  Power Event         Reg 0x2  = 0x0
  Detect Event        Reg 0x4  = 0x0
  Fault Event         Reg 0x6  = 0x0
  T-Start Event       Reg 0x8  = 0x0
  Supply Event        Reg 0xA  = 0x0
  Port 1 Status       Reg 0xC  = 0x24
  Port 2 Status       Reg 0xD  = 0x24
  Port 3 Status       Reg 0xE  = 0x3
  Port 4 Status       Reg 0xF  = 0x3
  Power Status        Reg 0x10 = 0xFF
  Pin Status          Reg 0x11 = 0x0
  Operating Mode      Reg 0x12 = 0xAA
  Disconnect Enable   Reg 0x13 = 0xA0
  Detect/Class Enable Reg 0x14 = 0xFF
  Reserved            Reg 0x15 = 0x0
  Timing Config       Reg 0x16 = 0x2
  Misc Config         Reg 0x17 = 0xA0
  ID Revision         Reg 0x1A = 0x64

Module 1, Controller Instance 1, Address 0x42
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show controllers power inline command on a Catalyst 3750G-24PS switch:

Switch> show controllers power inline
Alchemy instance 0, address 0
 Pending event flag    :N N N N N N N N N N N N
 Current State         :00 05 10 51 61 11
 Current Event         :00 01 00 10 40 00
 Timers                :00 C5 57 03 12 20 04 B2 05 06 07 07
 Error State           :00 00 00 00 10 00
 Error Code            :00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 Power Status          :N Y N N Y N N N N N N N
 Auto Config           :N Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y
 Disconnect            :N N N N N N N N N N N N
 Detection Status      :00 00 00 30 00 00
 Current Class         :00 00 00 30 00 00
 Tweetie debug         :00 00 00 00
 POE Commands pending at sub:
     Command 0 on each port :00 00 00 00 00 00
     Command 1 on each port :00 00 00 00 00 00
     Command 2 on each port :00 00 00 00 00 00
     Command 3 on each port :00 00 00 00 00 00

Related Commands

Command
Description

logging event power-inline-status

Enables the logging of PoE events.

power inline

Configures the power management mode for the specified PoE port or for all PoE ports.

show power inline

Displays the PoE status for the specified PoE port or for all PoE ports.


show controllers tcam

Use the show controllers tcam privileged EXEC command to display the state of the registers for all ternary content addressable memory (TCAM) in the system and for all TCAM interface ASICs that are CAM controllers.

show controllers tcam [asic [number]] [detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

asic

(Optional) Display port ASIC TCAM information.

number

(Optional) Display information for the specified port ASIC number. The range is from 0 to 15.

detail

(Optional) Display detailed TCAM register information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The asic [number] keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

This display provides information that might be useful for Cisco technical support representatives troubleshooting the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show controllers tcam command:

Switch# show controllers tcam
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TCAM-0 Registers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  REV:    00B30103
  SIZE:   00080040
  ID:     00000000
  CCR:    00000000_F0000020

  RPID0:  00000000_00000000
  RPID1:  00000000_00000000
  RPID2:  00000000_00000000
  RPID3:  00000000_00000000

  HRR0:   00000000_E000CAFC
  HRR1:   00000000_00000000
  HRR2:   00000000_00000000
  HRR3:   00000000_00000000
  HRR4:   00000000_00000000
  HRR5:   00000000_00000000
  HRR6:   00000000_00000000
  HRR7:   00000000_00000000
<output truncated>

  GMR31:  FF_FFFFFFFF_FFFFFFFF
  GMR32:  FF_FFFFFFFF_FFFFFFFF
  GMR33:  FF_FFFFFFFF_FFFFFFFF

=============================================================================
 TCAM related PortASIC 1 registers
=============================================================================
LookupType:                   89A1C67D_24E35F00
LastCamIndex:                 0000FFE0
LocalNoMatch:                 000069E0
ForwardingRamBaseAddress:
                              00022A00 0002FE00 00040600 0002FE00 0000D400
                              00000000 003FBA00 00009000 00009000 00040600
                              00000000 00012800 00012900

Related Commands

Command
Description

show controllers cpu-interface

Displays the state of the CPU network ASIC and send and receive statistics for packets reaching the CPU.

show controllers ethernet-controller

Displays per-interface send and receive statistics read from the hardware or the interface internal registers.


show controllers utilization

Use the show controllers utilization user EXEC command to display bandwidth utilization on the switch or specific ports.

show controllers [interface-id] utilization [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the switch interface.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the specified expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the specified expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show controllers utilization command.

Switch> show controllers utilization
Port       Receive Utilization  Transmit Utilization
Fa1/0/1            0                    0
Fa1/0/2            0                    0
Fa1/0/3            0                    0
Fa1/0/4            0                    0
Fa1/0/5            0                    0
Fa1/0/6            0                    0
Fa1/0/7            0                    0
<output truncated>

<output truncated>

Switch Receive Bandwidth Percentage Utilization  : 0
Switch Transmit Bandwidth Percentage Utilization : 0

Switch Fabric Percentage Utilization : 0

This is an example of output from the show controllers utilization command on a specific port:

Switch> show controllers gigabitethernet1/0/1 utilization
Receive Bandwidth Percentage Utilization   : 0
Transmit Bandwidth Percentage Utilization  : 0

Table 2-21 show controllers utilization Field Descriptions

Field
Description

Receive Bandwidth Percentage Utilization

Displays the received bandwidth usage of the switch, which is the sum of the received traffic on all the ports divided by the switch receive capacity.

Transmit Bandwidth Percentage Utilization

Displays the transmitted bandwidth usage of the switch, which is the sum of the transmitted traffic on all the ports divided it by the switch transmit capacity.

Fabric Percentage Utilization

Displays the average of the transmitted and received bandwidth usage of the switch.


Related Commands

Command
Description

show controllers ethernet-controller

Displays the interface internal registers.


show diagnostic

To view the test results of the online diagnostics and list the supported test suites, use the show diagnostic command.

show diagnostic content switch [num] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show diagnostic post [{begin | exclude | include} expression]

show diagnostic result switch [num | detail | test {test-id | test-id-range | detail}] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show diagnostic schedule switch [num ] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show diagnostic status [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show diagnostic switch [num | detail | begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

content

Displays test information including test ID, test attributes, and supported coverage test levels for each test and for all modules.

switch num

(Optional) Specifies the module number.

|begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

|exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

|include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.

post

Displays the POST results; same as show post command.

result

Displays the test results.

detail

(Optional) Displays the all test statistics.

test

Specify a test to run.

test-id

Identification number for the test to be run; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for additional information.

test-id-range

Range of identification numbers for tests to be run; see the "Usage Guidelines" section for additional information.

schedule

Displays the current scheduled diagnostic tasks.

status

Displays the test status.


Defaults

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SEE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If you do not enter a module num, information for all modules is displayed.

In the command output, the possible testing results are as follows:

Passed (.)

Failed (F)

Unknown (U)

Examples

This example shows how to display the online diagnostics that are configured on a switch:

Switch# show diagnostic content switch 3

Switch 3:
Diagnostics test suite attributes:
    B/* - Basic ondemand test / NA
  P/V/* - Per port test / Per device test / NA
  D/N/* - Disruptive test / Non-disruptive test / NA
    S/* - Only applicable to standby unit / NA
    X/* - Not a health monitoring test / NA
    F/* - Fixed monitoring interval test / NA
    E/* - Always enabled monitoring test / NA
    A/I - Monitoring is active / Monitoring is inactive
    R/* - Switch will reload after test list completion / NA
    P/* - will partition stack / NA
                                                     Test Interval   Thre-
ID    Test Name                          attributes  day hh:mm:ss.ms shold
==== ================================== ============ =============== =====
 1)    TestPortAsicStackPortLoopback     B*N****A**   000 00:01:00.00  n/a
 2)    TestPortAsicLoopback              B*D*X**IR*   not configured  n/a
 3)    TestPortAsicCam                   B*D*X**IR*   not configured  n/a
 4)    TestPortAsicRingLoopback          B*D*X**IR*   not configured  n/a
 5)    TestMicRingLoopback               B*D*X**IR*   not configured  n/a
 6)    TestPortAsicMem                   B*D*X**IR*   not configured  n/a

This example shows how to display the online diagnostic results for a switch:

Switch# show diagnostic result switch 1
Switch 1: SerialNo :
Overall diagnostic result: PASS
Test results: (. = Pass, F = Fail, U = Untested)
1) TestPortAsicStackPortLoopback ---> .
2) TestPortAsicLoopback ------------> .
3) TestPortAsicCam -----------------> .
4) TestPortAsicRingLoopback --------> .
5) TestMicRingLoopback -------------> .
6) TestPortAsicMem -----------------> .

This example shows how to display the online diagnostic test status:

Switch# show diagnostic status
<BU> - Bootup Diagnostics, <HM> - Health Monitoring Diagnostics,
<OD> - OnDemand Diagnostics, <SCH> - Scheduled Diagnostics
====== ================================= =============================== ======
Card   Description                       Current Running Test             Run by
------ --------------------------------- ---------------------            ------
1                                         N/A                              N/A
2                                         TestPortAsicStackPortLoopback    <OD>
                                          TestPortAsicLoopback             <OD>
                                          TestPortAsicCam                  <OD>
                                          TestPortAsicRingLoopback         <OD>
                                          TestMicRingLoopback              <OD>
                                          TestPortAsicMem                  <OD>
3                                         N/A                              N/A 
4                                         N/A                              N/A
====== ================================= =============================== ======
Switch# 

This example shows how to display the online diagnostic test schedule for a switch:

This example shows how to display the online diagnostic test schedule for a switch:

Switch# show diagnostic schedule switch 1
Current Time = 14:39:49 PST Tue Jul 5 2005
Diagnostic for Switch 1:
Schedule #1:
To be run daily 12:00
Test ID(s) to be executed: 1.

Related Commands

Command
Description

diagnostic monitor

Configures teh health-monitoring diagnostic test.

diagnostic schedule

Sets the scheduling of test-based online diagnostic testing.

diagnostic start

Starts the online diagnostic test.


show dot1q-tunnel

Use the show dot1q-tunnel user EXEC command to display information about IEEE 802.1Q tunnel ports.

show dot1q-tunnel [interface interface-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specify the interface for which to display IEEE 802.1Q tunneling information. Valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

These are examples of output from the show dot1q-tunnel command:

Switch> show dot1q-tunnel
dot1q-tunnel mode LAN Port(s)
-----------------------------
Gi1/0/1
Gi1/0/2
Gi1/0/3
Gi1/0/6
Po2

Switch> show dot1q-tunnel interface gigabitethernet1/0/1 
dot1q-tunnel mode LAN Port(s)
-----------------------------
Gi1/0/1

Related Commands

Command
Description

show vlan dot1q tag native

Displays IEEE 802.1Q native VLAN tagging status.

switchport mode dot1q-tunnel

Configures an interface as an IEEE 802.1Q tunnel port.


show dot1x

Use the show dot1x user EXEC command to display IEEE 802.1x statistics, administrative status, and operational status for the switch or for the specified port.

show dot1x [{all [summary] | interface interface-id} [details | statistics]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

all [summary]

(Optional) Display the IEEE 802.1x status for all ports.

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display the IEEE 802.1x status for the specified port (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

details

(Optional) Display the IEEE 802.1x interface details.

statistics

(Optional) Display IEEE 802.1x statistics for the specified port.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The all keyword was added.

12.2(25)SED

The display was expanded to include auth-fail-vlan in the authorization state machine state and port status fields.

12.2(25)SEE

The command syntax was changed, and the command output was modified.


Usage Guidelines

If you do not specify a port, global parameters and a summary appear. If you specify a port, details for that port appear.

If the port control is configured as unidirectional or bidirectional control and this setting conflicts with the switch configuration, the show dot1x {all | interface interface-id} privileged EXEC command output has this information:

ControlDirection          = In (Inactive)

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show dot1x user EXEC command:

Switch> show dot1x 
Sysauthcontrol              Enabled
Dot1x Protocol Version            2
Critical Recovery Delay         100
Critical EAPOL             Disabled

This is an example of output from the show dot1x all user EXEC command:

Switch> show dot1x all
Sysauthcontrol              Enabled
Dot1x Protocol Version            2
Critical Recovery Delay         100
Critical EAPOL             Disabled

Dot1x Info for GigabitEthernet1/0/1
-----------------------------------
PAE                       = AUTHENTICATOR
PortControl               = AUTO
ControlDirection          = Both
HostMode                  = SINGLE_HOST
ReAuthentication          = Disabled
QuietPeriod               = 60
ServerTimeout             = 30
SuppTimeout               = 30
ReAuthPeriod              = 3600 (Locally configured)
ReAuthMax                 = 2
MaxReq                    = 2
TxPeriod                  = 30
RateLimitPeriod           = 0

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show dot1x all summary user EXEC command:

Interface       PAE     Client          Status
--------------------------------------------------------
Gi2/0/1         AUTH    none            UNAUTHORIZED
Gi2/0/2         AUTH    00a0.c9b8.0072  AUTHORIZED
Gi2/0/3         AUTH    none            UNAUTHORIZED

This is an example of output from the show dot1x interface interface-id user EXEC command:

Switch> show dot1x interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
Dot1x Info for GigabitEthernet1/0/2
-----------------------------------
PAE                       = AUTHENTICATOR
PortControl               = AUTO
ControlDirection          = In
HostMode                  = SINGLE_HOST
ReAuthentication          = Disabled
QuietPeriod               = 60
ServerTimeout             = 30
SuppTimeout               = 30
ReAuthPeriod              = 3600 (Locally configured)
ReAuthMax                 = 2
MaxReq                    = 2
TxPeriod                  = 30
RateLimitPeriod           = 0

This is an example of output from the show dot1x interface interface-id details user EXEC commmand:

Switch# show dot1x interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 details
Dot1x Info for GigabitEthernet1/0/2
-----------------------------------
PAE                       = AUTHENTICATOR
PortControl               = AUTO
ControlDirection          = Both
HostMode                  = SINGLE_HOST
ReAuthentication          = Disabled
QuietPeriod               = 60
ServerTimeout             = 30
SuppTimeout               = 30
ReAuthPeriod              = 3600 (Locally configured)
ReAuthMax                 = 2
MaxReq                    = 2
TxPeriod                  = 30
RateLimitPeriod           = 0

Dot1x Authenticator Client List Empty

This is an example of output from the show dot1x interface interface-id details commmand when a port is assigned to a guest VLAN and the host mode changes to multiple-hosts mode:

Switch# show dot1x interface gigabitethernet1/0/1 details
Dot1x Info for GigabitEthernet1/0/1
-----------------------------------
PAE                       = AUTHENTICATOR
PortControl               = AUTO
ControlDirection          = Both 
HostMode                  = SINGLE_HOST
ReAuthentication          = Enabled
QuietPeriod               = 60
ServerTimeout             = 30
SuppTimeout               = 30
ReAuthPeriod              = 3600 (Locally configured)
ReAuthMax                 = 2
MaxReq                    = 2
TxPeriod                  = 30
RateLimitPeriod           = 0
Guest-Vlan                = 182

Dot1x Authenticator Client List Empty

Port Status               = AUTHORIZED
Authorized By             = Guest-Vlan
Operational HostMode      = MULTI_HOST 
Vlan Policy               = 182

This is an example of output from the show dot1x interface interface-id statistics command. Table 2-22 describes the fields in the display.

Switch> show dot1x interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 statistics
Dot1x Authenticator Port Statistics for GigabitEthernet1/0/2
--------------------------------------------
RxStart = 0     RxLogoff = 0    RxResp = 1      RxRespID = 1
RxInvalid = 0   RxLenErr = 0    RxTotal = 2

TxReq = 2       TxReqID = 132   TxTotal = 134

RxVersion = 2   LastRxSrcMAC = 00a0.c9b8.0072

Table 2-22 show dot1x statistics Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

RxStart

Number of valid EAPOL-start frames that have been received.

RxLogoff

Number of EAPOL-logoff frames that have been received.

RxResp

Number of valid EAP-response frames (other than response/identity frames) that have been received.

RxRespID

Number of EAP-response/identity frames that have been received.

RxInvalid

Number of EAPOL frames that have been received and have an unrecognized frame type.

RxLenError

Number of EAPOL frames that have been received in which the packet body length field is invalid.

RxTotal

Number of valid EAPOL frames of any type that have been received.

TxReq

Number of EAP-request frames (other than request/identity frames) that have been sent.

TxReqId

Number of Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)-request/identity frames that have been sent.

TxTotal

Number of Extensible Authentication Protocol over LAN (EAPOL) frames of any type that have been sent.

RxVersion

Number of received packets in the IEEE 802.1x Version 1 format.

LastRxSrcMac

Source MAC address carried in the most recently received EAPOL frame.


Related Commands

Command
Description

dot1x default

Resets the IEEE 802.1x parameters to their default values.


show dtp

Use the show dtp privileged EXEC command to display Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) information for the switch or for a specified interface.

show dtp [interface interface-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display port security settings for the specified interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show dtp command:

Switch# show dtp
Global DTP information
        Sending DTP Hello packets every 30 seconds
        Dynamic Trunk timeout is 300 seconds
        21 interfaces using DTP

This is an example of output from the show dtp interface command:

Switch# show dtp interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
DTP information for GigabitEthernet1/0/1:
  TOS/TAS/TNS:                              ACCESS/AUTO/ACCESS
  TOT/TAT/TNT:                              NATIVE/NEGOTIATE/NATIVE
  Neighbor address 1:                       000943A7D081
  Neighbor address 2:                       000000000000
  Hello timer expiration (sec/state):       1/RUNNING
  Access timer expiration (sec/state):      never/STOPPED
  Negotiation timer expiration (sec/state): never/STOPPED
  Multidrop timer expiration (sec/state):   never/STOPPED
  FSM state:                                S2:ACCESS
  # times multi & trunk                     0
  Enabled:                                  yes
  In STP:                                   no

  Statistics
  ----------
  3160 packets received (3160 good)
  0 packets dropped
      0 nonegotiate, 0 bad version, 0 domain mismatches, 0 bad TLVs, 0 other
  6320 packets output (6320 good)
      3160 native, 3160 software encap isl, 0 isl hardware native
  0 output errors
  0 trunk timeouts
  1 link ups, last link up on Mon Mar 01 1993, 01:02:29
  0 link downs

Related Commands

Command
Description

show interfaces trunk

Displays interface trunking information.


show eap

Use the show eap privileged EXEC command to display Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) registration and session information for the switch or for the specified port.

show eap {{registrations [method [name] | transport [name]]} | {sessions [credentials name [interface interface-id] | interface interface-id | method name | transport name]}} [credentials name | interface interface-id | transport name] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

registrations

Display EAP registration information.

method name

(Optional) Display EAP method registration information.

transport name

(Optional) Display EAP transport registration information.

sessions

Display EAP session information.

credentials name

(Optional) Display EAP method registration information.

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display the EAP information for the specified port (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SEE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

When you use the show eap registrations privileged EXEC command these keywords, the command output shows this information:

None—All the lower levels used by EAP and the registered EAP methods.

method name keyword—The specified method registrations.

transport name keyword—The specific lower-level registrations.

When you use the show eap sessions privileged EXEC command with these keywords, the command output shows this information:

None—All active EAP sessions.

credentials name keyword—The specified credentials profile.

interface interface-id keyword—The parameter s for the specified interface.

method name keyword—the specified EAP method.

transport name keyword—The specified lower layer.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show eap registrations privileged EXEC command:

Switch> show eap registrations
Registered EAP Methods:
  Method  Type            Name
    4     Peer            MD5

Registered EAP Lower Layers:
  Handle  Type            Name
    2     Authenticator   Dot1x-Authenticator
    1     Authenticator   MAB

This is an example of output from the show eap registrations transport privileged user EXEC command:

Switch> show eap registrations transport all
Registered EAP Lower Layers:
  Handle  Type            Name
    2     Authenticator   Dot1x-Authenticator
    1     Authenticator   MAB

This is an example of output from the show eap sessions privileged EXEC command:

Switch> show eap sessions 
Role:                    Authenticator   Decision:                Fail
Lower layer:             Dot1x-AuthenticaInterface:               Gi1/0/1
Current method:          None            Method state:            Uninitialised
Retransmission count:    0  (max: 2)     Timer:                   Authenticator
ReqId Retransmit (timeout: 30s, remaining: 2s)
EAP handle:              0x5200000A      Credentials profile:     None
Lower layer context ID:  0x93000004      Eap profile name:        None
Method context ID:       0x00000000      Peer Identity:           None
Start timeout (s):       1               Retransmit timeout (s):  30 (30)
Current ID:              2               Available local methods: None

Role:                    Authenticator   Decision:                Fail
Lower layer:             Dot1x-AuthenticaInterface:               Gi1/0/2
Current method:          None            Method state:            Uninitialised
Retransmission count:    0  (max: 2)     Timer:                   Authenticator
ReqId Retransmit (timeout: 30s, remaining: 2s)
EAP handle:              0xA800000B      Credentials profile:     None
Lower layer context ID:  0x0D000005      Eap profile name:        None
Method context ID:       0x00000000      Peer Identity:           None
Start timeout (s):       1               Retransmit timeout (s):  30 (30)
Current ID:              2               Available local methods: None

<Output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show eap sessions interface interface-id privileged EXEC command:

Switch# show eap sessions gigabitethernet1/0/1
Role:                    Authenticator   Decision:                Fail
Lower layer:             Dot1x-AuthenticaInterface:               Gi1/0/1
Current method:          None            Method state:            Uninitialised
Retransmission count:    1  (max: 2)     Timer:                   Authenticator
ReqId Retransmit (timeout: 30s, remaining: 13s)
EAP handle:              0x5200000A      Credentials profile:     None
Lower layer context ID:  0x93000004      Eap profile name:        None
Method context ID:       0x00000000      Peer Identity:           None
Start timeout (s):       1               Retransmit timeout (s):  30 (30)
Current ID:              2               Available local methods: None

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear eap

Clears EAP session information for the switch or for the specified port.


show env

Use the show env user EXEC command to display fan, temperature, redundant power system (RPS) availability, and power information for the switch being accessed (standalone switch or stack master or stack member). Use with the stack keyword to display all information for the stack or for a specified switch in the stack.

show env {all | fan | power | rps | stack [switch-number] | temperature [status]} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

all

Display both fan and temperature environmental status.

fan

Display the switch fan status.

power

Display the switch power status.

rps

Display whether an RPS 300 Redundant Power System is connected to the switch.

stack [switch-number]

Display all environmental status for each switch in the stack or for the specified switch. The range is 1 to 9, depending on the switch member numbers in the stack.

temperature

Display the switch temperature status.

status

(Optional) Display the switch internal temperature (not the external temperature) and the threshold values. This keyword is available only on the Catalyst 3750G-48TS, 3750G-48PS, 3750G-24TS-1U, and 3750G-24PS switches.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(20)SE3

The temperature status keyword was added.


Usage Guidelines

Use the show access-lists privileged EXEC command to access information from a specific switch other than the master.

Use the show env stack [switch-number] command to display information about any switch in the stack from any member switch.

Though visible on all switches, the show env temperature status command is valid only for the Catalyst 3750G-48TS, 3750G-48PS, 3750G-24TS-1U, and 3750G-24PS switches. If you enter this command on these switches, the command output shows the switch temperature states and the threshold levels. If you enter the command on a switch other than these four switches, the output field shows Not Applicable.

On a Catalyst 3750G-48PS or 3750G-24PS switch, you can also use the show env temperature command to display the switch temperature status. The command output shows the green and yellow states as OK and the red state as FAULTY. If you enter the show env all command on this switch, the command output is the same as the show env temperature status command output.

For more information about the threshold levels, see the software configuration guide for this release.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show env all command entered from the master switch or a standalone switch:

Switch> show env all
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is AVAILABLE

This is an example of output from the show env fan command:

Switch> show env fan
FAN is OK
 
   

This is an example of output from the show env stack command:

Switch> show env stack
SWITCH: 1
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT
SWITCH: 2
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT
SWITCH: 3
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT
SWITCH: 4
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT
SWITCH: 5
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT
SWITCH: 6
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT

This example shows how to display information about stack member 3 from the master switch:

Switch> show env stack 3
SWITCH: 3
FAN is OK
TEMPERATURE is OK
POWER is OK
RPS is NOT PRESENT

This example shows how to display the temperature value, state, and the threshold values. Table 2-23 describes the temperature states in the command output.

Switch> show env temperature status
Temperature Value:28 Degree Celsius
Temperature State:GREEN
Yellow Threshold :70 Degree Celsius
Red Threshold    :75 Degree Celsius

Table 2-23 States in the show env temperature status Command Output

State
Description

Green

The switch temperature is in the normal operating range.

Yellow

The temperature is in the warning range. You should check the external temperature around the switch.

