MPLS OAM Commands

This module describes Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label switched path (LSP) verification commands. These commands provide a means to detect and diagnose data plane failures and are the first set of commands in the MPLS Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) solution.

For detailed information about MPLS concepts, configuration tasks, and examples, see Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router MPLS Configuration Guide .

clear mpls oam counters

To clear MPLS OAM counters, use the clear mpls oam counters command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

clear mpls oam counters {global | interface [type interface-path-id] | packet}

Syntax Description

global

Clears global counters.

interface

Clears counters on a specified interface.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

packet

Clears global packet counters.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Usage Guidelines

No specific guidelines impact the use of this command.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

execute

mpls-ldp

execute

mpls-static

execute

Examples

The following example shows how to clear all global MPLS OAM counters:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# clear mpls oam counters global

echo disable-vendor-extension

To disable sending the vendor extension type length and value (TLV) in the echo request, use the echo disable-vendor extension command in MPLS OAM configuration mode. To return to the default behavior, use the no form of this command.

echo disable-vendor-extension

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

The default value is 4.

Command Modes

MPLS OAM configuration mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

mpls-static

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to disable inclusion of the vendor extensions TLV in the echo requests:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# configure
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config)# mpls oam
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config-oam)# echo disable-vendor-extension

echo revision

To set the echo packet revision, use the echo revision command in MPLS OAM configuration mode. To return to the default behavior, use the no form of this command.

echo revision {1 | 2 | 3 | 4 }

Syntax Description

1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Draft revision number:

  • 1: draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2: draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3: draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4: draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

Command Default

The default echo revision is 4 (in draft 9).

Command Modes

MPLS OAM configuration mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

mpls-static

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the echo packet default revision:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# configure
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config)# mpls oam
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config-oam)# echo revision 1
  

mpls oam

To enable MPLS OAM LSP verification, use the mpls oam command in Global Configuration modeXR Config mode. To return to the default behavior, use the no form of this command.

mpls oam

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

By default, MPLS OAM functionality is disabled.

Command Modes

Global Configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Usage Guidelines

The mpls oam command and OAM functionality is described in the IETF LSP ping draft.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

mpls-static

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to enable MPLS OAM:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# configure
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config)# mpls oam
RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname(config-oam)#
  

ping mpls ipv4

To check MPLS host reachability and network connectivity by specifying the destination type as a Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) IPv4 address, use the ping mpls ipv4 command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping mpls ipv4 address/mask [ destination start-address end-address increment ] [dsmap] [ exp exp-bits ] [force-explicit-null] [ interval min-send-delay ] [ output { interface type interface-path-id [ nexthop nexthop-iaddress ] | | [ nexthop nexthop-address ] } ] [ pad pattern ] [ repeat count ] [ reply { dscp dscp-value | reply mode { ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert } | reply pad-tlv } ] [ revision version ] [ size packet-size ] [ source source-address ] [ sweep min value max value increment ] [ timeout timeout ] [ ttl value ] [verbose] [ fec-type { bgp | generic | ldp } ]

Syntax Description

address/mask

Address prefix of the target and number of bits in the target address network mask.

destination start address end address address increment

(Optional) Specifies a network 127/8 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start address

Start of the network address.

end address

Start of the ending network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address, which is expressed as a decimal number value or IP address.

dsmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream mapping (DSMAP) type length and value should be included in the LSP echo request.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

output interface

(Optional) Specifies the output interface where echo request packets are sent.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

nexthop

(Optional) Specifies the nextop as an IP address.

nexthop-iaddress

(Optional) IP address for the next hop.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode [ ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply ]

Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

reply pad-tlv

Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

size packet size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min value max value interval

(Optional) Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

fec-type

(Optional) Specifies FEC type to be used.

bgp

Use FEC type as BGP

generic

Use FEC type as generic

ldp

Use FEC type as LDP

Command Default

exp exp bits : 0

interval min-send-delay: 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Release 4.3.1

The fec-type keyword was added.

The nexthop keyword was added for interface sub-option.

Usage Guidelines

The output interface keyword specifies the output interface on which the MPLS echo request packets are sent. If the specified output interface is not part of the LSP, the packets are not transmitted.

In cases where the sweep keyword is used, values larger than the outgoing interface’s MTU are not transmitted.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an address, and then awaits a reply. Ping output can help you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path, and whether the host can be reached or is functioning.


Note


The ping mpls command is not supported on optical LSPs. If an optical LSP is encountered along the LSP's path, it is treated as a physical interface.


For detailed configuration information about the MPLS ping command, see Cisco ASR 9000 Series Router System Monitoring Configuration Guide .

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows the destination type as a label distribution protocol (LDP) prefix and specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls ipv4 140.140.140/32 verbose sweep 100 200 15 repeat 1
  
  Sending 1, [100..200]-byte MPLS Echos to 140.140.140.140/32,
        timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:
   
  Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
    'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
    'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
    'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
    'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
    'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
    'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0
   
  Type escape sequence to abort.
  !    size 100, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 115, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 130, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 145, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 160, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 175, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
  !    size 190, reply addr 196.100.1.26, return code 3
   
  Success rate is 100 percent (7/7), round-trip min/avg/max = 5/6/8 ms
  

The following example shows the destination type as a label distribution protocol (LDP) prefix and specifies FEC type as generic and verbose option:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls ipv4 11.11.11.11/32 fec-type generic output interface gigabitEthernet 0/0/0/3 
nexthop 172.40.103.2 verbose
  
Sending 5, 100-byte MPLS Echos to 11.11.11.11/32,
      timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

!      size 100, reply addr 11.101.11.11, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply addr 11.101.11.11, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply addr 11.101.11.11, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply addr 11.101.11.11, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply addr 11.101.11.11, return code 3 

Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 3/4/6 ms
  

ping mpls traffic-eng

To specify the destination type as an MPLS-TE tunnel and tunnel interface, use the ping mpls traffic-eng command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel tunnel-ID [dsmap] [exp exp-bits ] [force-explicit-null] [interval min-send-delay] [pad pattern] [repeat count] [reply {dscp dscp-value | reply mode {ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert} | reply pad-tlv}] [revision version] [size packet-size] [source source-address] [sweep min-value max-value increment] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel tunnel-ID

Specifies the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) tunnel and the tunnel interface number. The range for the tunnel interface number is from 0 to 65535.

dsmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream mapping (DSMAP) type length and value should be included in the LSP echo request.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode [ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

reply pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min-value max-value interval

(Optional) Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min-value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max-value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced. This command was replaced by the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te (P2P) command.

