Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Interfaces Configuration Guide
Configuring Interfaces

Table Of Contents

Configuring Interfaces

Information About Interfaces

Interface Description

Interface Modes

E Port

F Port

FL Port

NP Ports

TL Port

TE Port

TF Port

TNP Port

SD Port

ST Port

Fx Port

B Port

Auto Mode

Interface States

Administrative States

Operational States

Reason Codes

Graceful Shutdown

Port Administrative Speeds

Autosensing

Frame Encapsulation

Beacon LEDs

Speed LEDs

Bit Error Thresholds

SFP Transmitter Types

TL Ports

TL Port ALPA Caches

Port Guard

Port Monitor

Port Monitor Port Guard

Port Group Monitor

Local Switching

Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

Management Interfaces

VSAN Interfaces

Prerequisites for Interfaces

Guidelines and Limitations

Generation 1 Interface Configuration Guidelines

Private Loop Configuration Guidelines

VSAN Interface Configuration Guidelines

Default Settings

Configuring Interfaces

Configuring Fibre Channel Interfaces

Setting the Interface Administrative State

Configuring Interface Modes

Configuring System Default Port Mode F

Configuring ISL between Two Switches

Configuring 10-Gbps FC Mode

Configuring Port Administrative Speeds

Configuring Port Speed Group

Configuring the Interface Description

Specifying a Port Owner

Configuring Beacon Mode

Disabling Bit Error Threshold

Configuring Switch Port Attribute Default Values

Configuring TL Ports

Manually Inserting Entries into the ALPA Cache

Clearing the ALPA Cache

Configuring Port Guard

Configuring Port Monitor

Enabling Port Monitor

Configuring a Port Monitor Policy

Activating a Port Monitor Policy

Configuring a Port Monitor Port Guard

Configuring Port Group Monitor

Enabling Port Group Monitor

Configuring a Port Group Monitor Policy

Reverting to the Default Policy for a Specific Counter

Turning Off the Monitoring of Specific Counter

Activating a Port Group Monitor Policy

Configuring Management Interfaces

Creating VSAN Interfaces

Configuring Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

Configuring Congestion Frame Timeout Value

Configuring Stuck Frame Timeout Value

Configuring No-Credit Timeout Value

Configuring Credit Loss Recovery Threshold and Action

Configuring Average Credit Nonavailable Duration Threshold and Action

Verifying Interfaces Configuration

Displaying Interface Information

Displaying TL Port Information

Displaying the ALPA Cache Contents

Displaying Port Monitor Status and Policies

Displaying Port Group Monitor Status and Policies

Displaying Management Interface Configuration

Displaying VSAN Interface Information


Configuring Interfaces


Information About Interfaces

Prerequisites for Interfaces

Guidelines and Limitations

Default Settings

Configuring Interfaces

Verifying Interfaces Configuration

Information About Interfaces

The main function of a switch is to relay frames from one data link to another. To relay the frames, the characteristics of the interfaces through which the frames are received and sent must be defined. The configured interfaces can be Fibre Channel interfaces, Gigabit Ethernet interfaces, the management interface (mgmt0), or VSAN interfaces.

This section includes the following topics:

Interface Description

Interface Modes

Interface States

Graceful Shutdown

Port Administrative Speeds

Frame Encapsulation

Beacon LEDs

Speed LEDs

Bit Error Thresholds

SFP Transmitter Types

TL Ports

TL Port ALPA Caches

Port Guard

Port Monitor

Port Monitor Port Guard

Port Group Monitor

Local Switching

Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

Management Interfaces

VSAN Interfaces

Interface Description

For the Fibre Channel interfaces, you can configure the description parameter to provide a recognizable name for the interface. Using a unique name for each interface allows you to quickly identify the interface when you are looking at a listing of multiple interfaces. You can also use the description to identify the traffic or the use for that interface.

Interface Modes

Each physical Fibre Channel interface in a switch may operate in one of several port modes: E port, F port, FL port, TL port, TE port, SD port, ST port, and B port (see Figure 2-1). Besides these modes, each interface may be configured in auto or Fx port modes. These two modes determine the port type during interface initialization.

Figure 2-1 Cisco MDS 9000 Family Switch Port Modes


Note Interfaces are created in VSAN 1 by default. See the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fabric Configuration Guide.


Each interface has an associated administrative configuration and an operational status:

The administrative configuration does not change unless you modify it. This configuration has various attributes that you can configure in administrative mode.