Red

The temperature is in the critical range. The switch might not run properly if the temperature is in this range.


show errdisable detect

Use the show errdisable detect user EXEC command to display error-disabled detection status.

show errdisable detect [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

A displayed gbic-invalid error reason refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show errdisable detect command:

Switch> show errdisable detect
ErrDisable Reason    Detection status
-----------------    ----------------
udld                 Enabled
bpduguard            Enabled
security-violatio    Enabled
channel-misconfig    Enabled
psecure-violation    Enabled
vmps                 Enabled
loopback             Enabled
pagp-flap            Enabled
dtp-flap             Enabled
l2ptguard            Enabled
link-flap            Enabled
gbic-invalid         Enabled
dhcp-rate-limit      Enabled
unicast-flood        Enabled
storm-control        Enabled
ilpower              Enabled
arp-inspection       Enabled

Note Though visible in the output, the ilpower, storm-control, and unicast-flood fields are not valid.


Related Commands

Command
Description

errdisable detect cause

Enables error-disabled detection for a specific cause or all causes.

show errdisable flap-values

Displays error condition recognition information.

show errdisable recovery

Displays error-disabled recovery timer information.

show interfaces status

Displays interface status or a list of interfaces in error-disabled state.


show errdisable flap-values

Use the show errdisable flap-values user EXEC command to display conditions that cause an error to be recognized for a cause.

show errdisable flap-values [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The Flaps column in the display shows how many changes to the state within the specified time interval will cause an error to be detected and a port to be disabled. For example, the display shows that an error will be assumed and the port shut down if three Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP)-state (port mode access/trunk) or Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) flap changes occur during a 30-second interval, or if 5 link-state (link up/down) changes occur during a 10-second interval.

ErrDisable Reason    Flaps    Time (sec)
-----------------    ------   ----------
pagp-flap              3       30
dtp-flap               3       30
link-flap              5       10

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show errdisable flap-values command:

Switch> show errdisable flap-values
ErrDisable Reason    Flaps    Time (sec)
-----------------    ------   ----------
pagp-flap              3       30
dtp-flap               3       30
link-flap              5       10

Related Commands

Command
Description

errdisable detect cause

Enables error-disabled detection for a specific cause or all causes.

show errdisable detect

Displays error-disabled detection status.

show errdisable recovery

Displays error-disabled recovery timer information.

show interfaces status

Displays interface status or a list of interfaces in error-disabled state.


show errdisable recovery

Use the show errdisable recovery user EXEC command to display the error-disabled recovery timer information.

show errdisable recovery [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

A gbic-invalid error-disable reason refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module interface.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show errdisable recovery command:

Switch> show errdisable recovery
ErrDisable Reason    Timer Status
-----------------    --------------
udld                 Disabled
bpduguard            Disabled
security-violatio    Disabled
channel-misconfig    Disabled
vmps                 Disabled
pagp-flap            Disabled
dtp-flap             Disabled
link-flap            Enabled
l2ptguard            Disabled
psecure-violation    Disabled
gbic-invalid         Disabled
dhcp-rate-limit      Disabled
unicast-flood        Disabled
storm-control        Disabled
arp-inspection       Disabled
loopback             Disabled

Timer interval:300 seconds

Interfaces that will be enabled at the next timeout:

Interface    Errdisable reason    Time left(sec)
---------    -----------------    --------------
Gi1/0/2      link-flap             279 


Note Though visible in the output, the unicast-flood field is not valid.


Related Commands

Command
Description

errdisable recovery

Configures the recover mechanism variables.

show errdisable detect

Displays error-disabled detection status.

show errdisable flap-values

Displays error condition recognition information.

show interfaces status

Displays interface status or a list of interfaces in error-disabled state.


show etherchannel

Use the show etherchannel user EXEC command to display EtherChannel information for a channel.

show etherchannel [channel-group-number {detail | port | port-channel | protocol | summary}] {detail | load-balance | port | port-channel | protocol | summary} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

channel-group-number

(Optional) Number of the channel group. The range is 1 to 48.

detail

Display detailed EtherChannel information.

load-balance

Display the load-balance or frame-distribution scheme among ports in the port channel.

port

Display EtherChannel port information.

port-channel

Display port-channel information.

protocol

Display the protocol that is being used in the EtherChannel.

summary

Display a one-line summary per channel-group.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The protocol keyword was added.

12.2(25)SE

The channel-group-number range was changed from 1 to 12 to 1 to 48.


Usage Guidelines

If you do not specify a channel-group, all channel groups are displayed.

In the output, the Passive port list field is displayed only for Layer 3 port channels. This field means that the physical port, which is still not up, is configured to be in the channel group (and indirectly is in the only port channel in the channel group).

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show etherchannel 1 detail command:

Switch> show etherchannel 1 detail
Group state = L2
Ports: 2   Maxports = 16
Port-channels: 1 Max Port-channels = 16
Protocol:   LACP
                Ports in the group:
                -------------------
Port: Gi1/0/1
------------

Port state    = Up Mstr In-Bndl
Channel group = 1           Mode = Active      Gcchange = -
Port-channel  = Po1         GC   =   -         Pseudo port-channel = Po1
Port index    = 0           Load = 0x00        Protocol =   LACP

Flags:  S - Device is sending Slow LACPDUs   F - Device is sending fast LACPDU
        A - Device is in active mode.        P - Device is in passive mode.

Local information:
                            LACP port     Admin     Oper    Port     Port
Port      Flags   State     Priority      Key       Key     Number   State
Gi1/0/1   SA      bndl      32768         0x1       0x1     0x101    0x3D
Gi1/0/2   SA      bndl      32768         0x0       0x1     0x0      0x3D
 
   
Age of the port in the current state: 01d:20h:06m:04s
          
                Port-channels in the group:
                ----------------------

Port-channel: Po1    (Primary Aggregator)
------------

Age of the Port-channel   = 01d:20h:20m:26s
Logical slot/port   = 10/1          Number of ports = 2
HotStandBy port = null
Port state          = Port-channel Ag-Inuse
Protocol            =   LACP

Ports in the Port-channel:

Index   Load   Port     EC state        No of bits
------+------+------+------------------+-----------
  0     00     Gi1/0/1  Active          0
  0     00     Gi1/0/2  Active          0
 
   
Time since last port bundled:    01d:20h:20m:20s    Gi1/0/2

This is an example of output from the show etherchannel 1 summary command:

Switch> show etherchannel 1 summary
Flags:  D - down        P - in port-channel
        I - stand-alone s - suspended
        H - Hot-standby (LACP only)
        R - Layer3      S - Layer2
        u - unsuitable for bundling
        U - in use      f - failed to allocate aggregator
        d - default port

Number of channel-groups in use: 1
Number of aggregators:           1

Group  Port-channel  Protocol    Ports
------+-------------+-----------+----------------------------------------
1      Po1(SU)         LACP      Gi1/0/1(P)  Gi1/0/2(P)
 
   

This is an example of output from the show etherchannel 1 port-channel command:

Switch> show etherchannel 1 port-channel 
                Port-channels in the group: 
                ----------------------
Port-channel: Po1    (Primary Aggregator)

------------

Age of the Port-channel   = 01d:20h:24m:50s
Logical slot/port   = 10/1          Number of ports = 2
HotStandBy port = null
Port state          = Port-channel Ag-Inuse
Protocol            =   LACP

Ports in the Port-channel:

Index   Load   Port     EC state        No of bits
------+------+------+------------------+-----------
  0     00     Gi1/0/1  Active          0
  0     00     Gi1/0/2  Active          0
 
   
Time since last port bundled:    01d:20h:24m:44s    Gi1/0/2

This is an example of output from show etherchannel protocol command:

Switch# show etherchannel protocol
                Channel-group listing:
                -----------------------
Group: 1
----------
Protocol:  LACP

Group: 2
----------
Protocol:  PAgP

Related Commands

Command
Description

channel-group

Assigns an Ethernet port to an EtherChannel group.

channel-protocol

Restricts the protocol used on a port to manage channeling.

interface port-channel

Accesses or creates the port channel.


show flowcontrol

Use the show flowcontrol user EXEC command to display the flow control status and statistics.

show flowcontrol [interface interface-id | module number] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display the flow control status and statistics for a specific interface.

module number

(Optional) Display the flow control status and statistics for all interfaces on the specified stack member. The range is 1 to 9. This option is not available if you have entered a specific interface ID.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display the flow control status and statistics on the switch or for a specific interface.

Use the show flowcontrol command to display information about all the switch interfaces. For a standalone switch, the output from the show flowcontrol command is the same as the output from the show flowcontrol module number command.

Use the show flowcontrol interface interface-id command to display information about a specific interface.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show flowcontrol command.

Switch> show flowcontrol
Port       Send FlowControl  Receive FlowControl  RxPause TxPause
           admin    oper     admin    oper
---------  -------- -------- -------- --------    ------- -------
Gi2/0/1    Unsupp.  Unsupp.  off      off         0       0
Gi2/0/2    desired  off      off      off         0       0
Gi2/0/3    desired  off      off      off         0       0
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show flowcontrol interface interface-id command:

Switch> show flowcontrol gigabitethernet2/0/2
Port       Send FlowControl  Receive FlowControl  RxPause TxPause
           admin    oper     admin    oper
---------  -------- -------- -------- --------    ------- -------
Gi2/0/2    desired  off      off      off         0       0

Related Commands

Command
Description

flowcontrol

Sets the receive flow-control state for an interface.


show idprom

Use the show idprom user EXEC command to display the IDPROM information for the specified interface.

show idprom {interface interface-id} [detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

Display the IDPROM information for the specified 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

detail

(Optional) Display detailed hexidecimal IDPROM information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

This command applies only to 10-Gigabit Ethernet interfaces.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show idprom interface tengigabitethernet1/0/1 command for the 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface. It shows the XENPAK module serial EEPROM contents.

For information about the EEPROM map and the field descriptions for the display, see the XENPAK multisource agreement (MSA) at these sites:

http://www.xenpak.org/MSA/XENPAK_MSA_R2.1.pdf

http://www.xenpak.org/MSA/XENPAK_MSA_R3.0.pdf

To determine which version of the XENPAK documentation to read, check the XENPAK MSA Version supported field in the display. Version 2.1 is 15 hexadecimal, and Version 3.0 is 1E hexadecimal (not shown in the example).

Switch# show idprom interface tengigabitethernet1/0/1
TenGigabitEthernet1/0/1 (gpn:472, port-number:1)
-----------------------------------------------------------
XENPAK Serial EEPROM Contents:
Non-Volatile Register (NVR) Fields
 XENPAK MSA Version supported         :0x15
 NVR Size in bytes                    :0x100
 Number of bytes used                 :0xD0
 Basic Field Address                  :0xB
 Customer Field Address               :0x77
 Vendor Field Address                 :0xA7
 Extended Vendor Field Address        :0x100
 Reserved                             :0x0
 Transceiver type                     :0x1 =XENPAK
 Optical connector type               :0x1 =SC
 Bit encoding                         :0x1 =NRZ
 Normal BitRate in multiple of 1M b/s :0x2848
 Protocol Type                        :0x1 =10GgE

Standards Compliance Codes :
 10GbE Code Byte 0                    :0x2 =10GBASE-LR
 10GbE Code Byte 1                    :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 0                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 1                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 2                :0x0
 SONET/SDH Code Byte 3                :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 0                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 1                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 2                    :0x0
 10GFC Code Byte 3                    :0x0
 Transmission range in 10m            :0x3E8
Fibre Type :
 Fibre Type Byte 0                    :0x40 =NDSF only
 Fibre Type Byte 1                    :0x0 =Unspecified

 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 0 :0x1 0xFF 0xB8 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 1 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 2 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Centre Optical Wavelength in 0.01nm steps - Channel 3 :0x0 0x0 0x0 
 Package Identifier OUI  :0x41F420
 Transceiver Vendor OUI  :0x3400871
 Transceiver vendor name :CISCO-OPNEXT,INC
 Part number provided by transceiver vendor       :800-24558-01    
 Revision level of part number provided by vendor :01
 Vendor serial number           :ONJ0735003U     
 Vendor manufacturing date code :2003082700

 Reserved1 :00 00 00 00 00 00 00
 Basic Field Checksum :0x6C

 Customer Writable Area :
  0x00:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x10:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x20:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

 Vendor Specific :
  0x00:41 00 20 F4 88 84 28 94 C0 00 30 14 06 39 00 D9
  0x10:03 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x20:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
  0x30:00 00 00 00 11 5E 19 E9 BF 1B AD 98 03 9B DF 87
  0x40:CC F6 45 FF 99 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 C0 48
  0x50:46 D2 00 00 00 00 00 00 00

Related Commands

Command
Description

show controllers ethernet-controller

Displays per-interface send and receive statistics read from the hardware, interface internal registers, or port ASIC information.


show interfaces

Use the show interfaces privileged EXEC command to display the administrative and operational status of all interfaces or a specified interface.

show interfaces [interface-id | vlan vlan-id] [accounting | capabilities [module number] | counters | description | etherchannel | flowcontrol | private-vlan mapping | pruning | stats | status [err-disabled] | switchport [backup | module number] | transceiver [properties | detail] [module number] | trunk] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member, module, and port number) and port channels. The port-channel range is 1 to 48.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) VLAN identification. The range is 1 to 4094.

accounting

(Optional) Display accounting information on the interface, including active protocols and input and output packets and octets.

Note The display shows only packets processed in software; hardware-switched packets do not appear.

capabilities

(Optional) Display the capabilities of all interfaces or the specified interface, including the features and options that you can configure on the interface. Though visible in the command line help, this option is not available for VLAN IDs.

module number

(Optional) Display capabilities, switchport configuration, or transceiver characteristics (depending on preceding keyword) of all interfaces on the specified stack member. The range is 1 to 9. This option is not available if you entered a specific interface ID.

counters

(Optional) See the show interfaces counters command.

description

(Optional) Display the administrative status and description set for an interface.

etherchannel

(Optional) Display interface EtherChannel information.

flowcontrol

(Optional) Display interface flowcontrol information

private-vlan mapping

(Optional) Display private-VLAN mapping information for the VLAN switch virtual interfaces (SVIs). This keyword is available only if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

pruning

(Optional) Display interface trunk VTP pruning information.

stats

(Optional) Display the input and output packets by switching path for the interface.

status

(Optional) Display the status of the interface. A status of unsupported in the Type field means that a non-Cisco small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module is inserted in the module slot.

err-disabled

(Optional) Display interfaces in error-disabled state.

switchport

(Optional) Display the administrative and operational status of a switching (nonrouting) port, including port blocking and port protection settings.

backup

(Optional) Display Flex Link backup interface configuration and status for the specified interface or all interfaces on the stack.

transceiver [detail | properties]

(Optional) Display the physical properties of a CWDM1 or DWDM2 small form-factor (SFP) module interface. The keywords have these meanings:

detail(Optional) Display calibration properties, including high and low numbers and any alarm information.

properties—(Optional) Display speed, duplex, and inline power settings on an interface.

trunk

Display interface trunk information. If you do not specify an interface, only information for active trunking ports appears.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.

1 coarse wavelength-division multiplexer

2 dense wavelength-division multiplexer



Note Though visible in the command-line help strings, the crb, fair-queue, irb, mac-accounting, precedence, random-detect, rate-limit, and shape keywords are not supported.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

Support for the capabilities keyword was added.

12.2(20)SE

The private-vlan mapping, backup, transceiver calibration, detail, and properties, keywords were added.

12.2(25)SEA

The calibration keyword was removed.

12.2(25)SEE

Added the backup, counters, detail, and trunk keywords.


Usage Guidelines

The show interfaces capabilities command with different keywords has these results:

Use the show interface capabilities module number command to display the capabilities of all interfaces on that switch in the stack. If there is no switch with that module number in the stack, there is no output.

Use the show interfaces interface-id capabilities to display the capabilities of the specified interface.

Use the show interfaces capabilities (with no module number or interface ID) to display the capabilities of all interfaces in the stack.

Use the show interface switchport module number command to display the switch port characteristics of all interfaces on that switch in the stack. If there is no switch with that module number in the stack, there is no output.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show interfaces command for an interface on stack member 3:

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet3/0/2 
GigabitEthernet3/0/2 is down, line protocol is down
  Hardware is Gigabit Ethernet, address is 0009.43a7.d085 (bia 0009.43a7.d085)
  MTU 1500 bytes, BW 10000 Kbit, DLY 1000 usec,
     reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
  Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
  Keepalive set (10 sec)
  Auto-duplex, Auto-speed
  input flow-control is off, output flow-control is off
  ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00 Last input never, output never, output hang never
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
  Input queue: 0/75/0/0 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
  Queueing strategy: fifo
  Output queue :0/40 (size/max)
  5 minute input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
     2 packets input, 1040 bytes, 0 no buffer
     Received 0 broadcasts, 0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
     0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored
     0 watchdog, 0 multicast, 0 pause input
     0 input packets with dribble condition detected
     4 packets output, 1040 bytes, 0 underruns
     0 output errors, 0 collisions, 3 interface resets
     0 babbles, 0 late collision, 0 deferred
     0 lost carrier, 0 no carrier, 0 PAUSE output
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out

This is an example of output from the show interfaces accounting command.

Switch# show interfaces accounting
Vlan1
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
                      IP    1094395  131900022     559555   84077157
           Spanning Tree     283896   17033760         42       2520
                     ARP      63738    3825680        231      13860
Interface Vlan2 is disabled
Vlan7
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.
Vlan31
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.

GigabitEthernet1/0/1
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show interfaces capabilities command for an interface.

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/2 capabilities
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
  Model:                 WS-C3750G-24TS
  Type:                  10/100/1000BaseTX
  Speed:                 10,100,1000,auto
  Duplex:                full,auto
  Trunk encap. type:     802.1Q,ISL
  Trunk mode:            on,off,desirable,nonegotiate
  Channel:               yes
  Broadcast suppression: percentage(0-100)
  Flowcontrol:           rx-(off,on,desired),tx-(none)
  Fast Start:            yes
  QoS scheduling:        rx-(not configurable on per port basis),tx-(4q2t)
  CoS rewrite:           yes
  ToS rewrite:           yes
  UDLD:                  yes
  Inline power:          no
  SPAN:                  source/destination
  PortSecure:            yes
  Dot1x:                 yes
 
   

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface description command when the interface has been described as Connects to Marketing by using the description interface configuration command.

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/2 description
Interface Status         Protocol Description
Gi1/0/2     up             down     Connects to Marketing
 
   

This is an example of output from the show interfaces etherchannel command when port channels are configured on the switch:

Switch# show interfaces etherchannel
----
Port-channel1:
Age of the Port-channel   = 03d:20h:17m:29s
Logical slot/port   = 10/1           Number of ports = 0
GC                  = 0x00000000      HotStandBy port = null
Port state          = Port-channel Ag-Not-Inuse

Port-channel2:
Age of the Port-channel   = 03d:20h:17m:29s
Logical slot/port   = 10/2           Number of ports = 0
GC                  = 0x00000000      HotStandBy port = null
Port state          = Port-channel Ag-Not-Inuse

Port-channel3:
Age of the Port-channel   = 03d:20h:17m:29s
Logical slot/port   = 10/3           Number of ports = 0
GC                  = 0x00000000      HotStandBy port = null
Port state          = Port-channel Ag-Not-Inuse

This is an example of output from the show interfaces private-vlan mapping command when the private-VLAN primary VLAN is VLAN 10 and the secondary VLANs are VLANs 501 and 502:

Switch# show interfaces private-vlan mapping
Interface Secondary VLAN Type
--------- -------------- -----------------
vlan10    501            isolated
vlan10    502            community

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id pruning command when pruning is enabled in the VTP domain:

Switch# show interfaces gigibitethernet1/0/2 pruning
Port    Vlans pruned for lack of request by neighbor
Gi1/0/2   3,4
 
   
Port    Vlans traffic requested of neighbor
Gi1/0/2   1-3
 
   

This is an example of output from the show interfaces stats command for a specified VLAN interface.

Switch# show interfaces vlan 1 stats
Switching path    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
        Processor    1165354  136205310     570800   91731594
      Route cache          0          0          0          0
            Total    1165354  136205310     570800   91731594

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces status command. It displays the status of all interfaces.

Switch# show interfaces status
Port      Name               Status       Vlan       Duplex  Speed Type
Fa1/0/1                      connected    routed     a-half  a-100 10/100BaseTX
Fa1/0/2                      notconnect   121,40       auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa1/0/3                      notconnect   1            auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
Fa1/0/4                      notconnect   18           auto   auto Not Present
Fa1/0/5                      connected    121        a-full a-1000 10/100BaseTX
Fa1/0/6                      connected    122,11     a-full a-1000 10/100BaseTX 

<output truncated>
Gi1/0/1                      notconnect   1            auto   auto 10/100/1000BaseTX
Gi1/0/2                      notconnect   1            auto   auto unsupported
 
   

These are examples of output from the show interfaces status command for a specific interface when private VLANs are configured. Port 22 is configured as a private-VLAN host port. It is associated with primary VLAN 20 and secondary VLAN 25.

Switch# show interfaces fastethernet1/0/22 status
Port      Name               Status       Vlan       Duplex  Speed Type
Fa1/0/22                     connected    20,25      a-full  a-100 10/100BaseTX

In this example, port 20 is configured as a private-VLAN promiscuous port. The display shows only the primary VLAN 20.

Switch# show interfaces fastethernet1/0/20 status
Port      Name               Status       Vlan       Duplex  Speed Type
Fa1/0/20                     connected    20         a-full  a-100 10/100BaseTX

This is an example of output from the show interfaces status err-disabled command. It displays the status of interfaces in the error-disabled state.

Switch# show interfaces status err-disabled 
Port      Name               Status       Reason
Gi2/0/26                     err-disabled gbic-invalid
 
   

This is an example of output from the show interfaces switchport command for a port. Table 2-24 describes the fields in the display.


Note Private VLAN trunks are not supported in this release, so those fields are not applicable.


Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 switchport
Name: Gi1/0/1
Switchport: Enabled
Administrative Mode: dynamic auto
Operational Mode: static access
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: negotiate
Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native
Negotiation of Trunking: On
Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Voice VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan host-association:10 (VLAN0010) 502 (VLAN0502)
Administrative private-vlan mapping: none 
Administrative private-vlan trunk native VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk encapsulation: dot1q
Administrative private-vlan trunk normal VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk private VLANs: none
Operational private-vlan: none
Trunking VLANs Enabled: ALL
Pruning VLANs Enabled: 2-1001
Capture Mode Disabled
Capture VLANs Allowed: ALL

Protected: false
Unknown unicast blocked: disabled
Unknown multicast blocked: disabled

Voice VLAN: none (Inactive)
Appliance trust: none

Table 2-24 show interfaces switchport Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Name

Displays the port name.

Switchport

Displays the administrative and operational status of the port. In this display, the port is in switchport mode.

Administrative Mode

Operational Mode

Displays the administrative and operational modes.

Administrative Trunking Encapsulation

Operational Trunking Encapsulation

Negotiation of Trunking

Displays the administrative and operational encapsulation method and whether trunking negotiation is enabled.

Access Mode VLAN

Displays the VLAN ID to which the port is configured.

Trunking Native Mode VLAN

Trunking VLANs Enabled

Trunking VLANs Active

Lists the VLAN ID of the trunk that is in native mode. Lists the allowed VLANs on the trunk. Lists the active VLANs on the trunk.

Pruning VLANs Enabled

Lists the VLANs that are pruning-eligible.

Protected

Displays whether or not protected port is enabled (True) or disabled (False) on the interface.

Unknown unicast blocked

Unknown multicast blocked

Displays whether or not unknown multicast and unknown unicast traffic is blocked on the interface.

Voice VLAN

Displays the VLAN ID on which voice VLAN is enabled.

Administrative private-vlan host-association

Displays the administrative VLAN association for private-VLAN host ports.

Administrative private-vlan mapping

Displays the administrative VLAN mapping for private-VLAN promiscuous ports.

Operational private-vlan

Displays the operational private-VLAN status.

Appliance trust

Displays the class of service (CoS) setting of the data packets of the IP phone.


This is an example of output from the show interfaces switchport command for a port configured as a private VLAN promiscuous port. The primary VLAN 20 is mapped to secondary VLANs 25, 30 and 35:

Switch# show interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 switchport
Name: Gi1/0/2
Switchport: Enabled
Administrative Mode: private-vlan promiscuous
Operational Mode: private-vlan promiscuous
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: negotiate
Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native
Negotiation of Trunking: Off
Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Administrative Native VLAN tagging: enabled
Voice VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan host-association: none
Administrative private-vlan mapping: 20 (VLAN0020) 25 (VLAN0025) 30 (VLAN0030) 35 
(VLAN0035)
Administrative private-vlan trunk native VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk Native VLAN tagging: enabled
Administrative private-vlan trunk encapsulation: dot1q
Administrative private-vlan trunk normal VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk private VLANs: none
Operational private-vlan:
20 (VLAN0020) 25 (VLAN0025)
30 (VLAN0030)
35 (VLAN0035)

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show interfaces switchport backup command:

Switch# show interfaces switchport backup
Switch Backup Interface Pairs:
     Active Interface    Backup Interface    State
     --------------------------------------------------------------
     Fa1/0/1             Fa1/0/2             Active Up/Backup Standby
     Fa3/0/3             Fa4/0/5             Active Down/Backup Up
     Po1                 Po2                 Active Standby/Backup Up

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id pruning command:

Switch# show interfaces gigibitethernet1/0/2 pruning
Port    Vlans pruned for lack of request by neighbor

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id trunk command. It displays trunking information for the port.