Usage Guidelines

The output interface keyword specifies the output interface on which the MPLS echo request packets are sent. If the specified output interface is not part of the LSP, the packets are not transmitted.

In cases where the sweep keyword is used, values larger than the outgoing interface’s MTU are not transmitted.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an address, and then awaits a reply. Ping output can help you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path, and whether the host can be reached or is functioning.


Note


The ping mpls traffic-eng command is not supported on optical LSPs. If an optical LSP is encountered along the LSP's path, it is treated as a physical interface.


Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to check connectivity by using the ping mpls traffic-eng command when a TE tunnel 10 is present. Return code, reply address, and packet size are displayed due to the verbose keyword.


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel 10 repeat 1 verbose
  
  Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-te10,
        timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:
  
  Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
    'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
    'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
    'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
    'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
    'R' - transit router, 'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0
  
  Type escape sequence to abort.
  !    size 100, reply addr 196.100.1.18, return code 3
  
  Success rate is 100 percent (1/1), round-trip min/avg/max = 15/15/15 ms

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp

To specify the destination type as an MPLS-TP tunnel and tunnel interface, use the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp tunnel-id [ddmap] [destination start-address end-address increment] [dsmap] [ encap {cv-ip | cv-non-ip | ip}] [exp exp-bits] [flags {fec | reverse-verification }] [interval min-send-delay] [ lsp {active | protect | working}] [pad pattern] [repeat count] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {control-channel | no-reply } | pad-tlv}] [size packet-size] [source source-address] [sweep min value max value increment] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel-tp tunnel-ID

Specifies the destination type as an MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) tunnel and the tunnel interface number. The range for the tunnel interface number is 0 to 65535.

ddmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream detailed mapping (DDMAP) TLV should be included in the LSP echo request.

destination start-address end-address increment

Specifies a network 127/8 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start address

Start of the network address.

end  address

Start of the ending network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address, which is expressed as a decimal number value or IP address.

dsmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream mapping (DSMAP) type length and value should be included in the LSP echo request.

encap { cv-ip | cv-non-ip | ip }

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS-TP encapsulation type to use.

cv-ip

Use IP encapsulation with GACH channel 0x0021.

cv-non-ip

Use non-IP encapsulation with GACH channel 0x0025.

ip

Use IP encapsulation.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags { fec | reverse-verification }

(Optional) Specifies the flag options to use.

fec

Request forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

reverse-verification

Request reverse path connectivity verification.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

lsp { active | protect | working }

(Optional) Specifies the LSP to use.

active

Active MPLS-TP tunnel.

protect

Protect MPLS-TP tunnel.

working

Working MPLS-TP tunnel.

Note

 

Use this option to identify error in the LSP path if the MPLS-TP tunnel is not up.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

mode [control-channel | no-reply ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
control-channel

Send reply through a control channel.

no-reply

Do not reply.

pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min-value max-value interval

(Optional) Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min-value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max-value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.3.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

In cases where the sweep keyword is used, values larger than the outgoing interface's MTU are not transmitted.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an address, and then waits for a reply. Ping output helps you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path. It also helps you determine whether the host is reachable or is functioning.

Task ID

Task ID Operation
mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following sample output is from the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command using the non-IP-ACH encapsulation:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp 1 encap cv-non-ip

Sending 5, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-tp1,
      timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

!!!!!
Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 3/11/45 ms
  

The following sample output is from the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command using the non-IP-ACH encapsulation and verbose option:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp 1 encap cv-non-ip

Sending 5, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-tp1,
      timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

!      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 3 
!      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 3 

Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 3/3/4 ms
  

The following sample output is from the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command using the non-IP-ACH encapsulation and DSMAP/DDMAP option:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp 1 encap cv-non-ip

Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-tp1,
      timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface,
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label,
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP,
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

L      size 100, reply node id 12.12.12.3, global id 0, return code 8 
 Echo Reply received from Node ID 12.12.12.3, Global ID 0
  DSMAP 0, Ingress Link ID 3, Egress Link ID 4
    Depth Limit 0, MRU 1500 [Labels: 1100 Exp: 0]


Success rate is 0 percent (0/1)
  

ping pseudowire (AToM)

To verify connectivity between provider edge (PE) LSRs in an Any Transport over MPLS (AToM) setup, use the ping pseudowire command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping [mpls] pseudowire { remote-PE -address pw-id | fec-129 { aii-type1 | aii-type2 } vpls-id { ipv4-address:nn | as-number:nn } target router-id } [ exp exp-bits ] [ interval min-send-delay ] [ pad pattern ] [ repeat count ] [ reply { dscp dscp-value | reply mode { ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert | control-channel } | reply pad-tlv } ] [ size packet-size ] [ source source-address ] [ sweep min-value max-value increment ] [ timeout timeout ] [ ttl value ] [verbose]

Syntax Description

mpls

(Optional) Verifies the Labeled Switch Path (LSP).

remote-PE address

IP address of the remote PE LSR.

pw-id

Pseudowire ID that identifies the pseudowire in which MPLS connectivity is being verified. The pseudowire is used to send the echo request packets. The range is from 1 to 4294967295.

fec-129

Specifies FEC 129 pseudowire.

aii-type1

Specifies the type 1 attachment individual identifier.

aii-type2

Specifies the type 2 attachment individual identifier.

vpls-id

Specifies that the VPLS identifier should be included.

ipv4-address:nn

Specifies the VPLS identifier as an IPv4 address followed by the index value. The index value range is 0 to 4294967295.

as-number:nn

Specifies the VPLS identifier as an autonomous system (AS) identifier followed by the index value. The index value range is 0 to 4294967295. The AS identifier value range is 1 to 65535.

target

Specifies that the target end address of the pseudowire should be included.

router-id

Specifies the IPv4 address that is the L2VPN router identifier of the target.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode {ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply | control-channel }

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

control-channel

Force the use of a VCCV control channel.