The operational status represents the current status of a specified attribute like the interface speed. This status cannot be changed and is read-only. Some values may not be valid when the interface is down (for example, the operational speed).


Note When a module is removed and replaced with the same type of module, the configuration is retained. If a different type of module is inserted, then the original configuration is no longer retained.


Each interface is briefly described in the sections that follow.

E Port

In expansion port (E port) mode, an interface functions as a fabric expansion port. This port may be connected to another E port to create an Inter-Switch Link (ISL) between two switches. E ports carry frames between switches for configuration and fabric management. They serve as a conduit between switches for frames destined to remote N ports and NL ports. E ports support class 2, class 3, and class F service.

An E port connected to another switch may also be configured to form a PortChannel (see Chapter 6 "Configuring PortChannels").


Note We recommend that you configure E ports on 16-port modules. If you must configure an E port on a 32-port oversubscribed module, then you can only use the first port in a group of four ports (for example, ports 1 through 4, 5 through 8, and so forth). The other three ports cannot be used.


F Port

In fabric port (F port) mode, an interface functions as a fabric port. This port may be connected to a peripheral device (host or disk) operating as an N port. An F port can be attached to only one N port. F ports support class 2 and class 3 service.

FL Port

In fabric loop port (FL port) mode, an interface functions as a fabric loop port. This port may be connected to one or more NL ports (including FL ports in other switches) to form a public arbitrated loop. If more than one FL port is detected on the arbitrated loop during initialization, only one FL port becomes operational and the other FL ports enter nonparticipating mode. FL ports support class 2 and class 3 service.


Note FL port mode is not supported on 4-port 10-Gbps switching module interfaces.


NP Ports

An NP port is a port on a device that is in NPV mode and connected to the core switch via an F port. NP ports function like N ports except that in addition to providing N port operations, they also function as proxies for multiple, physical N ports.

For more details about NP ports and NPV, see Chapter 7 "Configuring N Port Virtualization."

TL Port

In translative loop port (TL port) mode, an interface functions as a translative loop port. It may be connected to one or more private loop devices (NL ports). TL ports are specific to Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches and have similar properties as FL ports. TL ports enable communication between a private loop device and one of the following devices:

A device attached to any switch on the fabric

A device on a public loop anywhere in the fabric

A device on a different private loop anywhere in the fabric

A device on the same private loop

TL ports support class 2 and class 3 services.

Private loop devices refer to legacy devices that reside on arbitrated loops. These devices are not aware of a switch fabric because they only communicate with devices on the same physical loop (see the "TL Port ALPA Caches" section).


Tip We recommend configuring devices attached to TL ports in zones that have up to 64 zone members.



Note TL port mode is not supported on Generation 2 switching module interfaces.


TE Port

In trunking E port (TE port) mode, an interface functions as a trunking expansion port. It may be connected to another TE port to create an extended ISL (EISL) between two switches. TE ports are specific to Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches. They expand the functionality of E ports to support the following:

VSAN trunking

Transport quality of service (QoS) parameters

Fibre Channel trace (fctrace) feature

In TE port mode, all frames are transmitted in EISL frame format, which contains VSAN information. Interconnected switches use the VSAN ID to multiplex traffic from one or more VSANs across the same physical link. This feature is referred to as trunking in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches (see Chapter 5 "Configuring Trunking"). TE ports support class 2, class 3, and class F service.

TF Port

In trunking F port (TF port) mode, an interface functions as a trunking expansion port. It may be connected to another trunked N port (TN port) or trunked NP port (TNP port) to create a link between a core switch and an NPV switch or an HBA to carry tagged frames. TF ports are specific to Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches. They expand the functionality of F ports to support VSAN trunking.

In TF port mode, all frames are transmitted in EISL frame format, which contains VSAN information. Interconnected switches use the VSAN ID to multiplex traffic from one or more VSANs across the same physical link. This feature is referred to as trunking in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family (see Chapter 5 "Configuring Trunking"). TF ports support class 2, class 3, and class F service.

TNP Port

In trunking NP port (TNP port) mode, an interface functions as a trunking expansion port. It may be connected to a trunked F port (TF port) to create a link to a core NPIV switch from an NPV switch to carry tagged frames.