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 trunk
Port          Mode         Encapsulation  Status        Native vlan
Gi1/0/1      auto         negotiate      trunking      1

Port          Vlans allowed on trunk
Gi1/0/1      1-4094

Port          Vlans allowed and active in management domain
Gi1/0/1      1-4

Port          Vlans in spanning tree forwarding state and not pruned
Gi1/0/1       1-4

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id transceiver properties command:

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 transceiver properties
Name : Gi1/0/1
Administrative Speed: auto 
Operational Speed: auto 
Administrative Duplex: auto
Administrative Power Inline: enable
Operational Duplex: auto
Administrative Auto-MDIX: off
Operational Auto-MDIX: off
 
   

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id transceiver detail command:

Switch# show interfaces gigabitethernet2/0/3 transceiver detail
ITU Channel not available (Wavelength not available),
Transceiver is externally calibrated.
mA:milliamperes, dBm:decibels (milliwatts), N/A:not applicable.
++:high alarm, +:high warning, -:low warning, -- :low alarm.
A2D readouts (if they differ), are reported in parentheses.
The threshold values are uncalibrated.

                            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
        Temperature         Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
Port     (Celsius)          (Celsius)   (Celsius)  (Celsius)  (Celsius)
------- ------------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Gi2/0/3 41.5                110.0       103.0      -8.0       -12.0

                            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
         Voltage            Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
Port     (Volts)            (Volts)     (Volts)    (Volts)    (Volts)
-------  ---------------    ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Gi2/0/3  3.20               4.00        3.70       3.00       2.95

                            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
         Current            Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
Port     (milliamperes)     (mA)        (mA)       (mA)       (mA)
-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Gi2/0/3  31.0               84.0        70.0       4.0        2.0

         Optical            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
         Transmit Power     Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
Port     (dBm)              (dBm)       (dBm)      (dBm)      (dBm)
-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Gi2/0/3  -0.0 ( -0.0)       -0.0        -0.0       -0.0       -0.0

         Optical            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
         Receive Power      Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
Port     (dBm)              (dBm)       (dBm)      (dBm)      (dBm)
-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Gi2/0/3  N/A  ( -0.0) --    -0.0        -0.0       -0.0       -0.0

Related Commands

Command
Description

switchport access

Configures a port as a static-access or a dynamic-access port.

switchport block

Blocks unknown unicast or multicast traffic on an interface.

switchport backup interface

Configures Flex Links, a pair of Layer 2 interfaces that provide mutual backup.

switchport mode

Configures the VLAN membership mode of a port.

switchport mode private-vlan

Configures a port as a private-VLAN host or a promiscuous port.

switchport private-vlan

Defines private-VLAN association for a host port or private-VLAN mapping for a promiscuous port.

switchport protected

Isolates unicast, multicast, and broadcast traffic at Layer 2 from other protected ports on the same switch.

switchport trunk pruning

Configures the VLAN pruning-eligible list for ports in trunking mode.


show interfaces counters

Use the show interfaces counters privileged EXEC command to display various counters for the switch or for a specific interface.

show interfaces [interface-id | vlan vlan-id] counters [errors | etherchannel | module switch- number | protocol status | trunk] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the physical interface, including type, stack member, module, and port number.

errors

(Optional) Display error counters.

etherchannel

(Optional) Display EtherChannel counters, including octets, broadcast packets, multicast packets, and unicast packets received and sent.

module switch- number

(Optional) Display counters for the specified stack member. The range is from 1 to 9, depending upon the switch numbers in the stack.

Note In this command, the module keyword refers to the stack member number (1 to 9). The module number that is part of the interface ID is always zero.

protocol status

(Optional) Display status of protocols enabled on interfaces.

trunk

(Optional) Display trunk counters.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.



Note Though visible in the command-line help string, the vlan vlan-id keyword is not supported.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SE

The etherchannel and protocol status keywords were added. The broadcast, multicast, and unicast keywords were removed.


Usage Guidelines

If you do not enter any keywords, all counters for all interfaces are included.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters command. It displays all counters for the switch.

Switch# show interfaces counters
Port            InOctets   InUcastPkts   InMcastPkts   InBcastPkts
Gi1/0/1                0             0             0             0
Gi1/0/2                0             0             0             0

<output truncated>

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters module command for stack member 2. It displays all counters for the specified switch in the stack.

Switch# show interfaces counters module 2
Port            InOctets   InUcastPkts   InMcastPkts   InBcastPkts
Fa2/0/1              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/2              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/3              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/4              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/5              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/6              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/7              520             2             0             0
Fa2/0/8              520             2             0             0

<output truncated>

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters protocol status command for all interfaces.

Switch# show interfaces counters protocol status
Protocols allocated:
 Vlan1: Other, IP
 Vlan20: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan30: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan40: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan50: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan60: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan70: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan80: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan90: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan900: Other, IP, ARP
 Vlan3000: Other, IP
 Vlan3500: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/1: Other, IP, ARP, CDP
 FastEthernet1/0/2: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/3: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/4: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/5: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/6: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/7: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/8: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/9: Other, IP
 FastEthernet1/0/10: Other, IP, CDP

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show interfaces counters trunk command. It displays trunk counters for all interfaces.

Switch# show interfaces counters trunk
Port        TrunkFramesTx  TrunkFramesRx  WrongEncap
Gi1/0/1                 0              0           0
Gi1/0/2                 0              0           0
Gi1/0/3             80678           4155           0
Gi1/0/4             82320            126           0
Gi1/0/5                0               0           0

<output truncated>

Related Commands

Command
Description

show interfaces

Displays additional interface characteristics.


show inventory

Use the show inventory user EXEC command to display product identification (PID) information for the hardware.

show inventory [entity-name | raw] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

entity-name

(Optional) Display the specified entity. For example, enter the interface (such as gigabitethernet1/0/1) into which a small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module is installed.

raw

(Optional) Display every entity in the device.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SEC

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The command is case sensitive. With no arguments, the show inventory command produces a compact dump of all identifiable entities that have a product identifier. The compact dump displays the entity location (slot identity), entity description, and the unique device identifier (UDI) (PID, VID, and SN) of that entity.


Note If there is no PID, no output appears when you enter the show inventory command.


Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is example output from the show inventory command:

Switch> show inventory
NAME: "5", DESCR: "WS-C3750G-12S"
PID: WS-C3750G-12S-S   , VID: E0 , SN: CAT0749R204

show ip arp inspection

Use the show ip arp inspection privileged EXEC command to display the configuration and the operating state of dynamic Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) inspection or the status of this feature for all VLANs or for the specified interface or VLAN.

show ip arp inspection [interfaces [interface-id] | log | statistics [vlan vlan-range] | vlan vlan-range] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

This command is available only if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

Syntax Description

interfaces [interface-id]

(Optional) Display the trust state and the rate limit of ARP packets for the specified interface or all interfaces. Valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

log

(Optional) Display the configuration and contents of the dynamic ARP inspection log buffer.

statistics [vlan vlan-range]

(Optional) Display statistics for forwarded, dropped, MAC validation failure, IP validation failure, access control list (ACL) permitted and denied, and DHCP permitted and denied packets for the specified VLAN. If no VLANs are specified or if a range is specified, display information only for VLANs with dynamic ARP inspection enabled (active).

You can specify a single VLAN identified by VLAN ID number, a range of VLANs separated by a hyphen, or a series of VLANs separated by a comma. The range is 1 to 4094.

vlan vlan-range

(Optional) Display the configuration and the operating state of dynamic ARP inspection for the specified VLAN. If no VLANs are specified or if a range is specified, display information only for VLANs with dynamic ARP inspection enabled (active).

You can specify a single VLAN identified by VLAN ID number, a range of VLANs separated by a hyphen, or a series of VLANs separated by a comma. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection interfaces command:

Switch# show ip arp inspection interfaces
 Interface        Trust State     Rate (pps)    Burst Interval
 ---------------  -----------     ----------    --------------
 Gi1/0/1          Untrusted               15                 1
 Gi1/0/2          Untrusted               15                 1
 Gi1/0/3          Untrusted               15                 1

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection interfaces interface-id command:

Switch# show ip arp inspection interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1
 Interface        Trust State     Rate (pps)    Burst Interval
 ---------------  -----------     ----------    --------------
 Gi1/0/1          Untrusted               15                 1

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection log command. It shows the contents of the log buffer before the buffers are cleared:

Switch# show ip arp inspection log
Total Log Buffer Size : 32
Syslog rate : 10 entries per 300 seconds.

Interface   Vlan  Sender MAC      Sender IP        Num Pkts   Reason       Time
----------  ----  --------------  ---------------  ---------  -----------  ----
Gi1/0/1     5     0003.0000.d673  192.2.10.4               5  DHCP Deny    19:39:01 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.0000.d774  128.1.9.25               6  DHCP Deny    19:39:02 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.c940.1111  10.10.10.1               7  DHCP Deny    19:39:03 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.c940.1112  10.10.10.2               8  DHCP Deny    19:39:04 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.c940.1114  173.1.1.1               10  DHCP Deny    19:39:06 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.c940.1115  173.1.1.2               11  DHCP Deny    19:39:07 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993
Gi1/0/1     5     0001.c940.1116  173.1.1.3               12  DHCP Deny    19:39:08 UTC 
Mon Mar 1 1993

If the log buffer overflows, it means that a log event does not fit into the log buffer, and the display for the show ip arp inspection log privileged EXEC command is affected. A -- in the display appears in place of all data except the packet count and the time. No other statistics are provided for the entry. If you see this entry in the display, increase the number of entries in the log buffer, or increase the logging rate in the ip arp inspection log-buffer global configuration command.

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection statistics command. It shows the statistics for packets that have been processed by dynamic ARP inspection for all active VLANs.

Switch# show ip arp inspection statistics
Vlan       Forwarded        Dropped     DHCP Drops      ACL Drops
 ----      ---------        -------     ----------      ---------
    5              3           4618           4605              4
 2000              0              0              0              0

 Vlan   DHCP Permits    ACL Permits   Source MAC Failures
 ----   ------------    -----------   -------------------
    5              0             12                     0
 2000              0              0                     0

 Vlan   Dest MAC Failures   IP Validation Failures
 ----   -----------------   ----------------------
    5                   0                        9
 2000                   0                        0

For the show ip arp inspection statistics command, the switch increments the number of forwarded packets for each ARP request and response packet on a trusted dynamic ARP inspection port. The switch increments the number of ACL or DHCP permitted packets for each packet that is denied by source MAC, destination MAC, or IP validation checks, and the switch increments the appropriate failure count.

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection statistics vlan 5 command. It shows statistics for packets that have been processed by dynamic ARP for VLAN 5.

Switch# show ip arp inspection statistics vlan 5
Vlan      Forwarded        Dropped     DHCP Drops      ACL Drops
 ----      ---------        -------     ----------      ---------
    5              3           4618           4605              4

 Vlan   DHCP Permits    ACL Permits   Source MAC Failures
 ----   ------------    -----------   -------------------
    5              0             12                     0

 Vlan   Dest MAC Failures   IP Validation Failures      Invalid Protocol Data
 ----   -----------------   ----------------------      ---------------------
    5                   0                        9                          3

This is an example of output from the show ip arp inspection vlan 5 command. It shows the configuration and the operating state of dynamic ARP inspection for VLAN 5.

Switch# show ip arp inspection vlan 5
Source Mac Validation      :Enabled
Destination Mac Validation :Enabled
IP Address Validation      :Enabled

 Vlan     Configuration    Operation   ACL Match          Static ACL
 ----     -------------    ---------   ---------          ----------
    5     Enabled          Active      second             No

 Vlan     ACL Logging      DHCP Logging
 ----     -----------      ------------
    5     Acl-Match        All

Related Commands

Command
Description

arp access-list

Defines an ARP ACL.

clear ip arp inspection log

Clears the dynamic ARP inspection log buffer.

clear ip arp inspection statistics

Clears the dynamic ARP inspection statistics.

ip arp inspection log-buffer

Configures the dynamic ARP inspection logging buffer.

ip arp inspection vlan logging

Controls the type of packets that are logged per VLAN.

show arp access-list

Displays detailed information about ARP access lists.


show ip dhcp snooping

Use the show ip dhcp snooping user EXEC command to display the DHCP snooping configuration.

show ip dhcp snooping [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SEE

The command output was updated to show the global suboption configuration.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

This command displays only the results of global configuration. Therefore, in this example, the circuit ID suboption appears in its default format of vlan-mod-port, even if a string is configured for the circuit ID.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip dhcp snooping command:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping
Switch DHCP snooping is enabled
DHCP snooping is configured on following VLANs:
40-42
Insertion of option 82 is enabled
	circuit-id format: vlan-mod-port
	remote-id format: string
Option 82 on untrusted port is allowed 
Verification of hwaddr field is enabled
Interface                    Trusted     Rate limit (pps)
------------------------     -------     ----------------
GigabitEthernet1/0/1             yes         unlimited
GigabitEthernet1/0/2             yes         unlimited
GigabitEthernet2/0/3             no          2000 
GigabitEthernet2/0/4             yes         unlimited

Related Commands

Command
Description

show ip dhcp snooping binding

Displays the DHCP snooping binding information.


show ip dhcp snooping binding

Use the show ip dhcp snooping binding user EXEC command to display the DHCP snooping binding database and configuration information for all interfaces on a switch.

show ip dhcp snooping binding [ip-address] [mac-address] [interface interface-id] [vlan vlan-id] | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

ip-address

(Optional) Specify the binding entry IP address.

mac-address

(Optional) Specify the binding entry MAC address.

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specify the binding input interface.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify the binding entry VLAN.

| begin

Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

This command was introduced.

12.2(18)SE

The dynamic and static keywords were removed.


Usage Guidelines

The show ip dhcp snooping binding command output shows only the dynamically configured bindings. Use the show ip source binding privileged EXEC command to display the dynamically and statically configured bindings in the DHCP snooping binding database.

If DHCP snooping is enabled and an interface changes to the down state, the switch does not delete the statically configured bindings.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries for a switch:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping binding
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
------------------  ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
01:02:03:04:05:06   10.1.2.150       9837        dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/1
00:D0:B7:1B:35:DE   10.1.2.151       237         dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/2
Total number of bindings: 2

This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries for a specific IP address:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping binding 10.1.2.150
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
------------------  ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
01:02:03:04:05:06   10.1.2.150       9810        dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/1
Total number of bindings: 1

This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries for a specific MAC address:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping binding 0102.0304.0506
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
------------------  ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
01:02:03:04:05:06   10.1.2.150       9788        dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/2
Total number of bindings: 1

This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries on a port:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping binding interface gigabitethernet2/0/2
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
------------------  ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
00:30:94:C2:EF:35   10.1.2.151       290         dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/2
Total number of bindings: 1

This example shows how to display the DHCP snooping binding entries on VLAN 20:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping binding vlan 20
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
------------------  ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
01:02:03:04:05:06   10.1.2.150       9747        dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/1
00:00:00:00:00:02   10.1.2.151       65          dhcp-snooping  20    GigabitEthernet2/0/2
Total number of bindings: 2

Table 2-25 describes the fields in the show ip dhcp snooping binding command output:

Table 2-25 show ip dhcp snooping binding Command Output 

Field
Description

MacAddress

Client hardware MAC address

IpAddress

Client IP address assigned from the DHCP server

Lease(sec)

Remaining lease time for the IP address

Type

Binding type

VLAN

VLAN number of the client interface

Interface

Interface that connects to the DHCP client host

Total number of bindings

Total number of bindings configured on the switch

Note The command output might not show the total number of bindings. For example, if 200 bindings are configured on the switch and you stop the display before all the bindings appear, the total number does not change.


Related Commands

Command
Description

ip dhcp snooping binding

Configures the DHCP snooping binding database

show ip dhcp snooping

Displays the DHCP snooping configuration.


show ip dhcp snooping database

Use the show ip dhcp snooping database user EXEC command to display the status of the DHCP snooping binding database agent.

show ip dhcp snooping database [detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

This command is available only if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

Syntax Description

detail

(Optional) Display detailed status and statistics information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip dhcp snooping database command:

Switch> show ip dhcp snooping database
Agent URL : 
Write delay Timer : 300 seconds
Abort Timer : 300 seconds

Agent Running : No
Delay Timer Expiry : Not Running
Abort Timer Expiry : Not Running

Last Succeded Time : None
Last Failed Time : None
Last Failed Reason : No failure recorded.

Total Attempts       :        0   Startup Failures :        0
Successful Transfers :        0   Failed Transfers :        0
Successful Reads     :        0   Failed Reads     :        0
Successful Writes    :        0   Failed Writes    :        0
Media Failures       :        0

This is an example of output from the show ip dhcp snooping database detail command:

Switch# show ip dhcp snooping database detail 
Agent URL : tftp://10.1.1.1/directory/file
Write delay Timer : 300 seconds
Abort Timer : 300 seconds

Agent Running : No
Delay Timer Expiry : 7 (00:00:07)
Abort Timer Expiry : Not Running

Last Succeded Time : None
Last Failed Time : 17:14:25 UTC Sat Jul 7 2001
Last Failed Reason : Unable to access URL.

Total Attempts       :       21   Startup Failures :        0
Successful Transfers :        0   Failed Transfers :       21
Successful Reads     :        0   Failed Reads     :        0
Successful Writes    :        0   Failed Writes    :       21
Media Failures       :        0

First successful access: Read

Last ignored bindings counters :
Binding Collisions    :        0   Expired leases    :        0
Invalid interfaces    :        0   Unsupported vlans :        0
Parse failures        :        0
Last Ignored Time : None

Total ignored bindings counters:
Binding Collisions    :        0   Expired leases    :        0
Invalid interfaces    :        0   Unsupported vlans :        0
Parse failures        :        0

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip dhcp snooping

Enables DHCP snooping on a VLAN.

ip dhcp snooping database

Configures the DHCP snooping binding database agent or the binding file.

show ip dhcp snooping

Displays DHCP snooping information.


show ip igmp profile

Use the show ip igmp profile privileged EXEC command to display all configured Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) profiles or a specified IGMP profile.

show ip igmp profile [profile number] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

profile number

(Optional) The IGMP profile number to be displayed. The range is 1 to 4294967295. If no profile number is entered, all IGMP profiles are displayed.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

These are examples of output from the show ip igmp profile privileged EXEC command, with and without specifying a profile number. If no profile number is entered, the display includes all profiles configured on the switch.

Switch# show ip igmp profile 40
IGMP Profile 40
    permit
    range 233.1.1.1 233.255.255.255

Switch# show ip igmp profile
IGMP Profile 3
    range 230.9.9.0 230.9.9.0
IGMP Profile 4
    permit
    range 229.9.9.0 229.255.255.255

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip igmp profile

Configures the specified IGMP profile number.


show ip igmp snooping

Use the show ip igmp snooping user EXEC command to display the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping configuration of the switch or the VLAN.

show ip igmp snooping [groups | mrouter | querier] [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

groups

(Optional) See the show ip igmp snooping groups command.

mrouter

(Optional) See the show ip igmp snooping mrouter command.

querier

(Optional) See the show ip igmp snooping querier command.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094 (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The querier keyword was added.

12.2(18)SE

The groups keyword was added. The show ip igmp snooping groups command replaced the show ip igmp snooping multicast command.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display snooping configuration for the switch or for a specific VLAN.

VLAN IDs 1002 to 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in IGMP snooping.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping vlan 1 command. It shows snooping characteristics for a specific VLAN.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping vlan 1
Global IGMP Snooping configuration:
-----------------------------------
IGMP snooping             :Enabled
IGMPv3 snooping (minimal) :Enabled
Report suppression        :Enabled
TCN solicit query         :Disabled
TCN flood query count     :2
Last member query interval : 100

Vlan 1:
--------
IGMP snooping                       :Enabled
Immediate leave                     :Disabled
Multicast router learning mode      :pim-dvmrp
Source only learning age timer      :10
CGMP interoperability mode          :IGMP_ONLY
Last member query interval : 100

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping command. It displays snooping characteristics for all VLANs on the switch.

Switch> show ip igmp snooping 
Global IGMP Snooping configuration:
-----------------------------------
IGMP snooping              : Enabled
IGMPv3 snooping (minimal)  : Enabled
Report suppression         : Enabled
TCN solicit query          : Disabled
TCN flood query count      : 2
Last member query interval : 100

Vlan 1:
--------
IGMP snooping                       :Enabled
Immediate leave                     :Disabled
Multicast router learning mode      :pim-dvmrp
Source only learning age timer      :10
CGMP interoperability mode          :IGMP_ONLY
Last member query interval          : 100

Vlan 2:
--------
IGMP snooping                       :Enabled
Immediate leave                     :Disabled
Multicast router learning mode      :pim-dvmrp
Source only learning age timer      :10
CGMP interoperability mode          :IGMP_ONLY
Last member query interval          : 333

<output truncated>

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip igmp snooping

Enables IGMP snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ip igmp snooping last-member-query-interval

Enables the IGMP snooping configurable-leave timer.

ip igmp snooping querier

Enables the IGMP querier function in Layer 2 networks.

ip igmp snooping report-suppression

Enables IGMP report suppression.

ip igmp snooping tcn

Configures the IGMP topology change notification behavior.

ip igmp snooping tcn flood

Specifies multicast flooding as the IGMP spanning-tree topology change notification behavior.

ip igmp snooping vlan immediate-leave

Enables IGMP snooping immediate-leave processing on a VLAN.

ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter

Adds a multicast router port or configures the multicast learning method.

ip igmp snooping vlan static

Statically adds a Layer 2 port as a member of a multicast group.

show ip igmp snooping groups

Displays the IGMP snooping multicast table for the switch.

show ip igmp snooping mrouter

Displays IGMP snooping multicast router ports for the switch or for the specified multicast VLAN.

show ip igmp snooping querier

Displays the configuration and operation information for the IGMP querier configured on a switch.


show ip igmp snooping groups

Use the show ip igmp snooping groups privileged EXEC command to display the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping multicast table for the switch or the multicast information. Use with the vlan keyword to display the multicast table for a specified multicast VLAN or specific multicast information.

show ip igmp snooping groups [count | dynamic [count] | user [count]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show ip igmp snooping groups vlan vlan-id [ip_address | count | dynamic [count] | user [count]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

count

(Optional) Display the total number of entries for the specified command

options instead of the actual entries.

dynamic

(Optional) Display entries learned by IGMP snooping.

user

Optional) Display only the user-configured multicast entries.

ip_address

(Optional) Display characteristics of the multicast group with the specified group IP address.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(18)SE

This command was introduced. It replaced the show ip igmp snooping multicast command.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display multicast information or the multicast table.

VLAN IDs 1002 to 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in IGMP snooping.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping groups command without any keywords. It displays the multicast table for the switch.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping groups
Vlan      Group          Type        Version     Port List
-------------------------------------------------------------
1         224.1.4.4      igmp                    Fa1/0/11
1         224.1.4.5      igmp                    Fa1/0/11
2         224.0.1.40     igmp        v2          Fa1/0/15
 
   

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping groups count command. It displays the total number of multicast groups on the switch.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping groups count
Total number of multicast groups: 2

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping groups dynamic command. It shows only the entries learned by IGMP snooping.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping groups vlan 1 dynamic
Vlan      Group          Type        Version     Port List
-------------------------------------------------------------
104       224.1.4.2      igmp        v2          Gi2/0/1, Fa1/0/15
104       224.1.4.3      igmp        v2          Gi2/0/1, Fa1/0/15
 
   

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping groups vlan vlan-id ip-address command. It shows the entries for the group with the specified IP address.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping groups vlan 104 224.1.4.2
Vlan      Group          Type        Version     Port List
-------------------------------------------------------------
104       224.1.4.2      igmp        v2          Gi2/0/1, Fa1/0/15

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip igmp snooping

Enables IGMP snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter

Configures a multicast router port.

ip igmp snooping vlan static

Statically adds a Layer 2 port as a member of a multicast group.

show ip igmp snooping

Displays the IGMP snooping configuration of the switch or the VLAN.

show ip igmp snooping mrouter

Displays IGMP snooping multicast router ports for the switch or for the specified multicast VLAN.


show ip igmp snooping mrouter

Use the show ip igmp snooping mrouter privileged EXEC command to display the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping dynamically learned and manually configured multicast router ports for the switch or for the specified multicast VLAN.

show ip igmp snooping mrouter [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display multicast router ports on the switch or for a specific VLAN.

VLAN IDs 1002 to 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in IGMP snooping.

When multicast VLAN registration (MVR) is enabled, the show ip igmp snooping mrouter command displays MVR multicast router information and IGMP snooping information.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping mrouter command. It shows how to display multicast router ports on the switch.