Reply using an application for a defined control channel. This applies only to pseudowires in which VCCV is used in the reply path. This is the default choice for pseudowire ping.

reply pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a reply pad TLV should be included.

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min-value max-value interval

Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min-value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max-value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2 seconds.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

The following keywords and arguments were added:

  • force-control-channel , control-word , ra-label and ttl-expiry keywords were added.

Release 5.3.2

The pseudowire FEC129 AII-type 1 is supported.

Release 6.3.2

Supports segment routing and SR-TE policy preferred path as transport to reach remote PE.

Note

 
Label distribution protocol (LDP) is required to signal PW up, but is not required as transport.

Usage Guidelines

In cases in which the sweep keyword is used, values larger than the outgoing interface’s MTU are not transmitted.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an address, and then awaits a reply. Ping output can help you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path, and whether the host can be reached or is functioning.


Note


The ping mpls command is not supported on optical LSPs. If an optical LSP is encountered along the LSP's path, it is treated as a physical interface.


AToM VCCV allows the sending of control packets inband of an AToM pseudowire (PW) from the originating provider edge (PE) router. The transmission is intercepted at the destination PE router, instead of being forwarded to the customer edge (CE) router. This lets you use MPLS LSP ping to test the pseudowire section of AToM virtual circuits (VCs).

The no interactive version of the ping pseudowire (AToM) command is supported.

The control word setting is either enabled along the entire path between the Terminating-Provider Edge (T-PE) or it is completely disabled. If the control word configuration is enabled on one segment and disabled on another segment, the multisegment pseudowire does not come up.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how the ping mpls pseudowire command is used to verify PE to PE connectivity in which the remote PE address is 150.150.150.150. Only one echo request packet is sent and the remote PE is to answer using IPv4 instead of the control channel.


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostnameping mpls pseudowire 150.150.150.150 21 repeat 1 reply mode ipv4
  
  Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to 150.150.150.150 VC: 21,
        timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec:
  
  Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
    'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
    'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
    'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
    'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
    'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
    'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0
  
  Type escape sequence to abort.
  !
  Success rate is 100 percent (1/1), round-trip min/avg/max = 23/23/23 ms

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te (P2P)

To specify the destination type as an MPLS-TE tunnel and tunnel interface, use the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te tunnel-ID {destination start-address end-address increment} [dsmap] [exp exp-bits ] [force-explicit-null] [interval min-send-delay] [ lsp {active | path-protect | reopt}] [pad pattern] [repeat count] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert} | pad-tlv}] [revision version] [size packet-size] [source source-address] [sweep min-value max-value increment] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel-te tunnel-ID

Specifies the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) tunnel and the tunnel interface number. The range for the tunnel interface number is 0 to 65535.

destination start-address end-address increment

Specifies a network 127/8 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start address

Start of the network address.

end  address

Start of the ending network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address, which is expressed as a decimal number value or IP address.

dsmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream mapping (DSMAP) type length and value should be included in the LSP echo request.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

{ active | | path-protect }

(Optional) Specifies the LSP to use.

active
path-protect

Path-Protect LSP.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

mode [ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

reply pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min-value max-value interval

(Optional) Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min-value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max-value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced. This command replaces the ping mpls traffic-eng command.

Usage Guidelines

The output interface keyword specifies the output interface on which the MPLS echo request packets are sent. If the specified output interface is not part of the LSP, the packets are not transmitted.

In cases where the sweep keyword is used, values larger than the outgoing interface's MTU are not transmitted.

The ping command sends an echo request packet to an address, and then waits for a reply. Ping output helps you evaluate path-to-host reliability, delays over the path. It also helps you determine whether the host is reachable or is functioning.

Task ID

Task ID Operation
mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte (P2MP)

To specify the destination type as a Point-to-Multipoint (P2MP) for MPLS-TE tunnel and tunnel interface, use the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte tunnel-ID [ ddmap { destination start-address end-address increment } ] [ responder-id ipv4-address ] [ exp exp-bits ] [ interval min-send-delay ] [ jitter jitter-value ] [ lsp { active | reopt } ] [ pad pattern ] [ repeat count ] [ reply { dscp dscp-value | mode { ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert } | pad-tlv } ] [ size packet-size ] [ source source-address ] [ sweep min-value max-value increment ] [ timeout timeout ] [ ttl value ] [ verbose ]

Syntax Description

tunnel-mte tunnel-ID

Specifies the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) P2MP tunnel and the tunnel interface number. The range for the tunnel interface number is 0 to 65535.

ddmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream detailed mapping TLV should be included in the LSP echo request.

destination start-address end-address increment

Specifies a network 127/8 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start-address

Start of the network address.

end-address

End of the network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address, which is expressed as a decimal number value or IP address.

responder-id ipv4-address

(Optional) Specifies the responder IPv4 address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

jitter jitter-value

(Optional) Specifies a jitter value, in milliseconds. Range is 0 to 2147483647. Default is 200.

lsp { active | reopt }

(Optional) Specifies the Label Switch Path (LSP) to use.

active

Active LSP.

reopt

Reoptimize LSP.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

mode [ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

reply pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

sweep min-value max-value interval

(Optional) Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min-value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max-value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet(range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255). Default is 255.

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

lsp : active

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Usage Guidelines

To ping for LSP reoptimization, ensure that the reoptimization timer for the tunnel is running by using the show mpls traffic-eng tunnels reoptimized within-last command.

Task ID

Task ID Operation
basic-services

execute

mpls-te or mpls-ldp

read

Examples

The following example shows how to check connectivity by using the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command with the jitter keyword:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 jitter 300

Mon Apr 12 12:13:00.630 EST

Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-mte10,
      timeout is 2.3 seconds, send interval is 0 msec, jitter value is 300 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

Request #1
! reply addr 192.168.222.2
! reply addr 192.168.140.2
! reply addr 192.168.170.1

Success rate is 100 percent (3 received replies/3 expected replies),
     round-trip min/avg/max = 148/191/256 ms

The following example shows how to check connectivity by using the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command with the ddmap keyword:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 ddmap

Mon Apr 12 12:13:34.365 EST

Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-mte10,
      timeout is 2.2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec, jitter value is 200 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

Request #1
! reply addr 192.168.222.2
! reply addr 192.168.140.2
! reply addr 192.168.170.1

Success rate is 100 percent (3 received replies/3 expected replies),
     round-trip min/avg/max = 105/178/237 ms

The following example shows how to identify the LSP ID tunnel information by using the show mpls traffic-eng tunnels p2mp command, and then using the lsp id keyword with the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command.