SD Port

In SPAN destination port (SD port) mode, an interface functions as a switched port analyzer (SPAN). The SPAN feature is specific to switches in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family. It monitors network traffic that passes though a Fibre Channel interface. This monitoring is done using a standard Fibre Channel analyzer (or a similar switch probe) that is attached to an SD port. SD ports do not receive frames, they only transmit a copy of the source traffic. The SPAN feature is nonintrusive and does not affect switching of network traffic for any SPAN source ports (see the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS System Management Configuration Guide).

ST Port

In the SPAN tunnel port (ST port) mode, an interface functions as an entry point port in the source switch for the RSPAN Fibre Channel tunnel. The ST port mode and the remote SPAN (RSPAN) feature are specific to switches in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family. When configured in ST port mode, the interface cannot be attached to any device, and thus cannot be used for normal Fibre Channel traffic (see the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS System Management Configuration Guide).


Note ST port mode is not supported on the Cisco MDS 9124 Fabric Switch, the Cisco Fabric Switch for HP c-Class BladeSystem, and the Cisco Fabric Switch for IBM BladeCenter.


Fx Port

Interfaces configured as Fx ports can operate in either F port or FL port mode. The Fx port mode is determined during interface initialization depending on the attached N port or NL port. This administrative configuration disallows interfaces to operate in any other mode—for example, preventing an interface to connect to another switch.

B Port

While E ports typically interconnect Fibre Channel switches, some SAN extender devices, such as the Cisco PA-FC-1G Fibre Channel port adapter, implement a bridge port (B port) model to connect geographically dispersed fabrics. This model uses B ports as described in the T11 Standard FC-BB-2.

If an FCIP peer is a SAN extender device that only supports Fibre Channel B ports, you need to enable the B port mode for the FCIP link. When a B port is enabled, the E port functionality is also enabled and they coexist. If the B port is disabled, the E port functionality remains enabled (see the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS IP Services Configuration Guide).

Auto Mode

Interfaces configured in auto mode can operate in one of the following modes: F port, FL port, E port, TE port, or TF port. The port mode is determined during interface initialization. For example, if the interface is connected to a node (host or disk), it operates in F port or FL port mode depending on the N port or NL port mode. If the interface is attached to a third-party switch, it operates in E port mode. If the interface is attached to another switch in the Cisco MDS 9000 Family, it may become operational in TE port mode (see Chapter 5 "Configuring Trunking").

TL ports and SD ports are not determined during initialization and are administratively configured.


Note Fibre Channel interfaces on Storage Services Modules (SSMs) cannot be configured in auto mode.


Interface States

The interface state depends on the administrative configuration of the interface and the dynamic state of the physical link.

Administrative States

The administrative state refers to the administrative configuration of the interface as described in Table 2-1.

Table 2-1 Administrative States 

Administrative State
Description

Up

Interface is enabled.

Down

Interface is disabled. If you administratively disable an interface by shutting down that interface, the physical link layer state change is ignored.


Operational States

The operational state indicates the current operational state of the interface as described in Table 2-2.

Table 2-2 Operational States 

Operational State
Description

Up

Interface is transmitting or receiving traffic as desired. To be in this state, an interface must be administratively up, the interface link layer state must be up, and the interface initialization must be completed.

Down

Interface cannot transmit or receive (data) traffic.

Trunking

Interface is operational in TE or TF mode.


Reason Codes

Reason codes are dependent on the operational state of the interface as described in Table 2-3.

Table 2-3 Reason Codes for Interface States 

Administrative Configuration
Operational Status
Reason Code

Up

Up

None.

Down

Down

Administratively down—If you administratively configure an interface as down, you disable the interface. No traffic is received or transmitted.

Up

Down

See Table 2-4.



Note Only some of the reason codes are listed in Table 2-4.


If the administrative state is up and the operational state is down, the reason code differs based on the nonoperational reason code as described in Table 2-4.

Table 2-4 Reason Codes for Nonoperational States 

Reason Code (long version)
Description
Applicable Modes

Link failure or not connected

The physical layer link is not operational.

All

SFP not present

The small form-factor pluggable (SFP) hardware is not plugged in.

Initializing

The physical layer link is operational and the protocol initialization is in progress.

Reconfigure fabric in progress

The fabric is currently being reconfigured.

Offline

The Cisco NX-OS software waits for the specified R_A_TOV time before retrying initialization.

Inactive

The interface VSAN is deleted or is in a suspended state.

To make the interface operational, assign that port to a configured and active VSAN.

Hardware failure

A hardware failure is detected.