Switch# show ip igmp snooping mrouter
Vlan    ports
----    -----
   1    Gi2/0/1(dynamic)

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip igmp snooping

Enables IGMP snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ip igmp snooping vlan mrouter

Adds a multicast router port.

ip igmp snooping vlan static

Statically adds a Layer 2 port as a member of a multicast group.

show ip igmp snooping

Displays the IGMP snooping configuration of the switch or the VLAN

show ip igmp snooping groups

Displays IGMP snooping multicast information for the switch or for the specified parameter.


show ip igmp snooping querier

Use the show ip igmp snooping querier detail user EXEC command to display the configuration and operation information for the IGMP querier configured on a switch.

show ip igmp snooping querier [detail | vlan vlan-id [detail]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

detail

Optional) Display detailed IGMP querier information.

vlan vlan-id [detail]

Optional) Display IGMP querier information for the specified VLAN. The range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094. Use the detail keyword to display detailed information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SEA

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use the show ip igmp snooping querier command to display the IGMP version and the IP address of a detected device, also called a querier, that sends IGMP query messages. A subnet can have multiple multicast routers but has only one IGMP querier. In a subnet running IGMPv2, one of the multicast routers is elected as the querier. The querier can be a Layer 3 switch.

The show ip igmp snooping querier command output also shows the VLAN and the interface on which the querier was detected. If the querier is the switch, the output shows the Port field as Router. If the querier is a router, the output shows the port number on which the querier is learned in the Port field.

The show ip igmp snooping querier detail user EXEC command is similar to the show ip igmp snooping querier command. However, the show ip igmp snooping querier command displays only the device IP address most recently detected by the switch querier.

The show ip igmp snooping querier detail command displays the device IP address most recently detected by the switch querier and this additional information:

The elected IGMP querier in the VLAN

The configuration and operational information pertaining to the switch querier (if any) that is configured in the VLAN

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping querier command:

Switch> show ip igmp snooping querier
Vlan      IP Address     IGMP Version        Port
---------------------------------------------------
1         172.20.50.11   v3                  Gi1/0/1
2         172.20.40.20   v2                  Router

This is an example of output from the show ip igmp snooping querier detail command:

Switch> show ip igmp snooping querier detail

Vlan      IP Address     IGMP Version   Port
-------------------------------------------------------------
1         1.1.1.1        v2             Fa8/0/1 

Global IGMP switch querier status
--------------------------------------------------------
admin state                    : Enabled
admin version                  : 2
source IP address              : 0.0.0.0        
query-interval (sec)           : 60
max-response-time (sec)        : 10
querier-timeout (sec)          : 120
tcn query count                : 2
tcn query interval (sec)       : 10

Vlan 1:   IGMP switch querier status

--------------------------------------------------------
elected querier is 1.1.1.1         on port Fa8/0/1
--------------------------------------------------------
admin state                    : Enabled
admin version                  : 2
source IP address              : 10.1.1.65      
query-interval (sec)           : 60
max-response-time (sec)        : 10
querier-timeout (sec)          : 120
tcn query count                : 2
tcn query interval (sec)       : 10
operational state              : Non-Querier
operational version            : 2
tcn query pending count        : 0

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip igmp snooping

Enables IGMP snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ip igmp snooping querier

Enables the IGMP querier function in Layer 2 networks.

show ip igmp snooping

Displays IGMP snooping multicast router ports for the switch or for the specified multicast VLAN.


show ip source binding

Use the show ip source binding user EXEC command to display the IP source bindings on the switch.

show ip source binding [ip-address] [mac-address] [dhcp-snooping | static] [interface interface-id] [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

This command is available only if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

Syntax Description

ip-address

(Optional) Display IP source bindings for a specific IP address.

mac-address

(Optional) Display IP source bindings for a specific MAC address.

dhcp-snooping

(Optional) Display IP source bindings that were learned by DHCP snooping.

static

(Optional) Display static IP source bindings.

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display IP source bindings on a specific interface.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display IP source bindings on a specific VLAN.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The show ip source binding command output shows the dynamically and statically configured bindings in the DHCP snooping binding database. Use the show ip dhcp snooping binding privileged EXEC command to display only the dynamically configured bindings.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip source binding command:

Switch> show ip source binding
MacAddress          IpAddress        Lease(sec)  Type           VLAN  Interface
--------------      ---------------  ----------  -------------  ----  --------------------
00:00:00:0A:00:0B   11.0.0.1         infinite    static         10    GigabitEthernet1/0/1
00:00:00:0A:00:0A   11.0.0.2         10000       dhcp-snooping  10    GigabitEthernet1/0/1

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip dhcp snooping binding

Configures the DHCP snooping binding database.

ip source binding

Configures static IP source bindings on the switch.


show ip verify source

Use the show ip verify source user EXEC command to display the IP source guard configuration on the switch or on a specific interface.

show ip verify source [interface interface-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display IP source guard configuration on a specific interface.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(20)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ip verify source command:

Switch> show ip verify source
Interface  Filter-type  Filter-mode  IP-address       Mac-address     Vlan
---------  -----------  -----------  ---------------  --------------  ---------
gi1/0/1      ip           active       10.0.0.1                         10
gi1/0/1      ip           active       deny-all                         11-20
gi1/0/2      ip           inactive-trust-port
gi1/0/3      ip           inactive-no-snooping-vlan
gi1/0/4      ip-mac       active       10.0.0.2         aaaa.bbbb.cccc  10
gi1/0/4      ip-mac       active       11.0.0.1         aaaa.bbbb.cccd  11
gi1/0/4      ip-mac       active       deny-all         deny-all        12-20
gi1/0/5      ip-mac       active       10.0.0.3         permit-all      10
gi1/0/5      ip-mac       active       deny-all         permit-all      11-20

In the previous example, this is the IP source guard configuration:

On the Gigabit Ethernet 1/0/1 interface, DHCP snooping is enabled on VLANs 10 to 20. For VLAN 10, IP source guard with IP address filtering is configured on the interface, and a binding exists on the interface. For VLANs 11 to 20, the second entry shows that a default port access control lists (ACLs) is applied on the interface for the VLANs on which IP source guard is not configured.

The Gigabit Ethernet 1/0/2 interface is configured as trusted for DHCP snooping.

On the Gigabit Ethernet 1/0/3 interface, DHCP snooping is not enabled on the VLANs to which the interface belongs.

On the Gigabit Ethernet 1/0/4 interface, IP source guard with source IP and MAC address filtering is enabled, and static IP source bindings are configured on VLANs 10 and 11. For VLANs 12 to 20, the default port ACL is applied on the interface for the VLANs on which IP source guard is not configured.

On the Gigabit Ethernet 1/0/5 interface, IP source guard with source IP and MAC address filtering is enabled and configured with a static IP binding, but port security is disabled. The switch cannot filter source MAC addresses.

This is an example of output on an interface on which IP source guard is disabled:

Switch> show ip verify source gigabitethernet1/0/6
IP source guard is not configured on the interface gi1/0/6.

Related Commands

Command
Description

ip verify source

Enables IP source guard on an interface.


show ipc

Use the show ipc user EXEC command to display Interprocess Communications Protocol (IPC) configuration, status, and statistics on a switch stack or a standalone switch.

show ipc {mcast {appclass | groups | status} | nodes | ports [open] | queue | rpc | session {all | rx | tx} [verbose] | status [cumlulative] | zones} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

mcast {appclass | groups | status}

Display the IPC multicast routing information. The keywords have these meanings:

appclass—Display the IPC multicast application classes.

groups—Display the IPC multicast groups.

status—Display the IPC multicast routing status.

nodes

Display participating nodes.

ports [open]

Display local IPC ports. The keyword has this meaning:

open—(Optional) Display only the open ports.

queue

Display the contents of the IPC transmission queue.

rpc

Display the IPC remote-procedure statistics.

session {all | rx | tx}

Display the IPC session statistics (available only in privileged EXEC mode). The keywords have these meanings:

all—Display all the session statistics.

rx—Display the sessions statistics for traffic that the switch receives

tx—Display the sessions statistics for traffic that the switch forwards.

verbose

(Optional) Display detailed statistics (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

status [cumlulative]

Display the status of the local IPC server. The keyword has this meaning:

cumlulative(Optional) Display the status of the local IPC server since the switch was started or restarted.

zones

Display the participating IPC zones. The switch supports a single IPC zone.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(18)SE

The mcast {appclass | groups | status}, rpc, session {all | rx | tx} [verbose], and cumulative keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This example shows how to display the IPC routing status:

Switch> show ipc mcast status
                           IPC Mcast Status
                                                        Tx        Rx

 Total Frames                                           0         0
 Total control Frames                                   0         0
 Total Frames dropped                                   0         0
 Total control Frames dropped                           0         0

 Total Reliable messages                                0         0
 Total Reliable messages acknowledged                   0         0
 Total Out of Band Messages                             0         0
 Total Out of Band messages acknowledged                0         0

 Total No Mcast groups                                  0         0

 Total Retries                    0  Total Timeouts                     0
 Total OOB Retries                0  Total OOB Timeouts                 0
 Total flushes                    0  Total No ports                     0

This example shows how to display the participating nodes:

Switch> show ipc nodes
There is 1 node in this IPC realm.
   ID    Type       Name           Last  Last
                                   Sent  Heard
   10000 Local      IPC Master     0      0

This example shows how to display the local IPC ports:

Switch> show ipc ports
There are 8 ports defined.

Port ID        Type       Name                    (current/peak/total)
There are 8 ports defined.
   10000.1     unicast    IPC Master:Zone
   10000.2     unicast    IPC Master:Echo
   10000.3     unicast    IPC Master:Control
   10000.4     unicast    IPC Master:Init
   10000.5     unicast    FIB Master:DFS.process_level.msgs
   10000.6     unicast    FIB Master:DFS.interrupt.msgs
   10000.7     unicast    MDFS RP:Statistics
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
  0/2/159

   10000.8     unicast    Slot 1 :MDFS.control.RIL
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
  0/0/0

RPC packets:current/peak/total
                                                            0/1/4

This example shows how to display the contents of the IPC retransmission queue:

Switch> show ipc queue
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for acknowledgement in the transmit queue.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for a response.
There are 0 IPC messages waiting for additional fragments.
There are 0 IPC messages currently on the IPC inboundQ.
Messages currently in use                     :         3
Message cache size                            :      1000
Maximum message cache usage                   :      1000

0  times message cache crossed       5000 [max]

Emergency messages currently in use           :         0

There are 2 messages currently reserved for reply msg.

Inbound message queue depth 0
Zone inbound message queue depth 0

This example shows how to display all the IPC session statistics:

Switch# show ipc session all
Tx Sessions:
Port ID        Type       Name
   10000.7     Unicast    MDFS RP:Statistics
     port_index = 0  type = Unreliable      last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     Msgs requested = 180  Msgs returned = 180

   10000.8     Unicast    Slot 1 :MDFS.control.RIL
     port_index = 0  type = Reliable        last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     Msgs requested = 0    Msgs returned = 0

Rx Sessions:
Port ID        Type       Name
   10000.7     Unicast    MDFS RP:Statistics
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     No of msgs requested = 180   Msgs returned = 180

   10000.8     Unicast    Slot 1 :MDFS.control.RIL
     port_index = 0  seat_id = 0x10000    last sent = 0     last heard = 0
     No of msgs requested = 0     Msgs returned = 0

This example shows how to display the status of the local IPC server:

Switch> show ipc status cumulative
                         IPC System Status

 Time last IPC stat cleared :never

 This processor is the IPC master server.
 Do not drop output of IPC frames for test purposes.

 1000 IPC Message Headers Cached.

                                                    Rx Side     Tx Side

 Total Frames                                            12916         608
     0          0
 Total from Local Ports                                  13080         574
 Total Protocol Control Frames                             116          17
 Total Frames Dropped                                        0           0

                             Service Usage

 Total via Unreliable Connection-Less Service            12783         171
 Total via Unreliable Sequenced Connection-Less Svc          0           0
 Total via Reliable Connection-Oriented Service             17         116
<output truncated>

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear ipc

Clears the IPC multicast routing statistics.


show ipv6 access-list

Use the show ipv6 access-list user EXEC command to display the contents of all current IPv6 access lists.

show ipv6 access-list [access-list-name]


Note This command is available only if the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image and you have configured a dual IPv4 and IPv6 Switch Database Management (SDM) template on the switch.


Syntax Description

access-list-name

(Optional) Name of access list.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The show ipv6 access-list command provides output similar to the show ip access-list command, except that it is IPv6-specific.

To configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, enter the sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) global configuration command and reload the switch.

Examples

The following output from the show ipv6 access-list command shows IPv6 access lists named inbound and outbound:

Router# show ipv6 access-list
IPv6 access list inbound
    permit tcp any any eq bgp (8 matches) sequence 10
    permit tcp any any eq telnet (15 matches) sequence 20
    permit udp any any sequence 30

Table 2-26 describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 2-26 show ipv6 access-list Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

IPv6 access list inbound

Name of the IPv6 access list, for example, inbound.

permit

Permits any packet that matches the specified protocol type.

tcp

Transmission Control Protocol. The higher-level (Layer 4) protocol type that the packet must match.

any

Equal to ::/0.

eq

An equal operand that compares the source or destination ports of TCP or UDP packets.

bgp (matches)

Border Gateway Protocol. The protocol type that the packet is equal to and the number of matches.

sequence 10

Sequence in which an incoming packet is compared to lines in an access list. Access list lines are ordered from first priority (lowest number, for example, 10) to last priority (highest number, for example, 80).


Related Commands

Command
Description

clear ipv6 access-list

Resets the IPv6 access list match counters.

ipv6 access-list

Defines an IPv6 access list and puts the switch into IPv6 access-list configuration mode.

sdm prefer

Configures an SDM template to optimize system resources based on how the switch is being used.


show ipv6 mld snooping

Use the show ipv6 mld snooping user EXEC command to display IP version 6 (IPv6) Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping configuration of the switch or the VLAN.

show ipv6 mld snooping [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]


Note This command is available only if the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image and you have configured a dual IPv4 and IPv6 Switch Database Management (SDM) template on the switch.


Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display MLD snooping configuration for the switch or for a specific VLAN.

VLAN numbers 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in MLD snooping.

To configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, enter the sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) global configuration command and reload the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping vlan command. It shows snooping characteristics for a specific VLAN.

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping vlan 100
Global MLD Snooping configuration:
-------------------------------------------
MLD snooping                  : Enabled
MLDv2 snooping (minimal)      : Enabled
Listener message suppression  : Enabled
TCN solicit query             : Disabled
TCN flood query count         : 2
Robustness variable           : 3
Last listener query count     : 2
Last listener query interval  : 1000

Vlan 100:
--------
MLD snooping                        : Disabled
MLDv1 immediate leave               : Disabled
Explicit host tracking              : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode      : pim-dvmrp
Robustness variable                 : 3
Last listener query count           : 2
Last listener query interval        : 1000

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping command. It displays snooping characteristics for all VLANs on the switch.

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping
Global MLD Snooping configuration:
-------------------------------------------
MLD snooping                  : Enabled
MLDv2 snooping (minimal)      : Enabled
Listener message suppression  : Enabled
TCN solicit query             : Disabled
TCN flood query count         : 2
Robustness variable           : 3
Last listener query count     : 2
Last listener query interval  : 1000

Vlan 1:
--------
MLD snooping                        : Disabled
MLDv1 immediate leave               : Disabled
Explicit host tracking              : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode      : pim-dvmrp
Robustness variable                 : 1
Last listener query count           : 2
Last listener query interval        : 1000

<output truncated>

Vlan 951:
--------
MLD snooping                        : Disabled
MLDv1 immediate leave               : Disabled
Explicit host tracking              : Enabled
Multicast router learning mode      : pim-dvmrp
Robustness variable                 : 3
Last listener query count           : 2
Last listener query interval        : 1000

Related Commands

Command
Description

ipv6 mld snooping

Enables and configures MLD snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

sdm prefer

Configures an SDM template to optimize system resources based on how the switch is being used.


show ipv6 mld snooping address

Use the show ipv6 mld snooping address user EXEC command to display all or specified IP version 6 (IPv6) multicast address information maintained by Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping.

show ipv6 mld snooping address [[vlan vlan-id] [ipv6 address]] [vlan vlan-id] [count | dynamic | user] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]


Note This command is available only if the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image and you have configured a dual IPv4 and IPv6 Switch Database Management (SDM) template on the switch.


Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN about which to show MLD snooping multicast address information. The VLAN ID range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

ipv6-multicast-address

(Optional) Display information about the specified IPv6 multicast address. This keyword is only available when a VLAN ID is entered.

count

(Optional) Display the number of multicast groups on the switch or in the specified VLAN.

dynamic

(Optional) Display MLD snooping learned group information.

user

(Optional) Display MLD snooping user-configured group information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display IPv6 multicast address information.

You can enter an IPv6 multicast address only after you enter a VLAN ID.

VLAN numbers 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in MLD snooping.

Use the dynamic keyword to display information only about groups that are learned. Use the user keyword to display information only about groups that have been configured.

To configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, enter the sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) global configuration command and reload the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show snooping address user EXEC command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping address

Vlan Group   Type Version Port List
-------------------------------------------------------------
2    FF12::3 user         Fa1/0/2, Gi2/0/2, Gi3/0/1,Gi3/0/3

This is an example of output from the show snooping address count user EXEC command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping address count
Total number of multicast groups: 2

This is an example of output from the show snooping address user user EXEC command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping address user
Vlan Group  Type Version Port List
-------------------------------------------------------------
2    FF12::3 user  v2    Fa1/0/2, Gi2/0/2, Gi3/0/1,Gi3/0/3

Related Commands

Command
Description

ipv6 mld snooping vlan

Configures IPv6 MLD snooping on a VLAN.

sdm prefer

Configures an SDM template to optimize system resources based on how the switch is being used.


show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter

Use the show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter user EXEC command to display dynamically learned and manually configured IP version 6 (IPv6) Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) router ports for the switch or a VLAN.

show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]


Note This command is available only if the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image and you have configured a dual IPv4 and IPv6 Switch Database Management (SDM) template on the switch.


Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display MLD snooping router ports for the switch or for a specific VLAN.

VLAN numbers 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in MLD snooping.

To configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, enter the sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) global configuration command and reload the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter command. It displays snooping characteristics for all VLANs on the switch that are participating in MLD snooping.

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter
Vlan    ports
----    -----
   2    Gi1/0/11(dynamic)
  72    Gi1/0/11(dynamic)
 200    Gi1/0/11(dynamic)

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter vlan command. It shows multicast router ports for a specific VLAN.

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping mrouter vlan 100
Vlan    ports
----    -----
   2    Gi1/0/11(dynamic)

Related Commands

Command
Description

ipv6 mld snooping

Enables and configures MLD snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ipv6 mld snooping vlan mrouter interface interface-id | static ipv6-multicast-address interface interface-id]

Configures multicast router ports for a VLAN.

sdm prefer

Configures an SDM template to optimize system resources based on how the switch is being used.


show ipv6 mld snooping querier

Use the show ipv6 mld snooping querier user EXEC command to display IP version 6 (IPv6) Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) snooping querier-related information most recently received by the switch or the VLAN.

show ipv6 mld snooping querier [vlan vlan-id] [detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]


Note This command is available only if the switch stack is running the advanced IP services image and you have configured a dual IPv4 and IPv6 Switch Database Management (SDM) template on the switch.


Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Specify a VLAN; the range is 1 to 1001 and 1006 to 4094.

detail

(Optional) Display MLD snooping detailed querier information for the switch or for the VLAN.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use the show ipv6 mld snooping querier command to display the MLD version and IPv6 address of a detected device that sends MLD query messages, which is also called a querier. A subnet can have multiple multicast routers but has only one MLD querier. The querier can be a Layer 3 switch.

The show ipv6 mld snooping querier command output also shows the VLAN and interface on which the querier was detected. If the querier is the switch, the output shows the Port field as Router. If the querier is a router, the output shows the port number on which the querier is learned in the Port field.

The output of the show ipv6 mld snoop querier vlan command displays the information received in response to a query message from an external or internal querier. It does not display user-configured VLAN values, such as the snooping robustness variable on the particular VLAN. This querier information is used only on the MASQ message that is sent by the switch. It does not override the user-configured robustness variable that is used for aging out a member that does not respond to query messages.

VLAN numbers 1002 through 1005 are reserved for Token Ring and FDDI VLANs and cannot be used in MLD snooping.

To configure the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, enter the sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) global configuration command and reload the switch.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping querier command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping querier
Vlan      IP Address               MLD Version Port
-------------------------------------------------------------
2         FE80::201:C9FF:FE40:6000 v1          Gi3/0/1

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping querier detail command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping querier detail
Vlan      IP Address               MLD Version Port
-------------------------------------------------------------
2        FE80::201:C9FF:FE40:6000 v1           Gi3/0/1

This is an example of output from the show ipv6 mld snooping querier vlan command:

Switch> show ipv6 mld snooping querier vlan 2
IP address : FE80::201:C9FF:FE40:6000 
MLD version : v1
Port : Gi3/0/1
Max response time : 1000s

Related Commands2 Vlan IP Address MLD Version Port

Related Commands-------------------------------------------------------------

Command
Description

ipv6 mld snooping

Enables and configures IPv6 MLD snooping on the switch or on a VLAN.

ipv6 mld snooping last-listener-query-count

Configures the maximum number of queries that the switch sends before aging out an MLD client.

ipv6 mld snooping last-listener-query-interval

Configures the maximum response time after sending out a query that the switch waits before deleting a port from the multicast group.

ipv6 mld snooping robustness-variable

Configures the maximum number of queries that the switch sends before aging out a multicast address when there is no response.

sdm prefer

Configures an SDM template to optimize system resources based on how the switch is being used.


show l2protocol-tunnel

Use the show l2protocol-tunnel user EXEC command to display information about Layer 2 protocol tunnel ports. Displays information for interfaces with protocol tunneling enabled.

show l2protocol-tunnel [interface interface-id] [summary] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specify the interface for which protocol tunneling information appears. Valid interfaces are physical ports and port channels; the port channel range is 1 to 48.

summary

(Optional) Display only Layer 2 protocol summary information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

After enabling Layer 2 protocol tunneling on an access or IEEE 802.1Q tunnel port by using the l2protocol-tunnel interface configuration command, you can configure some or all of these parameters:

Protocol type to be tunneled

Shutdown threshold

Drop threshold

If you enter the show l2protocol-tunnel [interface interface-id] command, only information about the active ports on which all the parameters are configured appears.

If you enter the show l2protocol-tunnel summary command, only information about the active ports on which some or all of the parameters are configured appears.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show l2protocol-tunnel command:

Switch> show l2protocol-tunnel
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Drop Threshold for Encapsulated Packets: 0

Port       Protocol Shutdown  Drop      Encapsulation Decapsulation Drop
                    Threshold Threshold Counter       Counter       Counter
---------- -------- --------- --------- ------------- ------------- -------------
Fa3/0/3    ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           pagp          ----      ----             0         242500
           lacp          ----      ----         24268         242640
           udld          ----      ----             0         897960
Fa3/0/4    ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           pagp          1000      ----         24249         242700
           lacp          ----      ----         24256         242660
           udld          ----      ----             0         897960
Gi6/0/3    cdp           ----      ----        134482        1344820
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           pagp          1000      ----             0         242500
           lacp           500      ----             0         485320
           udld           300      ----         44899         448980
Gi6/0/4    cdp           ----      ----        134482        1344820
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           ---           ----      ----          ----          ----          ----
           pagp          ----      1000             0         242700
           lacp          ----      ----             0         485220
           udld           300      ----         44899         448980

This is an example of output from the show l2protocol-tunnel summary command:

Switch> show l2protocol-tunnel summary
COS for Encapsulated Packets: 5
Drop Threshold for Encapsulated Packets: 0

Port    Protocol    Shutdown         Drop             Status
                    Threshold        Threshold
                    (cdp/stp/vtp)    (cdp/stp/vtp)
                    (pagp/lacp/udld) (pagp/lacp/udld)
------- ----------- ---------------- ---------------- ----------
Fa3/0/2  --- --- --- ----/----/----   ----/----/----   up
     pagp lacp udld ----/----/----   ----/----/----
Fa9/0/3  --- --- --- ----/----/----   ----/----/----   up
     pagp lacp udld 1000/----/----   ----/----/----
Fa9/0/4  --- --- --- ----/----/----   ----/----/----   up
     pagp lacp udld 1000/ 500/----   ----/----/----
Fa9/0/5  cdp stp vtp ----/----/----   ----/----/----   down
     ---- ---- ---- ----/----/----   ----/----/----
Gi4/0/1  --- --- --- ----/----/----   ----/----/----   down
     pagp ---- ---- ----/----/----   1000/----/----
Gi4/0/2  --- --- --- ----/----/----   ----/----/----   down
     pagp ---- ---- ----/----/----   1000/----/----

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear l2protocol-tunnel counters

Clears counters for protocol tunneling ports.

l2protocol-tunnel

Enables Layer 2 protocol tunneling for CDP, STP, or VTP packets on an interface.

l2protocol-tunnel cos

Configures a class of service (CoS) value for tunneled Layer 2 protocol packets.


show lacp

Use the show lacp user EXEC command to display Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) channel-group information.

show lacp [channel-group-number] {counters | internal | neighbor | sys-id} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

channel-group-number

(Optional) Number of the channel group. The range is 1 to 48.

counters

Display traffic information.

internal

Display internal information.

neighbor

Display neighbor information.

sys-id

Display the system identifier that is being used by LACP. The system identifier is made up of the LACP system priority and the switch MAC address.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SE

The channel-group-number range was changed from 1 to 12 to 1 to 48.