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# show mpls traffic-eng tunnels p2mp 10

Mon Apr 12 12:13:55.075 EST
Signalling Summary:
              LSP Tunnels Process:  running
                     RSVP Process:  running
                       Forwarding:  enabled
          Periodic reoptimization:  every 3600 seconds, next in 654 seconds
           Periodic FRR Promotion:  every 300 seconds, next in 70 seconds
          Auto-bw enabled tunnels:  0 (disabled)

Name: tunnel-mte10
   Status:
     Admin: up  Oper: up (Up for 12w4d)

     Config Parameters:
      Bandwidth: 0 kbps (CT0) Priority: 7 7 Affinity: 0x0/0xffff
      Metric Type: TE (default)
      Fast Reroute: Not Enabled, Protection Desired: None
      Record Route: Not Enabled

      Destination summary: (3 up, 0 down, 0 disabled) Affinity: 0x0/0xffff
      Auto-bw: disabled
      Destination: 11.0.0.1
        State: Up for 12w4d
        Path options:
          path-option 1 dynamic     [active]
      Destination: 12.0.0.1
        State: Up for 12w4d
        Path options:
          path-option 1 dynamic     [active]
      Destination: 13.0.0.1
        State: Up for 12w4d
        Path options:
          path-option 1 dynamic     [active]

     History:
       Reopt. LSP:
         Last Failure:
           LSP not signalled, identical to the [CURRENT] LSP
           Date/Time: Thu Jan 14 02:49:22 EST 2010 [12w4d ago]

    Current LSP:
      lsp-id: 10002 p2mp-id: 10 tun-id: 10 src: 10.0.0.1 extid: 10.0.0.1
      LSP up for: 12w4d
      Reroute Pending: No
      Inuse Bandwidth: 0 kbps (CT0)
      Number of S2Ls: 3 connected, 0 signaling proceeding, 0 down

      S2L Sub LSP: Destination 11.0.0.1 Signaling Status: connected
        S2L up for: 12w4d
        Sub Group ID: 1 Sub Group Originator ID: 10.0.0.1
        Path option path-option 1 dynamic    (path weight 1)
        Path info (OSPF 1 area 0)
          192.168.222.2
          11.0.0.1

      S2L Sub LSP: Destination 12.0.0.1 Signaling Status: connected
        S2L up for: 12w4d
        Sub Group ID: 2 Sub Group Originator ID: 10.0.0.1
        Path option path-option 1 dynamic    (path weight 2)
        Path info (OSPF 1 area 0)
          192.168.222.2
          192.168.140.3
          192.168.140.2
          12.0.0.1

      S2L Sub LSP: Destination 13.0.0.1 Signaling Status: connected
        S2L up for: 12w4d
        Sub Group ID: 3 Sub Group Originator ID: 10.0.0.1
        Path option path-option 1 dynamic    (path weight 2)
        Path info (OSPF 1 area 0)
          192.168.222.2
          192.168.170.3
          192.168.170.1
          13.0.0.1

    Reoptimized LSP (Install Timer Remaining 0 Seconds):
      None
    Cleaned LSP (Cleanup Timer Remaining 0 Seconds):
      None
Displayed 1 (of 16) heads, 0 (of 0) midpoints, 0 (of 0) tails
Displayed 1 up, 0 down, 0 recovering, 0 recovered heads

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 lsp id 10002

Mon Apr 12 12:14:04.532 EST

Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-mte10,
      timeout is 2.2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec, jitter value is 200 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

Request #1
! reply addr 192.168.222.2
! reply addr 192.168.170.1
! reply addr 192.168.140.2

Success rate is 100 percent (3 received replies/3 expected replies),
     round-trip min/avg/max = 128/153/167 ms

The following example shows how to use the ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command to check connectivity with a router's host address 13.0.0.1:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# ping mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 egress 13.0.0.1


Mon Apr 12 12:15:34.205 EST

Sending 1, 100-byte MPLS Echos to tunnel-mte10,
      timeout is 2.2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec, jitter value is 200 msec:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

Request #1
! reply addr 192.168.170.1

Success rate is 100 percent (1 received reply/1 expected reply),
     round-trip min/avg/max = 179/179/179 ms

ping pseudowire multisegment

To verify the ping over the multisegment pseudowire, use the ping pseudowire multisegment command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

ping [mpls] pseudowire multisegment end-address pw-id [destinationfec sender-address remote-address pw-id-address] [exp exp-bits] [interval min-send-delay] [pad pattern] [repeat count] [segment-count segment-number] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert | control-channel} | pad-tlv}] [size packet-size] [source source-address] [sweep min value max value increment] [timeout timeout] [verbose]

Syntax Description

mpls

(Optional) Verifies the Label Switched Path (LSP).

end-address

Target end address.

pw-id

Virtual circuit of the pseudowire ID that identifies the pseudowire in which MPLS connectivity is being verified. The pseudowire sends the echo request packets. Range is from 1 to 4294967295.

destinationfec sender-address remote-address pw-id-address

(Optional) Specifies the destination for the Forwarding Equivalence Class (FEC) .
sender-address

Sender-PE (S-PE) address for the destination FEC. The S-PE address is placed in the S-PE address field of the FEC 128 Pseudowire (RFC 4379).

remote-address

Remote address (S-PE address for the partial ping) for the destination FEC. The address is placed in the remote PE address of the FEC 128 Pseudowire (RFC 4379).

pw-id-address

Pseudowire ID of the pseudowire segment to the remote T-PE address (S-PE address for the partial ping).

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval between requests (in milliseconds). Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

pad pattern

(Optional) Specifies the pad pattern for an echo request.

repeat count

(Optional) Specifies the number of times to resend a packet. Range is 1 to 2147483647. Default is 5.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode {ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply | control-channel }

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

control-channel

Force the use of a VCCV control channel.