Error disabled

Error conditions require administrative attention. Interfaces may be error-disabled for various reasons. For example:

Configuration failure.

Incompatible buffer-to-buffer credit configuration.

To make the interface operational, you must first fix the error conditions causing this state; and next, administratively shut down or enable the interface.

FC redirect failure

A port is isolated because a Fibre Channel redirect is unable to program routes.

No port activation license available

A port is not active because it does not have a port license.

SDM failure

A port is isolated because SDM is unable to program routes.

Isolation due to ELP failure

The port negotiation failed.

Only E ports and TE ports

Isolation due to ESC failure

The port negotiation failed.

Isolation due to domain overlap

The Fibre Channel domains (fcdomain) overlap.

Isolation due to domain ID assignment failure

The assigned domain ID is not valid.

Isolation due to the other side of the link E port isolated

The E port at the other end of the link is isolated.

Isolation due to invalid fabric reconfiguration

The port is isolated due to fabric reconfiguration.

Isolation due to domain manager disabled

The fcdomain feature is disabled.

Isolation due to zone merge failure

The zone merge operation failed.

Isolation due to VSAN mismatch

The VSANs at both ends of an ISL are different.

Nonparticipating

FL ports cannot participate in loop operations. It may happen if more than one FL port exists in the same loop, in which case all but one FL port in that loop automatically enters nonparticipating mode.

Only FL ports and TL ports

PortChannel administratively down

The interfaces belonging to the PortChannel are down.

Only PortChannel interfaces

Suspended due to incompatible speed

The interfaces belonging to the PortChannel have incompatible speeds.

Suspended due to incompatible mode

The interfaces belonging to the PortChannel have incompatible modes.

Suspended due to incompatible remote switch WWN

An improper connection is detected. All interfaces in a PortChannel must be connected to the same pair of switches.


Graceful Shutdown

Interfaces on a port are shut down by default (unless you modified the initial configuration).

The Cisco NX-OS software implicitly performs a graceful shutdown in response to either of the following actions for interfaces operating in the E port mode:

If you shut down an interface.

If a Cisco NX-OS software application executes a port shutdown as part of its function.

A graceful shutdown ensures that no frames are lost when the interface is shutting down. When a shutdown is triggered either by you or the Cisco NX-OS software, the switches connected to the shutdown link coordinate with each other to ensure that all frames in the ports are safely sent through the link before shutting down. This enhancement reduces the chance of frame loss.

A graceful shutdown is not possible in the following situations:

If you physically remove the port from the switch.

If in-order delivery (IOD) is enabled (for information about IOD, refer to the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fabric Configuration Guide).

If the Min_LS_interval interval is higher than 10 seconds. For information about FSPF global configuration, refer to the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fabric Configuration Guide.


Note This feature is only triggered if both switches at either end of this E port interface are MDS switches and are running Cisco SAN-OS Release 2.0(1b) or later, or MDS NX-OS Release 4.1(1a) or later.


Port Administrative Speeds

By default, the port administrative speed for an interface is automatically calculated by the switch.

For internal ports on the Cisco Fabric Switch for HP c_Class BladeSystem and Cisco Fabric Switch for IBM BladeCenter, a port speed of 1 Gbps is not supported. Auto-negotiation is supported between 2 Gbps and 4 Gbps only. Also, if the BladeCenter is a T chassis, then port speeds are fixed at 2 Gbps and auto-negotiation is not enabled.

Autosensing

Autosensing speed is enabled on all 4-Gbps and 8-Gbps switching module interfaces by default. This configuration enables the interfaces to operate at speeds of 1 Gbps, 2 Gbps, or 4 Gbps on the 4-Gbps switching modules, and 8 Gbps on the 8-Gbps switching modules. When autosensing is enabled for an interface operating in dedicated rate mode, 4 Gbps of bandwidth is reserved, even if the port negotiates at an operating speed of 1 Gbps or 2 Gbps.

To avoid wasting unused bandwidth on 48-port and 24-port 4-Gbps and 8-Gbps Fibre Channel switching modules, you can specify that only 2 Gbps of required bandwidth be reserved, not the default of 4 Gbps or 8 Gbps. This feature shares the unused bandwidth within the port group provided that it does not exceed the rate limit configuration for the port. You can also use this feature for shared rate ports that are configured for autosensing.