Usage Guidelines

You can enter any show lacp command to display the active channel-group information. To display specific channel information, enter the show lacp command with a channel-group number.

If you do not specify a channel group, information for all channel groups appears.

You can enter the channel-group-number option to specify a channel group for all keywords except sys-id.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show lacp counters user EXEC command. Table 2-27 describes the fields in the display.

Switch> show lacp counters
               LACPDUs         Marker      Marker Response    LACPDUs
Port         Sent   Recv     Sent   Recv     Sent   Recv      Pkts Err
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Channel group:1
Gi2/0/1      19     10       0      0        0      0         0     
Gi2/0/2      14     6        0      0        0      0         0     
 
   

Table 2-27 show lacp counters Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

LACPDUs Sent and Recv

The number of LACP packets sent and received by a port.

Marker Sent and Recv

The number of LACP marker packets sent and received by a port.

Marker Response Sent and Recv

The number of LACP marker response packets sent and received by a port.

LACPDUs Pkts and Err

The number of unknown and illegal packets received by LACP for a port.


This is an example of output from the show lacp internal command:

Switch> show lacp 1 internal 
Flags:  S - Device is requesting Slow LACPDUs
        F - Device is requesting Fast LACPDUs
        A - Device is in Active mode       P - Device is in Passive mode 

Channel group 1
                              LACP port     Admin     Oper    Port     Port
Port        Flags   State     Priority      Key       Key     Number   State
Gi2/0/1     SA      bndl      32768         0x3       0x3     0x4      0x3D  
Gi2/0/2     SA      bndl      32768         0x3       0x3     0x5      0x3D  
 
   

Table 2-28 describes the fields in the display:

Table 2-28 show lacp internal Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

State

State of the specific port. These are the allowed values:

- —Port is in an unknown state.

bndl—Port is attached to an aggregator and bundled with other ports.

susp—Port is in a suspended state; it is not attached to any aggregator.

hot-sby—Port is in a hot-standby state.

indiv—Port is incapable of bundling with any other port.

indep—Port is in an independent state (not bundled but able to switch data traffic. In this case, LACP is not running on the partner port).

down—Port is down.

LACP Port Priority

Port priority setting. LACP uses the port priority to put ports s in standby mode when there is a hardware limitation that prevents all compatible ports from aggregating.

Admin Key

Administrative key assigned to this port. LACP automatically generates an administrative key value as a hexadecimal number. The administrative key defines the ability of a port to aggregate with other ports. A port's ability to aggregate with other ports is determined by the port physical characteristics (for example, data rate and duplex capability) and configuration restrictions that you establish.

Oper Key

Runtime operational key that is being used by this port. LACP automatically generates this value as a hexadecimal number.

Port Number

Port number.

Port State

State variables for the port, encoded as individual bits within a single octet with these meanings:

bit0: LACP_Activity

bit1: LACP_Timeout

bit2: Aggregation

bit3: Synchronization

bit4: Collecting

bit5: Distributing

bit6: Defaulted

bit7: Expired

Note In the list above, bit7 is the MSB and bit0 is the LSB.


This is an example of output from the show lacp neighbor command:

Switch> show lacp neighbor 
Flags:  S - Device is sending Slow LACPDUs F - Device is sending Fast LACPDUs
        A - Device is in Active mode       P - Device is in Passive mode     

Channel group 3 neighbors

Partner's information:

          Partner               Partner                     Partner
Port      System ID             Port Number     Age         Flags
Gi2/0/1   32768,0007.eb49.5e80  0xC              19s        SP
 
   
          LACP Partner         Partner         Partner
          Port Priority        Oper Key        Port State
          32768                0x3             0x3C

Partner's information:

          Partner               Partner                     Partner
Port      System ID             Port Number     Age         Flags
Gi2/0/2   32768,0007.eb49.5e80  0xD              15s        SP
 
   
          LACP Partner         Partner         Partner
          Port Priority        Oper Key        Port State
          32768                0x3             0x3C

This is an example of output from the show lacp sys-id command:

Switch> show lacp sys-id 
32765,0002.4b29.3a00

The system identification is made up of the system priority and the system MAC address. The first two bytes are the system priority, and the last six bytes are the globally administered individual MAC address associated to the system.

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear lacp

Clears the LACP channel-group information.

lacp port-priority

Configures the LACP port priority.

lacp system-priority

Configures the LACP system priority.


show link state group

Use the show link state group global configuration command to display the link-state group information.

show link state group [number] [detail] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

number

(Optional) Number of the link-state group.

detail

(Optional) Specify that detailed information appears.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Defaults

There is no default.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SEE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Use the show link state group command to display the link-state group information. Enter this command without keywords to display information about all link-state groups. Enter the group number to display information specific to the group. Enter the detail keyword to display detailed information about the group.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output are not displayed, but the lines that contain Output are displayed.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show link state group 1 command:

Switch> show link state group 1
Link State Group: 1      Status: Enabled, Down

This is an example of output from the show link state group detail command:

Switch> show link state group detail
(Up):Interface up   (Dwn):Interface Down   (Dis):Interface disabled

Link State Group: 1 Status: Enabled, Down 
Upstream Interfaces : Gi1/0/15(Dwn) Gi1/0/16(Dwn) 
Downstream Interfaces : Gi1/0/11(Dis) Gi1/0/12(Dis) Gi1/0/13(Dis) Gi1/0/14(Dis)

Link State Group: 2 Status: Enabled, Down 
Upstream Interfaces : Gi1/0/15(Dwn) Gi1/0/16(Dwn) Gi1/0/17(Dwn) 
Downstream Interfaces : Gi1/0/11(Dis) Gi1/0/12(Dis) Gi1/0/13(Dis) Gi1/0/14(Dis)

(Up):Interface up (Dwn):Interface Down (Dis):Interface disabled

Related Commands

Command
Description

link state group

Configures an interface as a member of a link-state group.

link state track

Enables a link-state group.

show running-config

Displays the current operating configuration. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference for Release 12.2 > Cisco IOS File Management Commands > Configuration File Commands.


show mac access-group

Use the show mac access-group user EXEC command to display the MAC access control lists (ACLs) configured for an interface or a switch.

show mac access-group [interface interface-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display the MAC ACLs configured on a specific interface. Valid interfaces are physical ports and port channels; the port-channel range is 1 to 48 (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac-access group user EXEC command. In this display, port 2 has the MAC access list macl_e1 applied; no MAC ACLs are applied to other interfaces.

Switch> show mac access-group 
Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/1:
   Inbound access-list is not set
Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/2:
   Inbound access-list is macl_e1
Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/3:
   Inbound access-list is not set
Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/4:
   Inbound access-list is not set

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show mac access-group interface gigabitethernet1/0/1 command:

Switch# show mac access-group interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Interface GigabitEthernet1/0/1:
   Inbound access-list is macl_e1

Related Commands

Command
Description

mac access-group

Applies a MAC access group to an interface.


show mac address-table

Use the show mac address-table user EXEC command to display a specific MAC address table static and dynamic entry or the MAC address table static and dynamic entries on a specific interface or VLAN.

show mac address-table [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table command:

Switch> show mac address-table
          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------
Vlan    Mac Address       Type       Ports
----    -----------       ----       -----
 All    0000.0000.0001    STATIC     CPU
 All    0000.0000.0002    STATIC     CPU
 All    0000.0000.0003    STATIC     CPU
 All    0000.0000.0009    STATIC     CPU
 All    0000.0000.0012    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.000b    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.000c    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.000d    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.000e    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.000f    STATIC     CPU
 All    0180.c200.0010    STATIC     CPU
   1    0030.9441.6327    DYNAMIC    Gi6/0/4
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 12

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear mac address-table dynamic

Deletes from the MAC address table a specific dynamic address, all dynamic addresses on a particular interface, or all dynamic addresses on a particular VLAN.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table address

Use the show mac address-table address user EXEC command to display MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table address mac-address [interface interface-id] [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

mac-address

Specify the 48-bit MAC address; the valid format is H.H.H.

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display information for a specific interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display entries for the specific VLAN only. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table address command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table address command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table address command:

Switch# show mac address-table address 0002.4b28.c482
          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------

Vlan    Mac Address     Type    Ports
----    -----------     ----    -----
 All    0002.4b28.c482  STATIC  CPU
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 1 

Related Commands

Command
Description

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table aging-time

Use the show mac address-table aging-time user EXEC command to display the aging time of a specific address table instance, all address table instances on a specified VLAN or, if a specific VLAN is not specified, on all VLANs.

show mac address-table aging-time [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display aging time information for a specific VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table aging-time command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table aging-time command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

If no VLAN number is specified, the aging time for all VLANs appears.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table aging-time command:

Switch> show mac address-table aging-time
Vlan    Aging Time
----    ----------
   1     300 

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table aging-time vlan 10 command:

Switch> show mac address-table aging-time vlan 10
Vlan    Aging Time
----    ----------
  10     300 

Related Commands

Command
Description

mac address-table aging-time

Sets the length of time that a dynamic entry remains in the MAC address table after the entry is used or updated.

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table count

Use the show mac address-table count user EXEC command to display the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display the number of addresses for a specific VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table count command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table count command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

If no VLAN number is specified, the address count for all VLANs appears.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table count command:

Switch# show mac address-table count
Mac Entries for Vlan   : 1
---------------------------
Dynamic Address Count  : 2
Static  Address Count  : 0
Total Mac Addresses    : 2 

Related Commands

Command
Description

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table dynamic

Use the show mac address-table dynamic user EXEC command to display only dynamic MAC address table entries.

show mac address-table dynamic [address mac-address] [interface interface-id] [vlan vlan-id]
[ | {
begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

address mac-address

(Optional) Specify a 48-bit MAC address; the valid format is H.H.H (available in privileged EXEC mode only).

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specify an interface to match; valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display entries for a specific VLAN; the range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table dynamic command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table dynamic command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table dynamic command:

Switch> show mac address-table dynamic
          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------

Vlan    Mac Address     Type    Ports
----    -----------     ----    -----
   1    0030.b635.7862  DYNAMIC Gi6/0/2
   1    00b0.6496.2741  DYNAMIC Gi6/0/2
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 2 

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear mac address-table dynamic

Deletes from the MAC address table a specific dynamic address, all dynamic addresses on a particular interface, or all dynamic addresses on a particular VLAN.

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table interface

Use the show mac address-table interface user command to display the MAC address table information for the specified interface in the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table interface interface-id [vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

Specify an interface type; valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display entries for a specific VLAN; the range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table interface command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table interface command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table interface command:

Switch> show mac address-table interface gigabitethernet6/0/2
          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------

Vlan    Mac Address     Type    Ports
----    -----------     ----    -----
   1    0030.b635.7862  DYNAMIC Gi6/0/2
   1    00b0.6496.2741  DYNAMIC Gi6/0/2
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 2 

Related Commands

Command
Description

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table move update

Use the show mac address-table move update user EXEC command to display the MAC address-table move update information on the switch.

show mac address-table move update [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SED

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table move update command:

Switch> show mac address-table move update
Switch-ID : 010b.4630.1780
Dst mac-address : 0180.c200.0010
Vlans/Macs supported : 1023/8320
Default/Current settings: Rcv Off/On, Xmt Off/On
Max packets per min : Rcv 40, Xmt 60
Rcv packet count : 10
Rcv conforming packet count : 5
Rcv invalid packet count : 0
Rcv packet count this min : 0
Rcv threshold exceed count : 0
Rcv last sequence# this min : 0
Rcv last interface : Po2
Rcv last src-mac-address : 0003.fd6a.8701
Rcv last switch-ID : 0303.fd63.7600
Xmt packet count : 0
Xmt packet count this min : 0
Xmt threshold exceed count : 0
Xmt pak buf unavail cnt : 0
Xmt last interface : None
switch#

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear mac address-table move update

Clears the MAC address-table move update counters.

mac address-table move update {receive | transmit}

Configures MAC address-table move update on the switch.


show mac address-table notification

Use the show mac address-table notification user EXEC command to display the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification [interface [interface-id]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Display information for all interfaces. Valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

interface-id

(Optional) Display information for the specified interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table notification command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table notification command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Use the show mac address-table notification command without any keywords to display whether the feature is enabled or disabled, the MAC notification interval, the maximum number of entries allowed in the history table, and the history table contents.

Use the interface keyword to display the flags for all interfaces. If the interface-id is included, only the flags for that interface appear.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table notification command:

Switch> show mac address-table notification
MAC Notification Feature is Enabled on the switch
Interval between Notification Traps : 60 secs
Number of MAC Addresses Added : 4
Number of MAC Addresses Removed : 4
Number of Notifications sent to NMS : 3
Maximum Number of entries configured in History Table : 100
Current History Table Length : 3
MAC Notification Traps are Enabled
History Table contents
----------------------
History Index 0, Entry Timestamp 1032254, Despatch Timestamp 1032254
MAC Changed Message :
Operation: Added   Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0001 Module: 0   Port: 1

History Index 1, Entry Timestamp 1038254, Despatch Timestamp 1038254
MAC Changed Message :
Operation: Added   Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0000 Module: 0   Port: 1
Operation: Added   Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0002 Module: 0   Port: 1
Operation: Added   Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0003 Module: 0   Port: 1

History Index 2, Entry Timestamp 1074254, Despatch Timestamp 1074254
MAC Changed Message :
Operation: Deleted Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0000 Module: 0   Port: 1
Operation: Deleted Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0001 Module: 0   Port: 1
Operation: Deleted Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0002 Module: 0   Port: 1
Operation: Deleted Vlan: 2     MAC Addr: 0000.0000.0003 Module: 0   Port: 1

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear mac address-table notification

Clears the MAC address notification global counters.

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table static

Use the show mac address-table static user EXEC command to display only static MAC address table entries.

show mac address-table static [address mac-address] [interface interface-id] [vlan vlan-id]
[ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

address mac-address

(Optional) Specify a 48-bit MAC address; the valid format is H.H.H (available in privileged EXEC mode only).

interface interface-id

(Optional) Specify an interface to match; valid interfaces include physical ports and port channels.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display addresses for a specific VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table static command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table static command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table static command:

Switch> show mac address-table static

          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------

Vlan    Mac Address     Type    Ports
----    -----------     ----    -----
 All    0100.0ccc.cccc  STATIC  CPU
 All    0180.c200.0000  STATIC  CPU
 All    0100.0ccc.cccd  STATIC  CPU
 All    0180.c200.0001  STATIC  CPU
 All    0180.c200.0004  STATIC  CPU
 All    0180.c200.0005  STATIC  CPU
   4    0001.0002.0004  STATIC  Drop
   6    0001.0002.0007  STATIC  Drop
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 8 

Related Commands

Command
Description

mac address-table static

Adds static addresses to the MAC address table.

mac address-table static drop

Enables unicast MAC address filtering and configures the switch to drop traffic with a specific source or destination MAC address.

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table vlan

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.


show mac address-table vlan

Use the show mac address-table vlan user EXEC command to display the MAC address table information for the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table vlan vlan-id [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

vlan-id

(Optional) Display addresses for a specific VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(19)EA1

The show mac-address-table vlan command (with the hyphen) was replaced by the show mac address-table vlan command (without the hyphen).


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mac address-table vlan 1 command:

Switch> show mac address-table vlan 1
          Mac Address Table
------------------------------------------

Vlan    Mac Address     Type    Ports
----    -----------     ----    -----
   1    0100.0ccc.cccc  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0000  STATIC  CPU
   1    0100.0ccc.cccd  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0001  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0002  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0003  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0005  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0006  STATIC  CPU
   1    0180.c200.0007  STATIC  CPU
Total Mac Addresses for this criterion: 9 

Related Commands

Command
Description

show mac address-table address

Displays MAC address table information for the specified MAC address.

show mac address-table aging-time

Displays the aging time in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table count

Displays the number of addresses present in all VLANs or the specified VLAN.

show mac address-table dynamic

Displays dynamic MAC address table entries only.

show mac address-table interface

Displays the MAC address table information for the specified interface.

show mac address-table notification

Displays the MAC address notification settings for all interfaces or the specified interface.

show mac address-table static

Displays static MAC address table entries only.


show mls qos

Use the show mls qos user EXEC command to display global quality of service (QoS) configuration information.

show mls qos [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos command when QoS is enabled and Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) transparency is disabled:

Switch> show mls qos
QoS is enabled
QoS ip packet dscp rewrite is disabled

This is an example of output from the show mls qos command when QoS is enabled and DSCP transparency is enabled:

Switch> show mls qos
QoS is enabled
QoS ip packet dscp rewrite is enabled

Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos

Enables QoS for the entire switch.


show mls qos aggregate-policer

Use the show mls qos aggregate-policer user EXEC command to display the quality of service (QoS) aggregate policer configuration. A policer defines a maximum permissible rate of transmission, a maximum burst size for transmissions, and an action to take if either maximum is exceeded.

show mls qos aggregate-policer [aggregate-policer-name] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

aggregate-policer-name

(Optional) Display the policer configuration for the specified name.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos aggregate-policer command:

Switch> show mls qos aggregate-policer policer1
aggregate-policer policer1 1000000 2000000 exceed-action drop
Not used by any policy map 

Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos aggregate-policer

Defines policer parameters that can be shared by multiple classes within a policy map.


show mls qos input-queue

Use the show mls qos input-queue user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) settings for the ingress queues.

show mls qos input-queue [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos input-queue command:

Switch> show mls qos input-queue
Queue     :      1      2
----------------------------------------------
buffers   :      90     10
bandwidth :      4      4
priority  :      0      10
threshold1:      100    100
threshold2:      100    100

Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth

Assigns shaped round robin (SRR) weights to an ingress queue.

mls qos srr-queue input buffers

Allocates the buffers between the ingress queues.

mls qos srr-queue input cos-map

Maps assigned class of service (CoS) values to an ingress queue and assigns CoS values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map

Maps assigned Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) values to an ingress queue and assigns DSCP values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue

Configures the ingress priority queue and guarantees bandwidth.

mls qos srr-queue input threshold

Assigns weighted tail-drop (WTD) threshold percentages to an ingress queue.


show mls qos interface

Use the show mls qos interface user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) information at the port level.

show mls qos interface [interface-id] [buffers | queueing | statistics]
[ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) Display QoS information for the specified port. Valid interfaces include physical ports.

buffers

(Optional) Display the buffer allocation among the queues.

queueing

(Optional) Display the queueing strategy (shared or shaped) and the weights corresponding to the queues.

statistics

(Optional) Display statistics for sent and received Differentiated Services Code Points (DSCPs) and class of service (CoS) values, the number of packets enqueued or dropped per egress queue, and the number of in-profile and out-of-profile packets for each policer.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.



Note Though visible in the command-line help string, the policers keyword is not supported.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos interface interface-id command when VLAN-based QoS is enabled:

Switch> show mls qos interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
GigabitEthernet1/0/1
trust state:not trusted
trust mode:not trusted
trust enabled flag:ena
COS override:dis
default COS:0
DSCP Mutation Map:Default DSCP Mutation Map
Trust device:none
qos mode:vlan-based

This is an example of output from the show mls qos interface interface-id command when VLAN-based QoS is disabled:

Switch> show mls qos interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
trust state:not trusted
trust mode:not trusted
trust enabled flag:ena
COS override:dis
default COS:0
DSCP Mutation Map:Default DSCP Mutation Map
Trust device:none
qos mode:port-based

This is an example of output from the show mls qos interface interface-id buffers command:

Switch> show mls qos interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 buffers
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
The port is mapped to qset : 1
The allocations between the queues are : 25 25 25 25

This is an example of output from the show mls qos interface interface-id queueing command. The egress expedite queue overrides the configured shaped round robin (SRR) weights.

Switch> show mls qos interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 queueing
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
Egress Priority Queue :enabled
Shaped queue weights (absolute) :  25 0 0 0
Shared queue weights  :  25 25 25 25
The port bandwidth limit : 100  (Operational Bandwidth:100.0)
The port is mapped to qset : 1

This is an example of output from the show mls qos interface interface-id statistics command. Table 2-29 describes the fields in this display.

Switch> show mls qos interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 statistics
GigabitEthernet1/0/2

  dscp: incoming
-------------------------------

  0 -  4 :      4213          0          0          0          0
  5 -  9 :         0          0          0          0          0
 10 - 14 :         0          0          0          0          0
 15 - 19 :         0          0          0          0          0
 20 - 24 :         0          0          0          0          0
 25 - 29 :         0          0          0          0          0
 30 - 34 :         0          0          0          0          0
 35 - 39 :         0          0          0          0          0
 40 - 44 :         0          0          0          0          0
 45 - 49 :         0          0          0          6          0
 50 - 54 :         0          0          0          0          0
 55 - 59 :         0          0          0          0          0
 60 - 64 :         0          0          0          0
  dscp: outgoing
-------------------------------

  0 -  4 :    363949          0          0          0          0
  5 -  9 :         0          0          0          0          0
 10 - 14 :         0          0          0          0          0
 15 - 19 :         0          0          0          0          0
 20 - 24 :         0          0          0          0          0
 25 - 29 :         0          0          0          0          0
 30 - 34 :         0          0          0          0          0
 35 - 39 :         0          0          0          0          0
 40 - 44 :         0          0          0          0          0
 45 - 49 :         0          0          0          0          0
 50 - 54 :         0          0          0          0          0
 55 - 59 :         0          0          0          0          0
 60 - 64 :         0          0          0          0
  cos: incoming
-------------------------------

  0 -  4 :    132067          0          0          0          0
  5 -  9 :         0          0          0
  cos: outgoing
-------------------------------

  0 -  4 :    739155          0          0          0          0
  5 -  9 :        90          0          0

Policer: Inprofile:        0 OutofProfile:        0

Table 2-29 show mls qos interface statistics Field Descriptions 

Field
 
Description

DSCP

incoming

Number of packets received for each DSCP value.

outgoing

Number of packets sent for each DSCP value.

CoS

incoming

Number of packets received for each CoS value.

outgoing

Number of packets sent for each CoS value.

Policer

Inprofile

Number of in profile packets for each policer.

Outofprofile

Number of out-of-profile packets for each policer.


Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos queue-set output buffers

Allocates buffers to a queue-set.

mls qos queue-set output threshold

Configures the weighted tail-drop (WTD) thresholds, guarantees the availability of buffers, and configures the maximum memory allocation to a queue-set.

mls qos srr-queue input bandwidth

Assigns SRR weights to an ingress queue.

mls qos srr-queue input buffers

Allocates the buffers between the ingress queues.

mls qos srr-queue input cos-map

Maps CoS values to an ingress queue or maps CoS values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map

Maps DSCP values to an ingress queue or maps DSCP values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue input priority-queue

Configures the ingress priority queue and guarantees bandwidth.

mls qos srr-queue input threshold

Assigns WTD threshold percentages to an ingress queue.

mls qos srr-queue output cos-map

Maps CoS values to an egress queue or maps CoS values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map

Maps DSCP values to an egress queue or maps DSCP values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

policy-map

Creates or modifies a policy map.

priority-queue

Enables the egress expedite queue on a port.

queue-set

Maps a port to a queue-set.

srr-queue bandwidth limit

Limits the maximum output on a port.

srr-queue bandwidth shape

Assigns the shaped weights and enables bandwidth shaping on the four egress queues mapped to a port.

srr-queue bandwidth share

Assigns the shared weights and enables bandwidth sharing on the four egress queues mapped to a port.


show mls qos maps

Use the show mls qos maps user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) mapping information. During classification, QoS uses the mapping tables to represent the priority of the traffic and to derive a corresponding class of service (CoS) or Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) value from the received CoS, DSCP, or IP precedence value.

show mls qos maps [cos-dscp | cos-input-q | cos-output-q | dscp-cos | dscp-input-q | dscp-mutation dscp-mutation-name | dscp-output-q | ip-prec-dscp | policed-dscp] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

cos-dscp

(Optional) Display class of service (CoS)-to-DSCP map.

cos-input-q

(Optional) Display the CoS input queue threshold map.

cos-output-q

(Optional) Display the CoS output queue threshold map.

dscp-cos

(Optional) Display DSCP-to-CoS map.

dscp-input-q

(Optional) Display the DSCP input queue threshold map.

dscp-mutation dscp-mutation-name

(Optional) Display the specified DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map.

dscp-output-q

(Optional) Display the DSCP output queue threshold map.

ip-prec-dscp

(Optional) Display the IP-precedence-to-DSCP map.

policed-dscp

(Optional) Display the policed-DSCP map.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

The policed-DSCP, DSCP-to-CoS, and the DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation maps appear as a matrix. The d1 column specifies the most-significant digit in the DSCP. The d2 row specifies the least-significant digit in the DSCP. The intersection of the d1 and d2 values provides the policed-DSCP, the CoS, or the mutated-DSCP value. For example, in the DSCP-to-CoS map, a DSCP value of 43 corresponds to a CoS value of 5.