Reply using an application for a defined control channel. This applies only to pseudowires in which VCCV is used in the reply path. This is the default choice for pseudowire ping.

segment-count

(Optional) Specifies the segment count for the FEC destination of the multisegment pseudowire . The segment count is used for the pseudowire label for the TTL value.

segment-number

(Optional) Value of the segment count. Range is 1 to 255.

pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

size packet-size

(Optional) Specifies the packet size or number of bytes in each MPLS echo request packet. Range is 100 to 17986. Default is 100.

sweep min value max value interval

Specifies a range of sizes for the echo packets sent.
min value

Minimum or start size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

max value

Maximum or end size for an echo packet (range is 100 to 17986)

interval

Number used to increment an echo packet size(range is 1 to 8993)

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2 seconds.

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

interval min-send-delay : 0

repeat count : 5

reply-mode : ipv4

size packet-size : 100

timeout timeout : 2 seconds

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification
Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Usage Guidelines

The partial ping works only if the destinationfec keyword is used.

The control word setting is either enabled along the entire path between the Terminating-Provider Edge (T-PE) or it is completely disabled. If the control word configuration is enabled on one segment and disabled on another segment, the multisegment pseudowire does not come up.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows the local pseudowire segment from T-PE1 is set to S-PE1 80.80.80.80 and the pseudowire ID is set to 100. The last pseudowire segment of the multisegment pseudowire is from S-PE1 80.80.80.80 to T-PE2 90.90.90.90 and the pseudowire ID is set to 300.


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname#  ping pseudowire multisegment 80.80.80.80 100  destinationfec 80.80.80.80 90.90.90.90 300 segment-count 2

Sending 5, 100-byte MPLS Echos to 80.80.80.80 VC: 100, 90.90.90.90 VC: 300
      timeout is 2 seconds, send interval is 0 msec, PW Label TTL is 2:

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.
!!!!!
Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 6/10/18 ms

show mpls oam

To display MPLS OAM information, use the show mpls oam command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

show mpls oam {client | counters {global | packet} | interface type interface-path-id}

Syntax Description

client

Displays clients registered with LSPV server.

counters global

Displays LSP verification global counters.

counters packet

Displays LSP verification packet counters.

counters interface

Displays LSP verification information for a specific interface.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

mpls-static

read

Examples

The following example shows how to display MPLS OAM client information:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# show mpls oam client
  
  Client Process: l2vpn_mgr Node: 0/0/SP Pid: 418014
  Client Process: te_control Node: 0/0/SP Pid: 639227
  

This table describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 1. show mpls oam client Command Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Client Process

Process of client.

show mpls oam database

To display MPLS OAM database information, use the show mpls oam database command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

show mpls oam database {replies | requests | tt-requests} [detail] [handle handle-value ]

Syntax Description

replies

Displays replies database.

requests

Displays request database

tt-requests

Displays tree trace request database

detail

(Optional) Displays displayed information.

handle

(Optional) Displays handle information.

handle-value

Generic handle value. Range is from 0 to 4294967295.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

The handle-value argument was added.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

mpls-static

read

Examples

The following example shows how to display detailed MPLS OAM database information:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# show mpls oam database request detail

traceroute mpls ipv4

To learn the routes that packets follow when traveling to their Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) IPv4 destination, use the traceroute mpls command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls ipv4 address/mask [ destination start-address end-address address-increment ] [ exp exp-bits ] [flags fec] [force-explicit-null] [ output { interface type interface-path-id [ nexthop nexthop-address ] | | [ nexthop nexthop-address ] } ] [ reply { dscp dscp-value | reply mode { ipv4 | router-alert } } ] [ revision version ] [ source source-address ] [ timeout timeout ] [ ttl value ] [verbose] [ fec-type { bgp | generic | ldp } ]

Syntax Description

address/mask

Specifies the destination type as a label distribution protocol (LDP) prefix. Address prefix of the target and number of bits in the target address network mask.

destination start-address end-address address-increment

Specifies a network 127 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start address

Start of the network address.

end address

End of the network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

output interface

(Optional) Specifies the output interface in which echo request packets are sent.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

nexthop

(Optional) Specifies the IP address for the next hop.

nexthop-address

(Optional) IP address for the next hop.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode { ipv4 | router-alert }

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
ipv4

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet with router alert

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeoutt

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is from 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the maximum number of hops (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

fec-type

(Optional) Specifies FEC type to be used.

bgp

Use FEC type as BGP

generic

Use FEC type as generic

ldp

Use FEC type as LDP

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

reply mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Release 4.3.1

The fec-type keyword was added.

The nexthop keyword was added for interface sub-option.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The traceroute mpls command is not supported on optical LSPs. If an optical LSP is encountered along the LSPs path, it is treated as a physical interface.


For detailed configuration information about MPLS LSP trace operations, see Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router System Monitoring Configuration Guide.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to trace a destination:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls ipv4 140.140.140.140/32 
destination 127.0.0.10 127.0.0.15.1


Tracing MPLS Label Switched Path to 140.140.140.140/32, timeout is 2
seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

Destination address 127.0.0.10

  0 196.100.1.41 MRU 4470 [Labels: 19 Exp: 0]
L 1 196.100.1.42 MRU 4470 [Labels: 86 Exp: 0] 360 ms
  2 196.100.1.50 MRU 4470 [Labels: implicit-null Exp: 0] 8 ms
! 3 196.100.1.18 9 ms

The following example shows how to trace a destination with FEC type specified as generic and verbose option:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls ipv4 11.11.11.11/32 fec-type generic output interface gigabitEthernet 0/0/0/3 
nexthop 172.40.103.2 verbose 


Tracing MPLS Label Switched Path to 11.11.11.11/32, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