The DSCP input queue threshold and the DSCP output queue threshold maps appear as a matrix. The d1 column specifies the most-significant digit of the DSCP number. The d2 row specifies the least-significant digit in the DSCP number. The intersection of the d1 and the d2 values provides the queue ID and threshold ID. For example, in the DSCP input queue threshold map, a DSCP value of 43 corresponds to queue 2 and threshold 1 (02-01).

The CoS input queue threshold and the CoS output queue threshold maps show the CoS value in the top row and the corresponding queue ID and threshold ID in the second row. For example, in the CoS input queue threshold map, a CoS value of 5 corresponds to queue 2 and threshold 1 (2-1).

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos maps command:

Switch> show mls qos maps
Policed-dscp map:
     d1 :  d2 0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
     ---------------------------------------
      0 :    00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
      1 :    10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
      2 :    20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
      3 :    30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
      4 :    40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49
      5 :    50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
      6 :    60 61 62 63

Dscp-cos map:
     d1 :  d2 0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
     ---------------------------------------
      0 :    00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 01
      1 :    01 01 01 01 01 01 02 02 02 02
      2 :    02 02 02 02 03 03 03 03 03 03
      3 :    03 03 04 04 04 04 04 04 04 04
      4 :    05 05 05 05 05 05 05 05 06 06
      5 :    06 06 06 06 06 06 07 07 07 07
      6 :    07 07 07 07

Cos-dscp map:
     cos:   0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7
  --------------------------------
    dscp:   0  8 16 24 32 40 48 56

IpPrecedence-dscp map:
     ipprec:   0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7
     --------------------------------
       dscp:   0  8 16 24 32 40 48 56

Dscp-outputq-threshold map:
  d1 :d2    0     1     2     3     4     5     6     7     8     9
  --------------------------------------------------------------------
   0 :    02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01
   1 :    02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01
   2 :    03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01 03-01
   3 :    03-01 03-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01
   4 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 04-01 04-01
   5 :    04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01
   6 :    04-01 04-01 04-01 04-01

Dscp-inputq-threshold map:
    d1 :d2    0     1     2     3     4     5     6     7     8     9
    --------------------------------------------------------------------
     0 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01
     1 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01
     2 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01
     3 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01
     4 :    02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 02-01 01-01 01-01
     5 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01
     6 :    01-01 01-01 01-01 01-01

Cos-outputq-threshold map:
              cos:  0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7
              ------------------------------------
  queue-threshold: 2-1 2-1 3-1 3-1 4-1 1-1 4-1 4-1

   Cos-inputq-threshold map:
              cos:  0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7
              ------------------------------------
  queue-threshold: 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1 1-1 2-1 1-1 1-1

Dscp-dscp mutation map:
   Default DSCP Mutation Map:
     d1 :  d2 0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
     ---------------------------------------
      0 :    00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
      1 :    10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
      2 :    20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
      3 :    30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
      4 :    40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49
      5 :    50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
      6 :    60 61 62 63

Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos map

Defines the CoS-to-DSCP map, DSCP-to-CoS map, DSCP-to-DSCP-mutation map, IP-precedence-to-DSCP map, and the policed-DSCP map.

mls qos srr-queue input cos-map

Maps CoS values to an ingress queue or maps CoS values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue input dscp-map

Maps DSCP values to an ingress queue or maps DSCP values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue output cos-map

Maps CoS values to an egress queue or maps CoS values to a queue and to a threshold ID.

mls qos srr-queue output dscp-map

Maps DSCP values to an egress queue or maps DSCP values to a queue and to a threshold ID.


show mls qos queue-set

Use the show mls qos queue-set user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) settings for the egress queues.

show mls qos queue-set [qset-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

qset-id

(Optional) ID of the queue-set. Each port belongs to a queue-set, which defines all the characteristics of the four egress queues per port. The range is 1 to 2.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.nway

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos queue-set command:

Switch> show mls qos queue-set
Queueset: 1
Queue   :        1       2       3       4
----------------------------------------------
buffers   :      25      25      25      25
threshold1:      100     200     100     100
threshold2:      100     200     100     100
reserved  :      50      50      50      50
maximum   :      400     400     400     400
Queueset: 2
Queue   :        1       2       3       4
----------------------------------------------
buffers   :      25      25      25      25
threshold1:      100     200     100     100
threshold2:      100     200     100     100
reserved  :      50      50      50      50
maximum   :      400     400     400     400

Related Commands

Command
Description

mls qos queue-set output buffers

Allocates buffers to the queue-set.

mls qos queue-set output threshold

Configures the weighted tail-drop (WTD) thresholds, guarantees the availability of buffers, and configures the maximum memory allocation of the queue-set.


show mls qos vlan

Use the show mls qos vlan user EXEC command to display the policy maps attached to a switch virtual interface (SVI).

show mls qos vlan vlan-id [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

vlan-id

Specify the VLAN ID of the SVI to display the policy maps. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.2(25)SE

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The output from the show mls qos vlan command is meaningful only when VLAN-based quality of service (QoS) is enabled and when hierarchical policy maps are configured.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mls qos vlan command:

Switch> show mls qos vlan 10
Vlan10
Attached policy-map for Ingress:pm-test-pm-2

Related Commands

Command
Description

policy-map

Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to multiple ports and enters policy-map configuration mode.


show monitor

Use the show monitor user EXEC command to display information about all Switched Port Analyzer (SPAN) and Remote SPAN (RSPAN) sessions on the switch. Use the command with keywords to show a specific session, all sessions, all local sessions, or all remote sessions.

show monitor [session {session_number | all | local | range list | remote} [detail]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

session

(Optional) Display information about specified SPAN sessions.

session_number

Specify the number of the SPAN or RSPAN session. The range is 1 to 66.

all

Display all SPAN sessions.

local

Display only local SPAN sessions.

range list

Display a range of SPAN sessions, where list is the range of valid sessions, either a single session or a range of sessions described by two numbers, the lower one first, separated by a hyphen. Do not enter any spaces between comma-separated parameters or in hyphen-specified ranges.

Note This keyword is available only in privileged EXEC mode.

remote

Display only remote SPAN sessions.

detail

(Optional) Display detailed information about the specified sessions.

| begin

Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The range list and detail keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

The output is the same for the show monitor command and the show monitor session all command.

Examples

This is an example of output for the show monitor user EXEC command:

Switch# show monitor
Session 1
---------
Type : Local Session
Source Ports :
RX Only : Fa4/0/1
Both : Fa4/0/2-3,Fa4/0/5-6
Destination Ports : Fa4/0/20
Encapsulation : Replicate
Ingress : Disabled

Session 2
---------
Type : Remote Source Session
Source VLANs :
TX Only : 10
Both : 1-9
Dest RSPAN VLAN : 105

This is an example of output for the show monitor user EXEC command for local SPAN source session 1:

Switch# show monitor session 1
Session 1
---------
Type : Local Session
Source Ports :
RX Only : Fa4/0/1
Both : Fa4/0/2-3,Fa4/0/5-6
Destination Ports : Fa4/0/20
Encapsulation : Replicate
Ingress : Disabled

This is an example of output for the show monitor session all user EXEC command when ingress traffic forwarding is enabled:

Switch# show monitor session all
Session 1
---------
Type : Local Session
Source Ports :
Both : Fa4/0/2
Destination Ports : Fa4/0/3
Encapsulation : Native
Ingress : Enabled, default VLAN = 5
Ingress encap : DOT1Q

Session 2
---------
Type : Local Session
Source Ports :
Both : Fa4/0/8
Destination Ports : Fa4/012
Encapsulation : Replicate
Ingress : Enabled, default VLAN = 4
Ingress encap : Untagged

Related Commands

Command
Description

monitor session

Starts or modifies a SPAN or RSPAN session.


show mvr

Use the show mvr privileged EXEC command without keywords to display the current Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) global parameter values, including whether or not MVR is enabled, the MVR multicast VLAN, the maximum query response time, the number of multicast groups, and the MVR mode (dynamic or compatible).

show mvr [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mvr command:

Switch# show mvr
MVR Running: TRUE
MVR multicast VLAN: 1
MVR Max Multicast Groups: 256
MVR Current multicast groups: 0
MVR Global query response time: 5 (tenths of sec)
MVR Mode: compatible

In the preceding display, the maximum number of multicast groups is fixed at 256. The MVR mode is either compatible (for interoperability with Catalyst 2900 XL and Catalyst 3500 XL switches) or dynamic (where operation is consistent with IGMP snooping operation and dynamic MVR membership on source ports is supported).

Related Commands

Command
Description

mvr (global configuration)

Enables and configures multicast VLAN registration on the switch.

mvr (interface configuration)

Configures MVR ports.

show mvr interface

Displays the configured MVR interfaces, status of the specified interface, or all multicast groups to which the interface belongs when the interface and members keywords are appended to the command.

show mvr members

Displays all ports that are members of an MVR multicast group or, if there are no members, means the group is inactive.


show mvr interface

Use the show mvr interface privileged EXEC command without keywords to display the Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) receiver and source ports. Use the command with keywords to display MVR parameters for a specific receiver port.

show mvr interface [interface-id [members [vlan vlan-id]]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) Display MVR type, status, and Immediate Leave setting for the interface.

Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member, module, and port number.

members

(Optional) Display all MVR groups to which the specified interface belongs.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display all MVR group members on this VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If the entered port identification is a non-MVR port or a source port, the command returns an error message. For receiver ports, it displays the port type, per port status, and Immediate-Leave setting.

If you enter the members keyword, all MVR group members on the interface appear. If you enter a VLAN ID, all MVR group members in the VLAN appear.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mvr interface command:

Switch# show mvr interface
Port        Type            Status          Immediate Leave
----        ----            -------         ---------------
Gi1/0/1   SOURCE          ACTIVE/UP       DISABLED
Gi1/0/2   RECEIVER        ACTIVE/DOWN     DISABLED

In the preceding display, Status is defined as follows:

Active means the port is part of a VLAN.

Up/Down means that the port is forwarding/nonforwarding.

Inactive means that the port is not yet part of any VLAN.

This is an example of output from the show mvr interface command for a specified port:

Switch# show mvr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
Type: RECEIVER Status: ACTIVE Immediate Leave: DISABLED 

This is an example of output from the show mvr interface interface-id members command:

Switch# show mvr interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 members
239.255.0.0     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.1     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.2     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.3     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.4     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.5     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.6     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.7     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.8     DYNAMIC ACTIVE
239.255.0.9     DYNAMIC ACTIVE

Related Commands

Command
Description

mvr (global configuration)

Enables and configures multicast VLAN registration on the switch.

mvr (interface configuration)

Configures MVR ports.

show mvr

Displays the global MVR configuration on the switch.

show mvr members

Displays all receiver ports that are members of an MVR multicast group.


show mvr members

Use the show mvr members privileged EXEC command to display all receiver and source ports that are currently members of an IP multicast group.

show mvr members [ip-address] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

ip-address

(Optional) The IP multicast address. If the address is entered, all receiver and source ports that are members of the multicast group appear. If no address is entered, all members of all Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) groups are listed. If a group has no members, the group is listed as Inactive.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

The show mvr members command applies to receiver and source ports. For MVR-compatible mode, all source ports are members of all multicast groups.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show mvr members command:

Switch# show mvr members
MVR Group IP    Status          Members
------------    ------          -------
239.255.0.1     ACTIVE          Gi1/0/1(d), Gi1/0/5(s)
239.255.0.2     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.3     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.4     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.5     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.6     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.7     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.8     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.9     INACTIVE        None
239.255.0.10    INACTIVE        None

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show mvr members ip-address command. It displays the members of the IP multicast group with that address:

Switch# show mvr members 239.255.0.2
239.255.003.--22     ACTIVE          Gi1/0/1(d), Gi1/0/2(d), Gi1/0/3(d), 
                                     Gi1/0/4(d), Gi1/0/5(s)

Related Commands

Command
Description

mvr (global configuration)

Enables and configures multicast VLAN registration on the switch.

mvr (interface configuration)

Configures MVR ports.

show mvr

Displays the global MVR configuration on the switch.

show mvr interface

Displays the configured MVR interfaces, status of the specified interface, or all multicast groups to which the interface belongs when the members keyword is appended to the command.


show pagp

Use the show pagp user EXEC command to display Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) channel-group information.

show pagp [channel-group-number] {counters | internal | neighbor} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]]

Syntax Description

channel-group-number

(Optional) Number of the channel group. The range is 1 to 48.

counters

Display traffic information.

internal

Display internal information.

neighbor

Display neighbor information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SE

The channel-group-number range was changed from 1 to 12 to 1 to 48.


Usage Guidelines

You can enter any show pagp command to display the active channel-group information. To display the nonactive information, enter the show pagp command with a channel-group number.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output are appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show pagp 1 counters command:

Switch> show pagp 1 counters
             Information        Flush
Port         Sent   Recv     Sent   Recv
--------------------------------------
Channel group: 1
  Gi1/0/1    45     42       0      0 
  Gi1/0/2    45     41       0      0 
 
   

This is an example of output from the show pagp 1 internal command:

Switch> show pagp 1 internal
Flags:  S - Device is sending Slow hello.  C - Device is in Consistent state.
        A - Device is in Auto mode.
Timers: H - Hello timer is running.        Q - Quit timer is running.
        S - Switching timer is running.    I - Interface timer is running.

Channel group 1
                                  Hello    Partner  PAgP     Learning  Group
Port        Flags State   Timers  Interval Count   Priority   Method  Ifindex
Gi1/0/1     SC    U6/S7   H       30s      1        128        Any      16
Gi1/0/2     SC    U6/S7   H       30s      1        128        Any      16
 
   

This is an example of output from the show pagp 1 neighbor command:

Switch> show pagp 1 neighbor
Flags:  S - Device is sending Slow hello.  C - Device is in Consistent state.
        A - Device is in Auto mode.        P - Device learns on physical port.

Channel group 1 neighbors
            Partner              Partner          Partner           Partner Group
Port        Name                 Device ID        Port         Age  Flags   Cap.
Gi1/0/1     switch-p2            0002.4b29.4600   Gi01//1        9s SC      10001 
Gi1/0/2     switch-p2            0002.4b29.4600   Gi1/0/2       24s SC      10001 

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear pagp

Clears PAgP channel-group information.


show parser macro

Use the show parser macro user EXEC command to display the parameters for all configured macros or for one macro on the switch.

show parser macro [{brief | description [interface interface-id] | name macro-name}] | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

brief

(Optional) Display the name of each macro.

description [interface interface-id]

(Optional) Display all macro descriptions or the description of a specific interface.

name macro-name

(Optional) Display information about a single macro identified by the macro name.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

The command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is a partial output example from the show parser macro command. The output for the Cisco-default macros varies depending on the switch platform and the software image running on the switch:

Switch# show parser macro
Total number of macros = 6
--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : cisco-global
Macro type : default global
# Enable dynamic port error recovery for link state
# failures
errdisable recovery cause link-flap
errdisable recovery interval 60

<output truncated>

--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : cisco-desktop
Macro type : default interface
# macro keywords $AVID
# Basic interface - Enable data VLAN only
# Recommended value for access vlan (AVID) should not be 1
switchport access vlan $AVID
switchport mode access

<output truncated>

--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : cisco-phone
Macro type : default interface
# Cisco IP phone + desktop template
# macro keywords $AVID $VVID
# VoIP enabled interface - Enable data VLAN
# and voice VLAN (VVID)
# Recommended value for access vlan (AVID) should not be 1
switchport access vlan $AVID
switchport mode access

<output truncated>

--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : cisco-switch
Macro type : default interface
# macro keywords $NVID
# Access Uplink to Distribution
# Do not apply to EtherChannel/Port Group
# Define unique Native VLAN on trunk ports
# Recommended value for native vlan (NVID) should not be 1
switchport trunk native vlan $NVID

<output truncated>

--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : cisco-router
Macro type : default interface
# macro keywords $NVID
# Access Uplink to Distribution
# Define unique Native VLAN on trunk ports
# Recommended value for native vlan (NVID) should not be 1
switchport trunk native vlan $NVID

<output truncated>

--------------------------------------------------------------
Macro name : snmp
Macro type : customizable

#enable port security, linkup, and linkdown traps
snmp-server enable traps port-security
snmp-server enable traps linkup
snmp-server enable traps linkdown
#set snmp-server host
snmp-server host ADDRESS
#set SNMP trap notifications precedence
snmp-server ip precedence VALUE

--------------------------------------------------------------



This is an example of output from the show parser macro name command:

Switch# show parser macro name standard-switch10
Macro name : standard-switch10
Macro type : customizable
macro description standard-switch10
# Trust QoS settings on VOIP packets
auto qos voip trust
# Allow port channels to be automatically formed
channel-protocol pagp

This is an example of output from the show parser macro brief command:

Switch# show parser macro brief
    default global   : cisco-global
    default interface: cisco-desktop
    default interface: cisco-phone
    default interface: cisco-switch
    default interface: cisco-router
    customizable     : snmp

This is an example of output from the show parser description command:

Switch# show parser macro description 
Global Macro(s): cisco-global
Interface    Macro Description(s)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Gi1/0/1        standard-switch10
Gi1/0/2       this is test macro
--------------------------------------------------------------

This is an example of output from the show parser description interface command:

Switch# show parser macro description interface gigabitethernet1/0/2
Interface    Macro Description
--------------------------------------------------------------
Gi1/0/2      this is test macro
--------------------------------------------------------------

Related Commands

Command
Description

macro apply

Applies a macro on an interface or applies and traces a macro on an interface.

macro description

Adds a description about the macros that are applied to an interface.

macro global

Applies a macro on a switch or applies and traces a macro on a switch.

macro global description

Adds a description about the macros that are applied to the switch.

macro name

Creates a macro.

show running-config

Displays the current operating configuration, including defined macros. For syntax information, select Cisco IOS Configuration Fundamentals Command Reference, Release 12.2 > File Management Commands > Configuration File Management Commands.


show policy-map

Use the show policy-map user EXEC command to display quality of service (QoS) policy maps, which define classification criteria for incoming traffic. Policy maps can include policers that specify the bandwidth limitations and the action to take if the limits are exceeded.

show policy-map [policy-map-name [class class-map-name]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

policy-map-name

(Optional) Display the specified policy-map name.

class class-map-name

(Optional) Display QoS policy actions for a individual class.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.



Note Though visible in the command-line help string, the control-plane and interface keywords are not supported, and the statistics shown in the display should be ignored.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show policy-map command:

Switch> show policy-map
Policy Map videowizard_policy2
  class  videowizard_10-10-10-10
   set dscp 34
   police 100000000 2000000 exceed-action drop

 Policy Map mypolicy
  class  dscp5
   set dscp 6

Related Commands

Command
Description

policy-map

Creates or modifies a policy map that can be attached to multiple ports to specify a service policy.


show port-security

Use the show port-security privileged EXEC command to display port-security settings for an interface or for the switch.

show port-security [interface interface-id] [address | vlan] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface interface-id

(Optional) Display port security settings for the specified interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

address

(Optional) Display all secure MAC addresses on all ports or a specified port.

vlan

(Optional) Display port security settings for all VLANs on the specified interface. This keyword is visible only on interfaces that have the switchport mode set to trunk.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The vlan keyword was added (visible only on trunk ports).


Usage Guidelines

If you enter the command without keywords, the output includes the administrative and operational status of all secure ports on the switch.

If you enter an interface-id, the command displays port security settings for the interface.

If you enter the address keyword, the command displays the secure MAC addresses for all interfaces and the aging information for each secure address.

If you enter an interface-id and the address keyword, the command displays all the MAC addresses for the interface with aging information for each secure address. You can also use this command to display all the MAC addresses for an interface even if you have not enabled port security on it.

If you enter the vlan keyword, the command displays the configured maximum and the current number of secure MAC addresses for all VLANs on the interface. This option is visible only on interfaces that have the switchport mode set to trunk.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of the output from the show port-security command:

Switch# show port-security
Secure Port      MaxSecureAddr  CurrentAddr  SecurityViolation  Security Action
                    (Count)        (Count)      (Count)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     Gi1/0/1         1             0             0            Shutdown
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Addresses in System (excluding one mac per port)     : 1
Max Addresses limit in System (excluding one mac per port) : 6272

This is an example of output from the show port-security interface interface-id command:

Switch# show port-security interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Port Security : Enabled
Port status : SecureUp
Violation mode : Shutdown
Maximum MAC Addresses : 1
Total MAC Addresses : 0
Configured MAC Addresses : 0
Aging time : 0 mins
Aging type : Absolute
SecureStatic address aging : Disabled
Security Violation count : 0

This is an example of output from the show port-security address command:

Switch# show port-security address

Secure Mac Address Table
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Vlan    Mac Address       Type                Ports   Remaining Age
                                                         (mins)
----    -----------       ----                -----   -------------
   1    0006.0700.0800    SecureConfigured    Gi1/0/2     1
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Addresses in System (excluding one mac per port)     : 1
Max Addresses limit in System (excluding one mac per port) : 6272

This is an example of output from the show port-security interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 address command:

Switch# show port-security interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 address
          Secure Mac Address Table
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Vlan    Mac Address       Type                Ports   Remaining Age
                                                         (mins)
----    -----------       ----                -----   -------------
   1    0006.0700.0800    SecureConfigured    Gi1/0/2     1
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Addresses: 1

This is an example of output from the show port-security interface interface-id vlan command:

Switch# show port-security interface gigabitethernet1/0/2 vlan 
Default maximum:not set, using 5120
VLAN  Maximum    Current   
    5    default          1
   10    default         54
   11    default        101
   12    default        101
   13    default        201
   14    default        501

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear port-security

Deletes from the MAC address table a specific type of secure address or all the secure addresses on the switch or an interface.

switchport port-security

Enables port security on a port, restricts the use of the port to a user-defined group of stations, and configures secure MAC addresses.


show power inline

Use the show power inline user EXEC command to display the Power over Ethernet (PoE) status for the specified PoE port or for all PoE ports.

show power inline [interface-id | consumption default | module switch-number] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) Display PoE-related power management information for the specified interface.

consumption default

(Optional) Display the power allocated to devices connected to PoE ports.

module switch-number

(Optional) Limit the display to ports on the specified stack member. The switch number is 1 to 9.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(19)EA1

This command was introduced.

12.2(25)SEC

The consumption default keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show power inline command. In the display, port 2 is configured as static; power has been pre-allocated to this port, but no powered device is connected. Port 6 is a static port in the power-deny state because its maximum wattage is configured for 10 W. The connected powered device has a reported class maximum wattage for a Class 0 or Class 3 device.

Switch> show power inline
Module   Available     Used     Remaining
          (Watts)     (Watts)    (Watts) 
------   ---------   --------   ---------
1            370.0      114.9       255.1
2            370.0       34.3       335.

Interface Admin  Oper       Power   Device              Class Max
                            (Watts)                            
--------- ------ ---------- ------- ------------------- ----- ----
Fa1/0/1   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/2   static off        15.4    n/a                 n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/3   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/4   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7960       2     15.4
Fa1/0/5   static on         15.4    IP Phone 7960       2     15.4
Fa1/0/6   static power-deny 10.0    n/a                 n/a   10.0
Fa1/0/7   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show power inline command on a port:

Switch> show power inline fastethernet2/0/1 
Interface Admin  Oper       Power   Device              Class Max
                            (Watts)
--------- ------ ---------- ------- ------------------- ----- ----
Fa2/0/1   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4

This is an example of output from the show power inline consumption default command on all PoE switch ports:

Switch> show power inline consumption default
Default PD consumption : 15400 mW

This is an example of output from the show power inline module switch-number command on stack member 1:

Switch> show power inline module 1
Module   Available     Used     Remaining
          (Watts)     (Watts)    (Watts)
------   ---------   --------   ---------
1           370.0      166.2       203.9
Interface Admin  Oper       Power   Device              Class Max
                            (Watts)
--------- ------ ---------- ------- ------------------- ----- ----
Fa1/0/1   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/2   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/3   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/4   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/5   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
Fa1/0/6   auto   on         6.3     IP Phone 7910       n/a   15.4
<output truncated>

Table 2-30 show power inline interface Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Admin

Administration mode: auto, off, static

Oper

Operating mode:

on—the powered device is detected, and power is applied.

off—no PoE is applied.

faulty—device detection or a powered device is in a faulty state.

power-deny—a powered device is detected, but no PoE is available, or the maximum wattage exceeds the detected powered-device maximum.

Power

The supplied PoE in watts

Device

The device type detected: n/a, unknown, Cisco powered-device, IEEE powered-device, <name from CDP>

Class

The IEEE classification: n/a, Class <0-4>

Available

The total amount of PoE in the system

Used

The amount of PoE allocated to ports

Remaining

The amount of PoE not allocated to ports in the system. (Available - Used = Remaining)


Related Commands

Command
Description

logging event power-inline-status

Enables the logging of PoE events.

power inline

Configures the power management mode for the specified PoE port or for all PoE ports.

show controllers power inline

Displays the values in the registers of the specified PoE controller.


show sdm prefer

Use the show sdm prefer privileged EXEC command to display information about the Switch Database Management (SDM) templates that can be used to maximize used for allocating system resources for a particular feature, or use the command without a keyword to display the template in use.

show sdm prefer [access | default | dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | routing | vlan} | routing | vlan [desktop]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

access

(Optional) Display the template that maximizes system resources for ACLs.

default

(Optional) Display the template that balances system resources among features.

dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | routing | vlan)

(Optional) Display the dual templates that support both IPv4 and IPv6.

default—Display the default dual template configuration.

routing—Display the routing dual template configuration.

vlan—Display the VLAN dual template configuration.