  0 172.40.103.1 172.40.103.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16038 Exp: 0]
L 1 172.40.103.2 173.101.103.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16037 Exp: 0] 6 ms, ret code 8
L 2 173.101.103.1 11.101.11.11 MRU 1500 [Labels: implicit-null Exp: 0] 4 ms, ret code 8
! 3 11.101.11.11 6 ms, ret code 3

traceroute mpls multipath

To discover all possible paths of an LSP between the ingress and egress routers, use the traceroute mpls multipath command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls multipath ipv4 address/mask [destination start-address end-address address-increment] [exp exp-bits] [flags fec] [force-explicit-null] [hashkey ipv4 bitmap bit-size] [interval min-send-delay] [output interface type interface-path-id [nexthop nexthop-address]] [reply {dscp dscp-value | reply mode {ipv4 | router-alert}}] [retry-count count] [revision version] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose] [fec-type {bgp | generic | ldp}]

traceroute mpls multipath ipv4 address/mask [ destination start-address end-address address-increment ] [ exp exp-bits ] [flags fec] [force-explicit-null] [ hashkey ipv4 bitmap bit-size ] [ interval min-send-delay ] [ output { interface type interface-path-id [ nexthop nexthop-address ] | | [ nexthop nexthop-address ] } ] [ reply { dscp dscp-value | reply mode { ipv4 | router-alert } } ] [ retry-count count ] [ revision version ] [ source source-address ] [ timeout timeout ] [ ttl value ] [verbose] [ fec-type { bgp | generic | ldp } ]

Syntax Description

ipv4

Specifies the destination type as a Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) IPv4 address.

address/mask

Address prefix of the target and number of bits in the target address network mask.

destination start-address end-address address -increment

(Optional) Specifies a network 127 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start-address

Start of the network address.

end-address

End of the network address.

address-increment

Incremental value of the network address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

hashkey ipv4 bitmap bit-size

(Optional) Allows user control of the hash key/multipath settings. Range is 0 to 256. The default is 32.

interval min-send-delay

(Optional) Specifies a send interval, in milliseconds, between requests. Range is 0 to 3600000. Default is 0.

output interface

(Optional) Specifies the output interface where echo request packets are sent.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

nexthop

(Optional) Specifies the IP address for the next hop.

nexthop-address

(Optional) IP address for the next hop.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode [ ipv4 | router-alert ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
ipv4

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet with router alert

retry-count count

(Optional) Specifies the number of retry attempts during multipath LSP traceroute. A retry is attempted if an outstanding echo request

  • times out waiting for the corresponding echo reply.
  • fails to find a valid destination address set to exercise a specific outgoing path. Range is 0 to 10. Default is 3.

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is from 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the maximum number of hops (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

hashkey ipv4 bitmap bit-size : 4

interval min-send-delay : 0

reply mode : IPv4

retry-count : 3

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 3.4.0

No modification.

Release 3.5.0

No modification.

Release 3.6.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.0

No modification.

Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.8.0

No modification.

Release 4.3.1

The fec-type keyword was added.

The nexthop keyword was added for interface sub-option.

Usage Guidelines

The hashkey ipv4 bitmap keyword and bit-size value control how many addresses are encoded in the DSMAP multipath field. Larger values allow more coverage of equal cost multiple paths throughout the network, but with more processing at the head, mid, and tail routers.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the destination type as an LDP IPv4 prefix:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls multi ipv4 140.140.140.140/32 verbose 
force-explicit-null
  
  Starting LSP Path Discovery for 140.140.140.140/32
  
  Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout, 
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch, 
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index, 
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0
  
  Type escape sequence to abort.
  
  LL!
  Path 0 found, 
  output interface POS0/2/0/3 source 196.100.1.61 destination 127.0.0.1 
  0 196.100.1.61 196.100.1.62 MRU 4470 [Labels: 18/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] multipaths 0
  L 1 196.100.1.62 196.100.1.10 MRU 4470 [Labels: 17/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
  L 2 196.100.1.10 196.100.1.18 MRU 4470 [Labels: implicit-null/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
  ! 3 196.100.1.1018, ret code 3 multipaths 0
  LL!
  Path 1 found, 
  output interface GigabitEthernet0/3/0/0 source 196.100.1.5 destination 127.0.0.1 
  0 196.100.1.5 196.100.1.37 6 MRU 1500 [Labels: 18/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] multipaths 0
  L 1 196.100.1.6 196.100.1.10 MRU 4470 [Labels: 17/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
  L 2 10196.0100.21.5 1010 196.0100.21.10 18 MRU 4470 [Labels: implicit-null/explicit-null Exp: 0/0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
  ! 3 10196.0100.21.1018, ret code 3 multipaths 0
  
  Paths (found/broken/unexplored) (2/0/0) 
  Echo Request (sent/fail) (6/0) 
  Echo Reply (received/timeout) (6/0) 
  Total Time Elapsed 80 ms
  

The following example shows how to specify the FEC type as LDP with verbose option:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname#  traceroute mpls multipath ipv4 11.11.11.11/32 fec-type ldp output interface gigabitEthernet 0/0/0/3 
nexthop 172.40.103.2 verbose
  
Starting LSP Path Discovery for 11.11.11.11/32

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

LL!
Path 0 found, 
 output interface GigabitEthernet0/0/0/3 nexthop 172.40.103.2
 source 172.40.103.1 destination 127.0.0.0
  0 172.40.103.1 172.40.103.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16038 Exp: 0] multipaths 0
L 1 172.40.103.2 173.101.103.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16037 Exp: 0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
L 2 173.101.103.1 11.101.11.11 MRU 1500 [Labels: implicit-null Exp: 0] ret code 8 multipaths 1
! 3 11.101.11.11, ret code 3 multipaths 0

Paths (found/broken/unexplored) (1/0/0)
 Echo Request (sent/fail) (3/0)
 Echo Reply (received/timeout) (3/0)
 Total Time Elapsed 21 ms

  

traceroute mpls traffic-eng

To specify the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) tunnel, use the traceroute mpls traffic-eng command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel tunnel-ID [destination start-address end-address address-increment increment-mask] [exp exp-bits] [flags fec] [force-explicit-null] [reply {dscp dscp-value | reply mode {ipv4 | router-alert}}] [revision version] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel

Specifies the MPLS-TE tunnel type.

tunnel-ID

Tunnel interface.

destination start-address end-address address -increment increment-mask

(Optional) Specifies a network 127 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start-address

Start of the network address.

end-address

End of the network address.

address-increment

Incremental value of the network address.

increment-mask

Incremental mask of the network address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply mode [ ipv4 | router-alert ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
ipv4

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet with router alert

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is from 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the maximum number of hops (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

reply mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification
Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 4.0.0

This command was replaced by the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te (P2P) command.