Note Though visible on all switches, this option is supported only when the stack is running the advanced IP services image.

routing

(Optional) Display the template that maximizes system resources for routing.

vlan

(Optional) Display the template that maximizes system resources for Layer 2 VLANs.

desktop

(Optional) For Catalyst 3750-12S aggregator switches only, display the desktop templates. For this switch, when you do not enter the desktop keyword, the aggregator templates appear.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The desktop keyword was added.

12.2(25)SE

The dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 {default | vlan) keywords were added.

12.2(25)SED

The access keyword was added.

12.2(25)SEE

The routing keyword was added for the dual IPv4 and IPv6 template.


Usage Guidelines

When you change the SDM template by using the sdm prefer global configuration command, you must reload the switch for the configuration to take effect. If you enter the show sdm prefer command before you enter the reload privileged EXEC command, the show sdm prefer command shows the template currently in use and the template that will become active after a reload.

The numbers displayed for each template represent an approximate maximum number for each feature resource. The actual number might vary, depending on the actual number of other features configured.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show sdm prefer command, displaying the template in use:

Switch# show sdm prefer
"default" template:
 The selected template optimizes the resources in
 the switch to support this level of features for
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs.

  number of unicast mac addresses:             12K
  number of igmp groups + multicast routes:    1K
  number of unicast routes:                    0
  number of qos aces:                          512
  number of security aces:                     1K
Switch# show sdm prefer
 The current template is "desktop default" template.
 The selected template optimizes the resources in
 the switch to support this level of features for
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs.

  number of unicast mac addresses:             6K
  number of igmp groups + multicast routes:    1K
  number of unicast routes:                    8K
    number of directly connected hosts:        6K
    number of indirect routes:                 2K
  number of policy based routing aces:         0
  number of qos aces:                          512
  number of security aces:                     1K

This is an example of output from the show sdm prefer routing command entered on an aggregator switch:

Switch# show sdm prefer routing
"aggregate routing" template:
 The selected template optimizes the resources in
 the switch to support this level of features for
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs.

  number of unicast mac addresses:             6K
  number of igmp groups + multicast routes:    1K
  number of unicast routes:                    20K
    number of directly connected hosts:        6K
    number of indirect routes:                 14K
  number of policy based routing aces:         512
  number of qos aces:                          512
  number of security aces:                     1K

This is an example of output from the show sdm prefer routing command entered on a desktop switch:

Switch# show sdm prefer routing
"desktop routing" template:
 The selected template optimizes the resources in
 the switch to support this level of features for
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs.

  number of unicast mac addresses:             3K
  number of igmp groups + multicast routes:    1K
  number of unicast routes:                    11K
    number of directly connected hosts:        3K
    number of indirect routes:                 8K
  number of policy based routing aces:         512
  number of qos aces:                          512
  number of security aces:                     1K

This is an example of output from the show sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 default command entered on a desktop switch:

Switch# show sdm prefer dual-ipv4-and-ipv6 default
 "desktop IPv4 and IPv6 default" template:
 The selected template optimizes the resources in
 the switch to support this level of features for
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs.

  number of unicast mac addresses:                  2K
  number of IPv4 IGMP groups + multicast routes:    1K
  number of IPv4 unicast routes:                    3K
    number of directly-connected IPv4 hosts:        2K
    number of indirect IPv4 routes:                 1K
  number of IPv6 multicast groups:                  1K
  number of directly-connected IPv6 addresses:      2K
  number of indirect IPv6 unicast routes:           1K
  number of IPv4 policy based routing aces:         0
  number of IPv4/MAC qos aces:                      512
  number of IPv4/MAC security aces:                 1K
  number of IPv6 policy based routing aces:         0
  number of IPv6 qos aces:                          510
  number of IPv6 security aces:                     510

This is an example of output from the show sdm prefer command when you have configured a new template but have not reloaded the switch:

Switch# show sdm prefer 
 The current template is "desktop routing" template. 
 The selected template optimizes the resources in 
 the switch to support this level of features for 
 8 routed interfaces and 1024 VLANs. 

  number of unicast mac addresses:            3K 
  number of igmp groups + multicast routes:   1K 
  number of unicast routes:                   11K 
    number of directly connected hosts:       3K 
    number of indirect routes:                8K 
  number of qos aces:                         512 
  number of security aces:                    1K 
  
 On next reload, template will be "desktop vlan" template.

Related Commands

Command
Description

sdm prefer

Sets the SDM template to maximize resources for routing or VLANs or to the default template, to select a dual IPv4 and IPv6 template, or to select the desktop or aggregator templates.


show setup express

Use the show setup express privileged EXEC command to display if Express Setup mode is active on the switch.

show setup express [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Defaults

No default is defined.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(14)EA1

This command was introduced.


Examples

This is an example of output from the show setup express command:

Switch# show setup express
express setup mode is active

Related Commands

Command
Description

setup express

Enables Express Setup mode.


show spanning-tree

Use the show spanning-tree user EXEC command to display spanning-tree state information.

show spanning-tree [bridge-group | active [detail] | backbonefast | blockedports | bridge | detail [active] | inconsistentports | interface interface-id | mst | pathcost method | root | summary [totals] | uplinkfast | vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree bridge-group [active [detail] | blockedports | bridge | detail [active] | inconsistentports | interface interface-id | root | summary] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree vlan vlan-id [active [detail] | blockedports | bridge | detail [active] | inconsistentports | interface interface-id | root | summary] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree {vlan vlan-id | bridge-group} bridge [address | detail | forward-time | hello-time | id | max-age | priority [system-id] | protocol] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree {vlan vlan-id | bridge-group} root [address | cost | detail | forward-time | hello-time | id | max-age | port | priority [system-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree interface interface-id [active [detail] | cost | detail [active] | inconsistency | portfast | priority | rootcost | state] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

show spanning-tree mst [configuration [digest]] | [instance-id [detail | interface interface-id [detail]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

bridge-group

(Optional) Specify the bridge group number. The range is 1 to 255.

active [detail]

(Optional) Display spanning-tree information only on active interfaces (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

backbonefast

(Optional) Display spanning-tree BackboneFast status.

blockedports

(Optional) Display blocked port information (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

bridge [address | detail | forward-time | hello-time | id | max-age | priority [system-id] | protocol]

(Optional) Display status and configuration of this switch (optional keywords available only in privileged EXEC mode).

detail [active]

(Optional) Display a detailed summary of interface information (active keyword available only in privileged EXEC mode).

inconsistentports

(Optional) Display inconsistent port information (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

interface interface-id [active [detail] | cost | detail [active] | inconsistency | portfast | priority | rootcost | state]

(Optional) Display spanning-tree information for the specified interface (all options except portfast and state available only in privileged EXEC mode). Enter each interface separated by a space. Ranges are not supported. Valid interfaces include physical ports, VLANs, and port channels. The VLAN range is 1 to 4094. The port-channel range is 1 to 48.

mst [configuration [digest]] [instance-id [detail | interface interface-id [detail]]

(Optional) Display the multiple spanning-tree (MST) region configuration and status (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

The keywords have these meanings:

digest—(Optional) Display the MD5 digest included in the current MST configuration identifier (MSTCI). Two separate digests, one for standard and one for prestandard switches, appear (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

The terminology was updated for the implementation of the IEEE standard, and the txholdcount field was added.

The new master role appears for boundary ports.

The word pre-standard or Pre-STD appears when an IEEE standard bridge sends prestandard BPDUs on a port.

The word pre-standard (config) or Pre-STD-Cf appears when a port has been configured to transmit prestandard BPDUs and no prestandard BPDU has been received on that port.

The word pre-standard (rcvd) or Pre-STD-Rx appears when a prestandard BPDU has been received on a port that has not been configured to transmit prestandard BPDUs.

A dispute flag appears when a designated port receives inferior designated information until the port returns to the forwarding state or ceases to be designated.

instance-idYou can specify a single instance ID, a range of IDs separated by a hyphen, or a series of IDs separated by a comma. The range is 1 to 4094. The display shows the number of currently configured instances.

interface interface-id—(Optional) Valid interfaces include physical ports, VLANs, and port channels. The VLAN range is 1 to 4094. The port-channel range is 1 to 48.

detail—(Optional) Display detailed information for the instance or interface.

pathcost method

(Optional) Display the default path cost method (available only in privileged EXEC mode).

root [address | cost | detail | forward-time | hello-time | id | max-age | port | priority [system-id]]

(Optional) Display root switch status and configuration (all keywords available only in privileged EXEC mode).

summary [totals]

(Optional) Display a summary of port states or the total lines of the spanning-tree state section. The words IEEE Standard identify the MST version running on a switch.

uplinkfast

(Optional) Display spanning-tree UplinkFast status.

vlan vlan-id [active [detail] | backbonefast | blockedports | bridge [address | detail | forward-time | hello-time | id | max-age | priority [system-id] | protocol]

(Optional) Display spanning-tree information for the specified VLAN (some keywords available only in privileged EXEC mode). You can specify a single VLAN identified by VLAN ID number, a range of VLANs separated by a hyphen, or a series of VLANs separated by a comma. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The mst keyword and options were added.

12.2(25)SEC

The digest keyword was added, and new digest and transmit hold count fields appear.


Usage Guidelines

If the vlan-id variable is omitted, the command applies to the spanning-tree instance for all VLANs.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree active command:

Switch# show spanning-tree active
VLAN0001
  Spanning tree enabled protocol ieee
  Root ID    Priority    32768
             Address     0001.42e2.cdd0
             Cost        3038
             Port        24 (GigabitEthernet2/0/1)
             Hello Time   2 sec  Max Age 20 sec  Forward Delay 15 sec

  Bridge ID  Priority    49153  (priority 49152 sys-id-ext 1)
             Address     0003.fd63.9580
             Hello Time   2 sec  Max Age 20 sec  Forward Delay 15 sec
             Aging Time 300
  Uplinkfast enabled

Interface        Role Sts Cost      Prio.Nbr Type
---------------- ---- --- --------- -------- --------------------------------
Gi2/0/1          Root FWD 3019      128.24   P2p
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree detail command:

Switch# show spanning-tree detail
VLAN0001 is executing the ieee compatible Spanning Tree protocol
  Bridge Identifier has priority 49152, sysid 1, address 0003.fd63.9580
  Configured hello time 2, max age 20, forward delay 15
  Current root has priority 32768, address 0001.42e2.cdd0
  Root port is 24 (GigabitEthernet2/0/1), cost of root path is 3038
  Topology change flag not set, detected flag not set
  Number of topology changes 0 last change occurred 1d16h ago
  Times:  hold 1, topology change 35, notification 2
          hello 2, max age 20, forward delay 15
  Timers: hello 0, topology change 0, notification 0, aging 300
  Uplinkfast enabled

 Port 1 (GigabitEthernet2/0/1) of VLAN0001 is forwarding
   Port path cost 3019, Port priority 128, Port Identifier 128.24.
   Designated root has priority 32768, address 0001.42e2.cdd0
   Designated bridge has priority 32768, address 00d0.bbf5.c680
   Designated port id is 128.25, designated path cost 19
   Timers: message age 2, forward delay 0, hold 0
   Number of transitions to forwarding state: 1
   Link type is point-to-point by default
   BPDU: sent 0, received 72364
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree interface interface-id command:

Switch# show spanning-tree interface gigabitethernet2/0/1
Vlan             Role Sts Cost      Prio.Nbr Type
---------------- ---- --- --------- -------- --------------------------------
VLAN0001         Root FWD 3019      128.24   P2p

Switch# show spanning-tree summary
Switch is in pvst mode
Root bridge for: none
EtherChannel misconfiguration guard is enabled
Extended system ID   is enabled
Portfast             is disabled by default
PortFast BPDU Guard  is disabled by default
Portfast BPDU Filter is disabled by default
Loopguard            is disabled by default
UplinkFast           is enabled
BackboneFast         is enabled
Pathcost method used is short

Name                   Blocking Listening Learning Forwarding STP Active
---------------------- -------- --------- -------- ---------- ----------
VLAN0001                  1        0         0        11         12
VLAN0002                  3        0         0        1          4
VLAN0004                  3        0         0        1          4
VLAN0006                  3        0         0        1          4
VLAN0031                  3        0         0        1          4
VLAN0032                  3        0         0        1          4
<output truncated>
---------------------- -------- --------- -------- ---------- ----------
37 vlans                  109      0         0        47         156
Station update rate set to 150 packets/sec.

UplinkFast statistics
-----------------------
Number of transitions via uplinkFast (all VLANs)            : 0
Number of proxy multicast addresses transmitted (all VLANs) : 0

BackboneFast statistics
-----------------------
Number of transition via backboneFast (all VLANs)           : 0
Number of inferior BPDUs received (all VLANs)               : 0
Number of RLQ request PDUs received (all VLANs)             : 0
Number of RLQ response PDUs received (all VLANs)            : 0
Number of RLQ request PDUs sent (all VLANs)                 : 0
Number of RLQ response PDUs sent (all VLANs)                : 0

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree mst configuration command:

Switch# show spanning-tree mst configuration
Name      [region1]
Revision  1
Instance  Vlans Mapped
--------  ------------------
0         1-9,21-4094
1         10-20
----------------------------

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree mst interface interface-id command:

Switch# show spanning-tree mst interface gigabitethernet2/0/1
GigabitEthernet2/0/1 of MST00 is root forwarding
Edge port: no             (default)        port guard : none        (default)
Link type: point-to-point (auto)           bpdu filter: disable     (default)
Boundary : boundary       (STP)            bpdu guard : disable     (default)
Bpdus sent 5, received 74

Instance role state cost      prio vlans mapped
0        root FWD   200000    128  1,12,14-4094

This is an example of output from the show spanning-tree mst 0 command:

Switch# show spanning-tree mst 0
###### MST00        vlans mapped: 1-9,21-4094
Bridge      address 0002.4b29.7a00  priority  32768 (32768 sysid 0)
Root        address 0001.4297.e000  priority  32768 (32768 sysid 0)
            port    Gi1/0/1         path cost 200038
IST master *this switch
Operational hello time 2, forward delay 15, max age 20, max hops 20
Configured  hello time 2, forward delay 15, max age 20, max hops 20

Interface              role state cost      prio type
--------------------   ---- ----- --------- ---- --------------------------------
GigabitEthernet2/0/1   root FWD   200000    128  P2P bound(STP)
GigabitEthernet2/0/2   desg FWD   200000    128  P2P bound(STP)
Port-channel1          desg FWD   200000    128  P2P bound(STP)

Related Commands

Command
Description

clear spanning-tree counters

Clears the spanning-tree counters.

clear spanning-tree detected-protocols

Restarts the protocol migration process.

spanning-tree backbonefast

Enables the BackboneFast feature.

spanning-tree bpdufilter

Prevents an interface from sending or receiving bridge protocol data units (BPDUs).

spanning-tree bpduguard

Puts an interface in the error-disabled state when it receives a BPDU.

spanning-tree cost

Sets the path cost for spanning-tree calculations.

spanning-tree extend system-id

Enables the extended system ID feature.

spanning-tree guard

Enables the root guard or the loop guard feature for all the VLANs associated with the selected interface.

spanning-tree link-type

Overrides the default link-type setting for rapid spanning-tree transitions to the forwarding state.

spanning-tree loopguard default

Prevents alternate or root ports from becoming the designated port because of a failure that leads to a unidirectional link.

spanning-tree mst configuration

Enters multiple spanning-tree (MST) configuration mode through which the MST region configuration occurs.

spanning-tree mst cost

Sets the path cost for MST calculations.

spanning-tree mst forward-time

Sets the forward-delay time for all MST instances.

spanning-tree mst hello-time

Sets the interval between hello BPDUs sent by root switch configuration messages.

spanning-tree mst max-age

Sets the interval between messages that the spanning tree receives from the root switch.

spanning-tree mst max-hops

Sets the number of hops in an MST region before the BPDU is discarded and the information held for an interface is aged.

spanning-tree mst port-priority

Configures an interface priority.

spanning-tree mst priority

Configures the switch priority for the specified spanning-tree instance.

spanning-tree mst root

Configures the MST root switch priority and timers based on the network diameter.

spanning-tree port-priority

Configures an interface priority.

spanning-tree portfast (global configuration)

Globally enables the BPDU filtering or the BPDU guard feature on Port Fast-enabled interfaces or enables the Port Fast feature on all nontrunking interfaces.

spanning-tree portfast (interface configuration)

Enables the Port Fast feature on an interface and all its associated VLANs.

spanning-tree uplinkfast

Accelerates the choice of a new root port when a link or switch fails or when the spanning tree reconfigures itself.

spanning-tree vlan

Configures spanning tree on a per-VLAN basis.


show storm-control

Use the show storm-control user EXEC command to display broadcast, multicast, or unicast storm control settings on the switch or on the specified interface or to display storm-control history.

show storm-control [interface-id] [broadcast | multicast | unicast] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) Interface ID for the physical port (including type, stack member, module, and port number).

broadcast

(Optional) Display broadcast storm threshold setting.

multicast

(Optional) Display multicast storm threshold setting.

unicast

(Optional) Display unicast storm threshold setting.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

When you enter an interface-id, the storm control thresholds appear for the specified interface.

If you do not enter an interface-id, settings appear for one traffic type for all ports on the switch.

If you do not enter a traffic type, settings appear for broadcast storm control.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of a partial output from the show storm-control command when no keywords are entered. Because no traffic-type keyword was entered, the broadcast storm control settings appear.

Switch> show storm-control
Interface    Filter State   Upper       Lower      Current
---------    -------------  ----------  ---------  ---------
Gi1/0/1      Forwarding     20 pps      10 pps     5 pps
Gi1/0/2      Forwarding     50.00%      40.00%     0.00%
<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show storm-control command for a specified interface. Because no traffic-type keyword was entered, the broadcast storm control settings appear.

Switch> show storm-control gigabitethernet 1/0/1
Interface    Filter State   Upper       Lower      Current
---------    -------------  ----------  ---------  ---------
Gi1/0/1      Forwarding     20 pps      10 pps     5 pps

Table 2-31 describes the fields in the show storm-control display.

Table 2-31 show storm-control Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Interface

Displays the ID of the interface.

Filter State

Displays the status of the filter:

Blocking—Storm control is enabled, and a storm has occurred.

Forwarding—Storm control is enabled, and no storms have occurred.

Inactive—Storm control is disabled.

Upper

Displays the rising suppression level as a percentage of total available bandwidth in packets per second or in bits per second.

Lower

Displays the falling suppression level as a percentage of total available bandwidth in packets per second or in bits per second.

Current

Displays the bandwidth usage of broadcast traffic or the specified traffic type (broadcast, multicast, or unicast) as a percentage of total available bandwidth. This field is only valid when storm control is enabled.


Related Commands

Command
Description

storm-control

Sets the broadcast, multicast, or unicast storm control levels for the switch.


show switch

Use the show switch user EXEC command to display information related to the stack member or the switch stack.

show switch [stack-member-number | detail | neighbors | stack-ports | stack-ring activity [detail]] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

stack-member-number

(Optional) Display information for the specified stack member. The range is 1 to 9.

detail

(Optional) Display detailed information about the stack ring.

neighbors

(Optional) Display the neighbors for the entire switch stack.

stack-ports

(Optional) Display port information for the entire switch stack.

stack-ring activity [detail]

(Optional) Display the number of frames per stack member that are sent to the stack ring. Use the detail keyword to display the ASIC, the receive queues, and the number of frames per stack member that are sent to the stack ring.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The display was expanded to include Switch Database Management (SDM) mismatch.

12.2(20)SE

The display was expanded to include provisioning information. The stack-ring activity [detail] keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

These are the states displayed from this command:

Waiting—The state when a switch is booting up and waiting for communication from other switches in the stack. The switch has not yet determined whether it is a stack master or not.

Stack members not participating in a stack master election remain in the waiting state until the stack master is elected and ready.

Initializing—The state when a switch has determined whether it is the stack master or not. If the switch is not the stack master, it is receiving its system- and interface-level configuration from the stack master and loading it.

Ready—The state when the stack member has completed loading the system- and interface-level configuration and is ready to forward traffic.

Master Re-Init—The state immediately after a stack master re-election and a different stack member is elected stack master. The new stack master is re-initializing its configuration. This state applies only to the new stack master.

Ver Mismatch—The state of a switch in version mismatch (VM) mode. VM mode is when a switch joining the switch stack has a different stack protocol minor version number than the stack master.

SDM Mismatch—The state of a switch in Switch Database Management (SDM) mismatch mode. SDM mismatch is when a stack member does not support the SDM template running on the stack master.

Provisioned—The state of a preconfigured switch before it becomes an active member of a switch stack, or the state of a stack member after it has left the switch stack. The MAC address and the priority number in the display are always 0 for the provisioned switch.

A typical state transition for a stack member (including a stack master) booting up is Waiting -> Initializing -> Ready.

A typical state transition for a stack member becoming a stack master after a stack master election is Ready -> Master Re-Init -> Ready.

A typical state transition for a stack member in version mismatch (VM) mode is Waiting -> Ver Mismatch.

You can use the show switch command to identify whether the provisioned switch exists in the switch stack. The show running-config and the show startup-config privileged EXEC commands do not provide this information.

Examples

This example shows how to display summary information about a switch stack:

Switch> show switch
                                               Current
Switch#  Role      Mac Address     Priority     State
--------------------------------------------------------
 6       Member    0003.e31a.1e00     1         Ready
*8       Master    0003.e31a.1200     1         Ready
 2       Member    0000.000.0000      0         Provisioned

This example shows detailed information about a switch stack:

Switch> show switch detail
                                               Current
Switch#  Role      Mac Address     Priority     State
--------------------------------------------------------
2       Member     0000.000.0000      0         Provisioned
6       Member     0003.e31a.1e00     1         Ready
*8      Master    0003.e31a.1200     1         Ready

         Stack Port Status             Neighbors
Switch#  Port A     Port B           Port A   Port B
--------------------------------------------------------
  6       Down        Ok              None       8
  8        Ok        Down               6      None

This example shows how to display summary information about stack member 6:

Switch> show switch 6
                                               Current
Switch#  Role      Mac Address     Priority     State
--------------------------------------------------------
 6       Member     0003.e31a.1e00     1         Ready

This example shows how to display neighbor information for a switch stack:

Switch> show switch neighbors
  Switch #    Port A       Port B
  --------    ------       ------
      6        None           8
      8         6            None

This example shows how to display stack-port information for a switch stack:

Switch> show switch stack-ports
  Switch #    Port A       Port B
  --------    ------       ------
    6          Down          Ok
    8           Ok          Down

This example shows how to display detailed stack-ring activity information for a switch stack:

Switch> show switch stack-ring activity detail
Switch   Asic  Rx Queue-1  Rx Queue-2  Rx Queue-3  Rx Queue-4       Total
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1           0     2021864     1228937      281510           0     3532311
1           1          52           0       72678           0       72730
                                              ---------------------------
                                              Switch 1 Total:     3605041
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2           0     2020901       90833      101680           0     2213414
2           1          52           0           0           0          52
                                              ---------------------------
                                              Switch 2 Total:     2213466
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Total frames sent to stack ring : 5818507

Note: these counts do not include frames sent to the ring
by certain output features, such as output SPAN and output
ACLs.

Related Commands

Command
Description

reload

Reloads the stack member and puts a configuration change into effect.

remote command

Monitors all or specified stack members.

session

Accesses a specific stack member.

switch priority

Changes the stack member priority value.

switch provision

Provisions a new switch before it joins the switch stack.

switch renumber

Changes the stack member number.


show system mtu

Use the show system mtu privileged EXEC command to display the global maximum transmission unit (MTU) or maximum packet size set for the switch.

show system mtu [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If you have used the system mtu or system mtu jumbo global configuration command to change the MTU setting, the new setting does not take effect until you reset the switch.

The system MTU refers to ports operating at 10/100 Mbps; the system jumbo MTU refers to Gigabit ports; the system routing MTU refers to routed ports.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show system mtu command:

Switch# show system mtu
System MTU size is 1500 bytes
System Jumbo MTU size is 1550 bytes
Routing MTU size is 1500 bytes.

Related Commands

Command
Description

system mtu

Sets the MTU size for the Fast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet, or routed ports.


show udld

Use the show udld user EXEC command to display UniDirectional Link Detection (UDLD) administrative and operational status for all ports or the specified port.

show udld [interface-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the interface and port number. Valid interfaces include physical ports and VLANs. The VLAN range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

If you do not enter an interface-id, administrative and operational UDLD status for all interfaces appear.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show udld interface-id command. For this display, UDLD is enabled on both ends of the link, and UDLD detects that the link is bidirectional. Table 2-32 describes the fields in this display.

Switch> show udld gigabitethernet2/0/1
Interface gi2/0/1
---
Port enable administrative configuration setting: Follows device default
Port enable operational state: Enabled
Current bidirectional state: Bidirectional
Current operational state: Advertisement - Single Neighbor detected
Message interval: 60
Time out interval: 5
    Entry 1
    Expiration time: 146
    Device ID: 1
    Current neighbor state: Bidirectional
    Device name: Switch-A 
    Port ID: Gi2/0/1
    Neighbor echo 1 device: Switch-B
    Neighbor echo 1 port: Gi2/0/2 
    Message interval: 5
    CDP Device name: Switch-A

Table 2-32 show udld Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Interface

The interface on the local device configured for UDLD.

Port enable administrative configuration setting

How UDLD is configured on the port. If UDLD is enabled or disabled, the port enable configuration setting is the same as the operational enable state. Otherwise, the enable operational setting depends on the global enable setting.

Port enable operational state

Operational state that shows whether UDLD is actually running on this port.

Current bidirectional state

The bidirectional state of the link. An unknown state appears if the link is down or if it is connected to an UDLD-incapable device. A bidirectional state appears if the link is a normal two-way connection to a UDLD-capable device. All other values mean miswiring.

Current operational state

The current phase of the UDLD state machine. For a normal bidirectional link, the state machine is most often in the Advertisement phase.

Message interval

How often advertisement messages are sent from the local device. Measured in seconds.

Time out interval

The time period, in seconds, that UDLD waits for echoes from a neighbor device during the detection window.

Entry 1

Information from the first cache entry, which contains a copy of echo information received from the neighbor.

Expiration time

The amount of time in seconds remaining before this cache entry is aged out.

Device ID

The neighbor device identification.

Current neighbor state

The neighbor's current state. If both the local and neighbor devices are running UDLD normally, the neighbor state and local state should be bidirectional. If the link is down or the neighbor is not UDLD-capable, no cache entries appear.

Device name

The device name or the system serial number of the neighbor. The system serial number appears if the device name is not set or is set to the default (Switch).

Port ID

The neighbor port ID enabled for UDLD.

Neighbor echo 1 device

The device name of the neighbors' neighbor from which the echo originated.

Neighbor echo 1 port

The port number ID of the neighbor from which the echo originated.

Message interval

The rate, in seconds, at which the neighbor is sending advertisement messages.

CDP device name

The CDP device name or the system serial number. The system serial number appears if the device name is not set or is set to the default (Switch).


Related Commands

Command
Description

udld

Enables aggressive or normal mode in UDLD or sets the configurable message timer time.

udld port

Enables UDLD on an individual interface or prevents a fiber-optic interface from being enabled by the udld global configuration command.

udld reset

Resets all interfaces shutdown by UDLD and permits traffic to begin passing through them again.


show version

Use the show version user EXEC command to display version information for the hardware and firmware.

show version [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show version command:


Note Though visible in the show version output, the configuration register information is not supported on the switch.


Switch> show version
Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) C3750 Software (C3750-IPSERVICES-M), Version 12.2(25)SEB, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-2005 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Tues 15-Feb-05 21:09 by antonino
Image text-base: 0x00003000, data-base: 0x008E36A4

ROM: Bootstrap program is C3750 boot loader
BOOTLDR: C3750 Boot Loader (C3750-HBOOT-M) Version 12.2(25)SEB, 

Switch uptime is 2 days, 11 hours, 16 minutes
System returned to ROM by power-on
System image file is "flash:i5.709"

cisco WS-C3750-48TS (PowerPC405) processor with 120822K/10240K bytes of memory.
Last reset from power-on
Bridging software.
Target IOS Version 12.2(25)SEB
1 Virtual Ethernet/IEEE 802.3  interface(s)
48 FastEthernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
32 Gigabit Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
The password-recovery mechanism is enabled.

512K bytes of flash-simulated non-volatile configuration memory.
Base ethernet MAC Address       : 00:09:43:A7:F2:00
Motherboard assembly number     : 73-7056-05
Motherboard serial number       : CSJ0638004U
Motherboard revision number     : 05
Model number                    : 73-7056-05


Switch   Ports  Model              SW Version              SW Image
------   -----  -----              ----------              ----------
     1   28     WS-C3750G-24TS     12.2(25)SEB             C3750-IPSERVICES-M
*    8   52     WS-C3750-48TS      12.2(25)SEB             C3750-IPSERVICES-M


Switch 01
---------

Switch Uptime                   : 2 days, 11 hours, 17 minutes
Base ethernet MAC Address       : 00:0B:46:2E:35:80
Motherboard assembly number     : 73-7058-04
Power supply part number        : 341-0045-01
Motherboard serial number       : CSJ0640010L
Model number                    : WS-C3750-24TS-SMI
System serial number            : CSJ0642U00A

Configuration register is 0xF

<output truncated>

show vlan

Use the show vlan user EXEC command to display the parameters for all configured VLANs or one VLAN (if the VLAN ID or name is specified) on the switch.

show vlan [brief | dot1q tag native | id vlan-id | internal usage | mtu | name vlan-name | private-vlan [type] | remote-span | summary] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

brief

(Optional) Display one line for each VLAN with the VLAN name, status, and its ports.

dot1q tag native

(Optional) Display the IEEE 802.1Q native VLAN tagging status.

id vlan-id

(Optional) Display information about a single VLAN identified by VLAN ID number. For vlan-id, the range is 1 to 4094.

internal usage

(Optional) Display a list of VLANs being used internally by the switch. These VLANs are always from the extended range (VLAN IDs 1006 to 4094), and you cannot create VLANs with these IDS by using the vlan global configuration command until you remove them from internal use.

mtu

(Optional) Display a list of VLANs and the minimum and maximum transmission unit (MTU) sizes configured on ports in the VLAN.

name vlan-name

(Optional) Display information about a single VLAN identified by VLAN name. The VLAN name is an ASCII string from 1 to 32 characters.

private-vlan

(Optional) Display information about configured private VLANs, including primary and secondary VLAN IDs, type (community, isolated, or primary) and ports belonging to the private VLAN. This keyword is only supported if your switch is running the IP services image, formerly known as the enhanced multilayer image (EMI).

type

(Optional) Display only private VLAN ID and type.

remote-span

(Optional) Display information about Remote SPAN (RSPAN) VLANs.

summary

(Optional) Display VLAN summary information.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.



Note Though visible in the command-line help string, the ifindex keyword is not supported.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.2(20)SE

The mtu and private-vlan keywords were added.

12.2(25)SE

The dot1q tag native keywords were added.


Usage Guidelines

In the show vlan mtu command output, the MTU_Mismatch column shows whether all the ports in the VLAN have the same MTU. When yes appears in this column, it means that the VLAN has ports with different MTUs, and packets that are switched from a port with a larger MTU to a port with a smaller MTU might be dropped. If the VLAN does not have an SVI, the hyphen (-) symbol appears in the SVI_MTU column. If the MTU-Mismatch column displays yes, the names of the port with the MinMTU and the port with the MaxMTU appear.

If you try to associate a private VLAN secondary VLAN with a primary VLAN before you define the secondary VLAN, the secondary VLAN is not included in the show vlan private-vlan command output.

In the show vlan private-vlan type command output, a type displayed as normal means a VLAN that has a private VLAN association but is not part of the private VLAN. For example, if you define and associate two VLANs as primary and secondary VLANs and then delete the secondary VLAN configuration without removing the association from the primary VLAN, the VLAN that was the secondary VLAN is shown as normal in the display. In the show vlan private-vlan output, the primary and secondary VLAN pair is shown as non-operational.

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show vlan command. Table 2-33 describes the fields in the display.

Switch> show vlan
VLAN Name                             Status    Ports
---- -------------------------------- --------- -------------------------------
1    default                          active    Fa1/0/1, Fa1/0/2, Fa1/0/3
                                                Fa1/0/4, Fa1/0/5, Fa1/0/6
                                                Fa1/0/7, Fa1/0/8, Fa1/0/9
                                                Fa1/0/10, Fa1/0/11, Fa1/0/12
                                                Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/14, Fa1/0/15
                                                Fa1/0/16, Fa1/0/17, Fa1/0/18
                                                Fa1/0/19, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/21
                                                Fa1/0/24, Gi1/0/1, Gi1/0/2
<output truncated>

2    VLAN0002                         active
3    VLAN0003                         active

<output truncated>

1000 VLAN1000                         active
1002 fddi-default                     active
1003 token-ring-default               active
1004 fddinet-default                  active
1005 trnet-default                    active

VLAN Type  SAID       MTU   Parent RingNo BridgeNo Stp  BrdgMode Trans1 Trans2
---- ----- ---------- ----- ------ ------ -------- ---- -------- ------ ------
1    enet  100001     1500  -      -      -        -    -        1002   1003
2    enet  100002     1500  -      -      -        -    -        0      0
3    enet  100003     1500  -      -      -        -    -        0      0

<output truncated>

1005 trnet 101005     1500  -      -      -        ibm  -        0      0

Remote SPAN VLANs
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Primary Secondary Type              Ports
------ --------- ----------------- ------------------------------------------

Primary Secondary Type Ports
------- --------- ----------------- ------------------------------------------
20      25     isolated  Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/22, Gi1/0/1, Fa2/0/13, Fa2/0/22, 
                         Fa3/0/13, Fa3/0/14. Fa3/0/20, Gi3/0/1 
20      30     community Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa11/0/21, Gi1/0/1, Fa2/0/13, Fa2/0/20, 
                         Fa3/0/14, Fa3/0/20,Fa3/0/21, Gi3/0/1 
20      35     community Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/23, Fa1/0/33, Gi1/0/1, Fa2/0/13, 
                         Fa3/0/14, Fa3/0/20, Fa3/0/23, Fa3/0/33, Gi3/0/1

<output truncated>

Table 2-33 show vlan Command Output Fields 

Field
Description

VLAN

VLAN number.

Name

Name, if configured, of the VLAN.

Status

Status of the VLAN (active or suspend).

Ports

Ports that belong to the VLAN.

Type

Media type of the VLAN.

SAID

Security association ID value for the VLAN.

MTU

Maximum transmission unit size for the VLAN.

Parent

Parent VLAN, if one exists.

RingNo

Ring number for the VLAN, if applicable.

BrdgNo

Bridge number for the VLAN, if applicable.

Stp

Spanning Tree Protocol type used on the VLAN.

BrdgMode

Bridging mode for this VLAN—possible values are source-route bridging (SRB) and source-route transparent (SRT); the default is SRB.

Trans1

Translation bridge 1.

Trans2

Translation bridge 2.

Remote SPAN VLANs

Identifies any RSPAN VLANs that have been configured.

Primary/Secondary/
Type/Ports

Includes any private VLANs that have been configured, including the primary VLAN ID, the secondary VLAN ID, the type of secondary VLAN (community or isolated), and the ports that belong to it.


This is an example of output from the show vlan dot1q tag native command:

Switch> show vlan dot1q tag native
dot1q native vlan tagging is disabled

This is an example of output from the show vlan private-vlan command:

Switch> show vlan private-vlan 
Primary Secondary Type              Ports
------- --------- ----------------- ------------------------------------------
10      501       isolated          Gi3/0/3
10      502       community         Fa2/0/11
10      503       non-operational3      -         
20       25       isolated          Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/22, Gi1/0/1, Fa2/0/13, 
                                    Fa2/0/22, Fa3/0/13, Fa3/0/14, Fa3/0/20, Gi3/0/1
20       30       community         Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/21, Gi1/0/1, Fa2/0/13, 
                                    Fa2/0/20, Fa3/0/14, Fa3/0/20, Fa3/0/21, Gi3/0/1
20       35       community         Fa1/0/13, Fa1/0/20, Fa1/0/23, Fa1/0/33. Gi1/0/1, 
                                    Fa2/0/13, Fa3/0/14, Fa3/0/20. Fa3/0/23, Fa3/0/33, 
                                    Gi3/0/1
20       55       non-operational
2000   2500       isolated          Fa1/0/5, Fa1/0/10, Fa2/0/5, Fa2/0/10, Fa2/0/15

This is an example of output from the show vlan private-vlan type command:

Switch> show vlan private-vlan type
Vlan Type
---- -----------------
10   primary
501  isolated
502  community
503  normal

This is an example of output from the show vlan summary command:

Switch> show vlan summary
Number of existing VLANs           : 45
 Number of existing VTP VLANs      : 45
 Number of existing extended VLANs : 0
 
   

This is an example of output from the show vlan id command.

Switch# show vlan id 2
VLAN Name                             Status    Ports
---- -------------------------------- --------- -------------------------------
2    VLAN0200                         active    Fa1/0/7, Fa1/0/8
 
   
VLAN Type  SAID       MTU   Parent RingNo BridgeNo Stp  BrdgMode Trans1 Trans2
---- ----- ---------- ----- ------ ------ -------- ---- -------- ------ ------
2    enet  100002     1500  -      -      -        -    -        0      0

Remote SPAN VLAN
----------------
Disabled

This is an example of output from the show vlan internal usage command. It shows that VLANs 1025 and 1026 are being used as internal VLANs for Fast Ethernet routed ports 23 and 24 on stack member 1. If you want to use one of these VLAN IDs, you must first shut down the routed port, which releases the internal VLAN, and then create the extended-range VLAN. When you start up the routed port, another internal VLAN number is assigned to it.

Switch> show vlan internal usage
VLAN Usage
---- -------------
1025 FastEthernet1/0/23
1026 FastEthernet1/0/24

Related Commands

Command
Description

private-vlan

Configures a VLAN as a community, isolated, or primary VLAN or associates a primary VLAN with secondary VLANs.

switchport mode

Configures the VLAN membership mode of a port.

vlan (global configuration)

Enables VLAN configuration mode where you can configure VLANs 1 to 4094.

vlan (VLAN configuration)

Configures VLAN characteristics in the VLAN database. Only available for normal-range VLANs (VLAN IDs 1 to 1005). Do not enter leading zeros.


show vlan access-map

Use the show vlan access-map privileged EXEC command to display information about a particular VLAN access map or for all VLAN access maps.

show vlan access-map [mapname] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

mapname

(Optional) Name of a specific VLAN access map.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show vlan access-map command:

Switch# show vlan access-map
Vlan access-map "SecWiz"  10
  Match clauses:
    ip  address: SecWiz_Fa10_3_in_ip

  Action:
    forward

Related Commands

Command
Description

show vlan filter

Displays information about all VLAN filters or about a particular VLAN or VLAN access map.

vlan access-map

Creates a VLAN map entry for VLAN packet filtering.

vlan filter

Applies a VLAN map to one or more VLANs.


show vlan filter

Use the show vlan filter privileged EXEC command to display information about all VLAN filters or about a particular VLAN or VLAN access map.

show vlan filter [access-map name | vlan vlan-id] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

access-map name

(Optional) Display filtering information for the specified VLAN access map.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) Display filtering information for the specified VLAN. The range is 1 to 4094.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show vlan filter command:

Switch# show vlan filter 
VLAN Map map_1 is filtering VLANs:
  20-22

Related Commands

Command
Description

show vlan access-map

Displays information about a particular VLAN access map or for all VLAN access maps.

vlan access-map

Creates a VLAN map entry for VLAN packet filtering.

vlan filter

Applies a VLAN map to one or more VLANs.


show vmps

Use the show vmps user EXEC command without keywords to display the VLAN Query Protocol (VQP) version, reconfirmation interval, retry count, VLAN Membership Policy Server (VMPS) IP addresses, and the current and primary servers, or use the statistics keyword to display client-side statistics.

show vmps [statistics] [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

statistics

(Optional) Display VQP client-side statistics and counters.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show vmps command:

Switch> show vmps
VQP Client Status:
--------------------
VMPS VQP Version:   1
Reconfirm Interval: 60 min
Server Retry Count: 3
VMPS domain server:

Reconfirmation status
---------------------
VMPS Action:         other

This is an example of output from the show vmps statistics command. Table 2-34 describes each field in the display.

Switch> show vmps statistics
VMPS Client Statistics
----------------------
VQP  Queries:               0
VQP  Responses:             0
VMPS Changes:               0
VQP  Shutdowns:             0
VQP  Denied:                0
VQP  Wrong Domain:          0
VQP  Wrong Version:         0
VQP  Insufficient Resource: 0 

Table 2-34 show vmps statistics Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

VQP Queries

Number of queries sent by the client to the VMPS.

VQP Responses

Number of responses sent to the client from the VMPS.

VMPS Changes

Number of times that the VMPS changed from one server to another.

VQP Shutdowns

Number of times the VMPS sent a response to shut down the port. The client disables the port and removes all dynamic addresses on this port from the address table. You must administratively re-enable the port to restore connectivity.

VQP Denied

Number of times the VMPS denied the client request for security reasons. When the VMPS response denies an address, no frame is forwarded to or from the workstation with that address (broadcast or multicast frames are delivered to the workstation if the port has been assigned to a VLAN). The client keeps the denied address in the address table as a blocked address to prevent more queries from being sent to the VMPS for each new packet received from this workstation. The client ages the address if no new packets are received from this workstation on this port within the aging time period.

VQP Wrong Domain

Number of times the management domain in the request does not match the one for the VMPS. Any previous VLAN assignments of the port are not changed. This response means that the server and the client have not been configured with the same VTP management domain.

VQP Wrong Version

Number of times the version field in the query packet contains a value that is higher than the version supported by the VMPS. The VLAN assignment of the port is not changed. The switches send only VMPS Version 1 requests.

VQP Insufficient Resource

Number of times the VMPS is unable to answer the request because of a resource availability problem. If the retry limit has not yet been reached, the client repeats the request with the same server or with the next alternate server, depending on whether the per-server retry count has been reached.


Related Commands

Command
Description

clear vmps statistics

Clears the statistics maintained by the VQP client.

vmps reconfirm (privileged EXEC)

Sends VQP queries to reconfirm all dynamic VLAN assignments with the VMPS.

vmps retry

Configures the per-server retry count for the VQP client.

vmps server

Configures the primary VMPS and up to three secondary servers.


show vtp

Use the show vtp user EXEC command to display general information about the VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP) management domain, status, and counters.

show vtp {counters | password | status} [ | {begin | exclude | include} expression]

Syntax Description

counters

Display the VTP statistics for the switch.

password

Display the configured VTP password.

status

Display general information about the VTP management domain status.

| begin

(Optional) Display begins with the line that matches the expression.

| exclude

(Optional) Display excludes lines that match the expression.

| include

(Optional) Display includes lines that match the specified expression.

expression

Expression in the output to use as a reference point.


Command Modes

User EXEC

Command History

Release
Modification

12.1(11)AX

This command was introduced.

12.1(14)EA1

The password keyword was added.


Usage Guidelines

Expressions are case sensitive. For example, if you enter | exclude output, the lines that contain output do not appear, but the lines that contain Output appear.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show vtp counters command. Table 2-35 describes each field in the display.

Switch> show vtp counters

VTP statistics:
Summary advertisements received    : 0
Subset advertisements received     : 0
Request advertisements received    : 0
Summary advertisements transmitted : 0
Subset advertisements transmitted  : 0
Request advertisements transmitted : 0
Number of config revision errors   : 0
Number of config digest errors     : 0
Number of V1 summary errors        : 0

VTP pruning statistics:

Trunk            Join Transmitted Join Received    Summary advts received from
                                                   non-pruning-capable device
---------------- ---------------- ---------------- ---------------------------
Fa1/0/47           0                0                0
Fa1/0/48           0                0                0
Gi2/0/1            0                0                0
Gi3/0/2            0                0                0

Table 2-35 show vtp counters Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

Summary advertisements received

Number of summary advertisements received by this switch on its trunk ports. Summary advertisements contain the management domain name, the configuration revision number, the update timestamp and identity, the authentication checksum, and the number of subset advertisements to follow.

Subset advertisements received

Number of subset advertisements received by this switch on its trunk ports. Subset advertisements contain all the information for one or more VLANs.

Request advertisements received

Number of advertisement requests received by this switch on its trunk ports. Advertisement requests normally request information on all VLANs. They can also request information on a subset of VLANs.

Summary advertisements transmitted

Number of summary advertisements sent by this switch on its trunk ports. Summary advertisements contain the management domain name, the configuration revision number, the update timestamp and identity, the authentication checksum, and the number of subset advertisements to follow.

Subset advertisements transmitted

Number of subset advertisements sent by this switch on its trunk ports. Subset advertisements contain all the information for one or more VLANs.

Request advertisements transmitted

Number of advertisement requests sent by this switch on its trunk ports. Advertisement requests normally request information on all VLANs. They can also request information on a subset of VLANs.

Number of configuration revision errors

Number of revision errors.

Whenever you define a new VLAN, delete an existing one, suspend or resume an existing VLAN, or modify the parameters on an existing VLAN, the configuration revision number of the switch increments.

Revision errors increment whenever the switch receives an advertisement whose revision number matches the revision number of the switch, but the MD5 digest values do not match. This error means that the VTP password in the two switches is different or that the switches have different configurations.

These errors means that the switch is filtering incoming advertisements, which causes the VTP database to become unsynchronized across the network.

Number of configuration digest errors

Number of MD5 digest errors.

Digest errors increment whenever the MD5 digest in the summary packet and the MD5 digest of the received advertisement calculated by the switch do not match. This error usually means that the VTP password in the two switches is different. To solve this problem, make sure the VTP password on all switches is the same.

These errors mean that the switch is filtering incoming advertisements, which causes the VTP database to become unsynchronized across the network.

Number of V1 summary errors

Number of Version 1 errors.

Version 1 summary errors increment whenever a switch in VTP V2 mode receives a VTP Version 1 frame. These errors mean that at least one neighboring switch is either running VTP Version 1 or VTP Version 2 with V2-mode disabled. To solve this problem, change the configuration of the switches in VTP V2-mode to disabled.

Join Transmitted

Number of VTP pruning messages sent on the trunk.

Join Received

Number of VTP pruning messages received on the trunk.

Summary Advts Received from non-pruning-capable device

Number of VTP summary messages received on the trunk from devices that do not support pruning.


This is an example of output from the show vtp status command. Table 2-36 describes each field in the display.

Switch> show vtp status
VTP Version                     : 2
Configuration Revision          : 0
Maximum VLANs supported locally : 1005
Number of existing VLANs        : 45
VTP Operating Mode              : Transparent
VTP Domain Name                 : shared_testbed1
VTP Pruning Mode                : Disabled
VTP V2 Mode                     : Disabled
VTP Traps Generation            : Enabled
MD5 digest                      : 0x3A 0x29 0x86 0x39 0xB4 0x5D 0x58 0xD7

Table 2-36 show vtp status Field Descriptions 

Field
Description

VTP Version

Displays the VTP version operating on the switch. By default, the switch implements Version 1 but can be set to Version 2.

Configuration Revision

Current configuration revision number on this switch.

Maximum VLANs Supported Locally

Maximum number of VLANs supported locally.

Number of Existing VLANs

Number of existing VLANs.

VTP Operating Mode

Displays the VTP operating mode, which can be server, client, or transparent.

Server: a switch in VTP server mode is enabled for VTP and sends advertisements. You can configure VLANs on it. The switch guarantees that it can recover all the VLAN information in the current VTP database from NVRAM after reboot. By default, every switch is a VTP server.

Note The switch automatically changes from VTP server mode to VTP client mode if it detects a failure while writing the configuration to NVRAM and cannot return to server mode until the NVRAM is functioning.

Client: a switch in VTP client mode is enabled for VTP, can send advertisements, but does not have enough nonvolatile storage to store VLAN configurations. You cannot configure VLANs on it. When a VTP client starts up, it does not send VTP advertisements until it receives advertisements to initialize its VLAN database.

Transparent: a switch in VTP transparent mode is disabled for VTP, does not send or learn from advertisements sent by other devices, and cannot affect VLAN configurations on other devices in the network. The switch receives VTP advertisements and forwards them on all trunk ports except the one on which the advertisement was received.

VTP Domain Name

Name that identifies the administrative domain for the switch.

VTP Pruning Mode

Displays whether pruning is enabled or disabled. Enabling pruning on a VTP server enables pruning for the entire management domain. Pruning restricts flooded traffic to those trunk links that the traffic must use to access the appropriate network devices.

VTP V2 Mode

Displays if VTP Version 2 mode is enabled. All VTP Version 2 switches operate in Version 1 mode by default. Each VTP switch automatically detects the capabilities of all the other VTP devices. A network of VTP devices should be configured to Version 2 only if all VTP switches in the network can operate in Version 2 mode.

VTP Traps Generation

Displays whether VTP traps are sent to a network management station.

MD5 Digest

A 16-byte checksum of the VTP configuration.

Configuration Last Modified

Displays the date and time of the last configuration modification. Displays the IP address of the switch that caused the configuration change to the database.


Related Commands

Command
Description

clear vtp counters

Clears the VTP and pruning counters.

vtp (global configuration)

Configures the VTP filename, interface name, domain name, and mode.

vtp (VLAN configuration)

Configures the VTP domain name, password, pruning, and mode.