Task ID

Task ID Operation

mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the destination as a MPLS-TE tunnel:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname#  traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel 13

Tracing MPLS TE Label Switched Path on tunnel-te13, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface,
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label,
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP,
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

 0 0.0.0.0 11.0.0.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16003 Exp: 0] 
 L 1 192.168.200.2 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: implicit-null Exp: 0] 110 ms 
 ! 2 192.168.170.1 0.0.0.0 MRU 0 [No Label] 169 ms

traceroute pseudowire multisegment

To verify the Labeled Switch Path (LSP) for the multisegment pseudowire, use the traceroute pseudowire multisegment command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute pseudowire multisegment address pw-id [exp exp-bits] [flags fec] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {ipv4 | no-reply | router-alert | control-channel} | pad-tlv}] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [verbose]

Syntax Description

address

Address of the next S-PE.

pw-id

Pseudowire ID of the pseudowire segment to the next S-PE.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

mode {ipv4 | router-alert | no-reply | control-channel }

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
no-reply

Do not reply

ipv4

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet (the default)

router-alert

Reply with an IPv4 UDP packet with the IP router alert set

control-channel

Force the use of a VCCV control channel.

Reply using an application for a defined control channel. This applies only to pseudowires in which VCCV is used in the reply path. This is the default choice for pseudowire ping.

pad-tlv

(Optional) Indicates that a pad TLV should be included.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2 seconds.

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

reply-mode : ipv4

timeout timeout : 2 seconds

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification
Release 3.7.2

This command was introduced.

Release 3.9.0

No modification.

Task ID

Task ID Operation

mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

Examples

The following example shows that the next pseudowire segment and traceroute go through each hop in which each hop is a S-PE or remote T-PE. The local segment from T-PE1 is set to S-PE1 80.80.80.80 and the pseudowire ID is set to 100. The last pseudowire segment of the multisegment pseudowire is from S-PE1 80.80.80.80 to T-PE2 90.90.90.90 and the pseudowire ID is set to 300.


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname#  traceroute pseudowire multisegment 80.80.80.80 100

Tracing MS-PW to 80.80.80.80 VC: 100, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

  0 1.2.1.2 MRU 1500 [Outgoing Labels: 20495 Exp: 0]
L 1 1.2.1.1 MRU 1500 [Outgoing Labels: 24587 Exp: 0] 13 ms
    local 70.70.70.70 remote 80.80.80.80 pw-id 100
! 2 1.4.1.1 9 ms
    local 80.80.80.80 remote 90.90.90.90 pw-id 300

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te (P2P)

To specify the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) tunnel for a point-to-point connection, use the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te (P2P) command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te tunnel-ID [destination start-address end-address address-increment increment-mask] [exp exp-bits] [flags fec] [force-explicit-null] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {ipv4 | router-alert}}] [revision version] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel-te

Specifies the MPLS-TE tunnel type.

tunnel-ID

Tunnel interface.

destination start-address end-address address -increment increment-mask

(Optional) Specifies a network 127 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start-address

Start of the network address.

end-address

End of the network address.

address-increment

Incremental value of the network address.

increment-mask

Incremental mask of the network address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

force-explicit-null

(Optional) Forces an unsolicited explicit null label to be added to the MPLS label stack and allows LSP ping to be used to detect LSP breakages at the penultimate hop.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply-mode [ ipv4 | router-alert ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
ipv4

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet (this is the default)

router-alert

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet with router alert

revision version

(Optional) Specifies the Cisco extension TLV versioning field:

  • 1 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (initial)
  • 2 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 1)
  • 3 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-03 (rev 2)
  • 4 draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-09 (initial)

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is from 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the maximum number of hops (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification
Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced. This command replaces the traceroute mpls traffic-eng command.

Task ID

Task ID Operation
mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the destination as a MPLS-TE tunnel:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname#  traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-te 13

Tracing MPLS TE Label Switched Path on tunnel-te13, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface,
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label,
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP,
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

 0 0.0.0.0 11.0.0.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16003 Exp: 0] 
 L 1 192.168.200.2 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: implicit-null Exp: 0] 110 ms 
 ! 2 192.168.170.1 0.0.0.0 MRU 0 [No Label] 169 ms

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte (P2MP)

To specify the destination type as an MPLS traffic engineering (TE) tunnel for point-to-multipoint connection, use the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte tunnel-ID [destination start-address end-address address-increment increment-mask] [responder-id ipv4-address] [exp exp-bits] [flags fec] [jitter jitter-value] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {ipv4 | router-alert}}] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel-mte

Specifies the MPLS-TE P2MP tunnel type.

tunnel-ID

Tunnel interface.

destination start-address end-address address -increment increment-mask

(Optional) Specifies a network 127 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start-address

Start of the network address.

end-address

End of the network address.

address-increment

Incremental value of the network address.

increment-mask

Incremental mask of the network address.

responder-id ipv4-address

(Optional) Specifies the responder-id IPv4 address.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags fec

(Optional) Specifies that forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

jitter jitter-value

(Optional) Specifies the jitter value. Range is 0 to 2147483647.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

reply-mode [ ipv4 | router-alert ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
ipv4

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet. (This is the default.)

router-alert

Reply with IPv4 UDP packet with router alert

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the maximum number of hops. Range is 1 to 255. Default is 30.

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

reply-mode : IPv4

timeout timeout : 2

ttl : 30

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Task ID

Task ID Operation
mpls-te

read

mpls-ldp

read

Examples

The following example shows how to specify the maximum number of hops for the trace route to traverse by using the ttl keyword:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 ttl 4

Mon Apr 12 12:16:50.095 EST

Tracing MPLS MTE Label Switched Path on tunnel-mte10, timeout is 2.2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

! 1 192.168.222.2 186 ms [Estimated Role: Bud]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]

! 2 192.168.222.2 115 ms [Estimated Role: Bud]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 2 192.168.140.2 213 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]
! 2 192.168.170.1 254 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

! 3 192.168.222.2 108 ms [Estimated Role: Bud]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 3 192.168.170.1 164 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]
! 3 192.168.140.2 199 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

! 4 192.168.170.1 198 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]
! 4 192.168.222.2 206 ms [Estimated Role: Bud]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 4 192.168.140.2 266 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

The following example shows how to specify the egress host address by using the egress keyword:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 egress 13.0.0.1

Mon Apr 12 12:18:01.994 EST

Tracing MPLS MTE Label Switched Path on tunnel-mte10, timeout is 2.2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

d 1 192.168.222.2 113 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]

d 2 192.168.222.2 118 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 2 192.168.170.1 244 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

d 3 192.168.222.2 141 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 3 192.168.170.1 204 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

d 4 192.168.222.2 110 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 4 192.168.170.1 174 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

The following example shows how to specify the egress host address, the maximum number of hops, and jitter in the tunnel:

RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-mte 10 egress 13.0.0.1 ttl 4 jitter 500

Mon Apr 12 12:19:00.292 EST

Tracing MPLS MTE Label Switched Path on tunnel-mte10, timeout is 2.5 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0, 'd' - DDMAP

Type escape sequence to abort.

d 1 192.168.222.2 238 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]

d 2 192.168.222.2 188 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 2 192.168.170.1 290 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

d 3 192.168.222.2 115 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 3 192.168.170.1 428 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

d 4 192.168.222.2 127 ms [Estimated Role: Branch]
    [L] DDMAP 0: 192.168.140.2 192.168.140.2 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16001 Exp: 0]
    [L] DDMAP 1: 192.168.170.1 192.168.170.1 MRU 1500 [Labels: 16000 Exp: 0]
! 4 192.168.170.1 327 ms [Estimated Role: Egress]

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp

To learn the routes that packets follow when traveling to their destination, use the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command in EXEC modeXR EXEC mode.

traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp tunnel-id [ddmap] [destination start-address end-address increment] [ encap {cv-ip | cv-non-ip | ip}] [exp exp-bits] [flags {fec | reverse-verification }] [ lsp {active | protect | working}] [reply {dscp dscp-value | mode {control-channel | no-reply } | pad-tlv}] [source source-address] [timeout timeout] [ttl value] [verbose]

Syntax Description

tunnel-tp tunnel-ID

Specifies the destination type as an MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) tunnel and the tunnel interface number. The range for the tunnel interface number is 0 to 65535.

ddmap

(Optional) Indicates that a downstream detailed mapping (DDMAP) TLV should be included in the LSP echo request.

destination start-address end-address increment

Specifies a network 127/8 address to be used as the destination address in the echo request packet.
start address

Start of the network address.

end  address

Start of the ending network address.

address increment

Incremental value of the network address, which is expressed as a decimal number value or IP address.

encap { cv-ip | cv-non-ip | ip }

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS-TP encapsulation type to use.

cv-ip

Use IP encapsulation with GACH channel 0x0021.

cv-non-ip

Use non-IP encapsulation with GACH channel 0x0025.

ip

Use IP encapsulation.

exp exp-bits

(Optional) Specifies the MPLS experimental field value in the MPLS header for echo replies. Range is 0 to 7. Default is 0.

flags { fec | reverse-verification }

(Optional) Specifies the flag options to use.

fec

Request forwarding equivalent class (FEC) stack checking is to be performed at transit routers.

reverse-verification

Request reverse path connectivity verification.

lsp { active | protect | working }

(Optional) Specifies the LSP to use.

active

Active MPLS-TP tunnel.

protect

Protect MPLS-TP tunnel.

working

Working MPLS-TP tunnel.

Note

 

Use this option to identify error in the LSP path if the MPLS-TP tunnel is not up.

reply dscp dscp-value

(Optional) Specifies the differentiated service codepoint value for an MPLS echo reply.

mode [control-channel ]

(Optional) Specifies the reply mode for the echo request packet.
control-channel

Send reply via a control channel.

source source-address

(Optional) Specifies the source address used in the echo request packet.

timeout timeout

(Optional) Specifies the timeout interval, in seconds. Range is 0 to 3600. Default is 2.

ttl value

(Optional) Specifies the TTL value to be used in the MPLS labels (range is 1 to 255).

verbose

(Optional) Enables verbose output information, including MPLS echo reply, sender address of the packet, and return codes.

Command Default

exp exp-bits : 0

timeout timeout : 2

Command Modes

EXECXR EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.3.1

This command was introduced.

Task ID

Task ID Operation
mpls-te

read, write

mpls-ldp

read, write

Examples

The following sample output is from the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command using the non-IP-ACH encapsulation:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp 1 encap cv-non-ip

Tracing MPLS TP Label Switched Path on tunnel-tp1, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

  0 Node ID 10.10.10.1, Global ID 0 MRU 1500 [Labels: 1000 Exp: 0]
L 1 Node ID 10.10.10.2, Global ID 0 MRU 1500 [Labels: 1100 Exp: 0] 3 ms
! 2 Node ID 12.12.12.3, Global ID 0 4 ms

  

The following sample output is from the traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp command using the non-IP-ACH encapsulation and verbose option:


RP/0/RP0RSP0/CPU0:router:hostname# traceroute mpls traffic-eng tunnel-tp 1 encap cv-non-ip

Tracing MPLS TP Label Switched Path on tunnel-tp1, timeout is 2 seconds

Codes: '!' - success, 'Q' - request not sent, '.' - timeout,
  'L' - labeled output interface, 'B' - unlabeled output interface, 
  'D' - DS Map mismatch, 'F' - no FEC mapping, 'f' - FEC mismatch,
  'M' - malformed request, 'm' - unsupported tlvs, 'N' - no rx label, 
  'P' - no rx intf label prot, 'p' - premature termination of LSP, 
  'R' - transit router, 'I' - unknown upstream index,
  'X' - unknown return code, 'x' - return code 0

Type escape sequence to abort.

  0 Node ID 10.10.10.1, Global ID 0 MRU 1500 [Labels: 1000 Exp: 0]
    Ingress Link ID 0, Egress Link ID 1
L 1 Node ID 10.10.10.2, Global ID 0 MRU 1500 [Labels: 1100 Exp: 0] 3 ms
    Ingress Link ID 2, Egress Link ID 3
! 2 Node ID 12.12.12.3, Global ID 0 4 ms