Tip When migrating a host that supports up to 2-Gbps traffic (that is, not 4 Gbps with autosensing capabilities) to the 4-Gbps switching modules, use autosensing with a maximum bandwidth of 2 Gbps. When migrating a host that supports up to 4-Gbps traffic (that is, not 8 Gbps with autosensing capabilities) to the 8-Gbps switching modules, use autosensing with a maximum bandwidth of 4 Gbps.


Frame Encapsulation

The switchport encap eisl command only applies to SD port interfaces. This command determines the frame format for all frames transmitted by the interface in SD port mode. If the encapsulation is set to EISL, all outgoing frames are transmitted in the EISL frame format, regardless of the SPAN sources.

The switchport encap eisl command is disabled by default. If you enable encapsulation, all outgoing frames are encapsulated, and you will see a new line (Encapsulation is eisl) in the show interface SD_port_interface command output. See the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS System Management Configuration Guide.

You can set the frame format to EISL for all frames transmitted by the interface in SD port mode. If you sent the frame encapsulation to EISL, all outgoing frames are transmitted in the EISL frame format, regardless of the SPAN sources. See the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS System Management Configuration Guide.

Beacon LEDs

Figure 2-2 displays the status, link, and speed LEDs in a 16-port switching module.

Figure 2-2 Cisco MDS 9000 Family Switch Interface Modes

 

 

1

Status LED1

3

Link LEDs1 and speed LEDs2

2

1/2-Gbps Fibre Channel port group3

4

Asset tag4

1 See the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

2 See the "Speed LEDs" section.

3 See the "Generation 1 Interface Configuration Guidelines" section.

4 Refer to the Cisco MDS 9000 Family hardware installation guide for your platform.


Speed LEDs

Each port has one link LED on the left and one speed LED on the right.

The speed LED displays the speed of the port interface:

Off—The interface attached to that port is functioning at 1000 Mbps.

On (solid green)—The interface attached to that port is functioning at 2000 Mbps (for 2 Gbps interfaces).

The speed LED also displays if the beacon mode is enabled or disabled:

Off or solid green—Beacon mode is disabled.

Flashing green—The beacon mode is enabled. The LED flashes at one-second intervals.


Note Generation 2, Generation 3, and Generation 4 modules and fabric switches do not have speed LEDs.


Bit Error Thresholds

The bit error rate threshold is used by the switch to detect an increased error rate before performance degradation seriously affects traffic.

The bit errors can occur for the following reasons:

Faulty or bad cable.

Faulty or bad GBIC or SFP.

GBIC or SFP is specified to operate at 1 Gbps but is used at 2 Gbps.

GBIC or SFP is specified to operate at 2 Gbps but is used at 4 Gbps.

Short haul cable is used for long haul or long haul cable is used for short haul.

Momentary sync loss.

Loose cable connection at one or both ends.

Improper GBIC or SFP connection at one or both ends.

A bit error rate threshold is detected when 15 error bursts occur in a 5-minute period. By default, the switch disables the interface when the threshold is reached. You can enter a shutdown and no shutdown command sequence to re-enable the interface.

You can configure the switch to not disable an interface when the threshold is crossed. By default, the threshold disables the interface.

SFP Transmitter Types

The small form-factor pluggable (SFP) hardware transmitters are identified by their acronyms when displayed. Table 2-5 defines the acronyms used for SFPs.

The small form-factor pluggable (SFP) hardware transmitters are identified by their acronyms when displayed in the show interface brief command. If the related SFP has a Cisco-assigned extended ID, then the show interface and show interface brief commands display the ID instead of the transmitter type. The show interface transceiver command and the show interface fc slot/port transceiver command display both values for Cisco-supported SFPs. Table 2-5 defines the acronyms used in the command output (see the "Displaying Interface Information" section).

Table 2-5 SFP Transmitter Acronym Definitions 

Definition
Acronym
Standard transmitters defined in the GBIC specifications

short wave laser

swl

long wave laser

lwl

long wave laser cost reduced

lwcr

electrical

elec

Extended transmitters assigned to Cisco-supported SFPs

CWDM-1470

c1470

CWDM-1490

c1490

CWDM-1510

c1510

CWDM-1530

c1530

CWDM-1550

c1550

CWDM-1570

c1570

CWDM-1590

c1590

CWDM-1610

c1610


TL Ports

Private loop devices refer to legacy devices that reside on arbitrated loops. These devices are not aware of a switch fabric because they only communicate with devices on the same physical loop. The legacy devices are used in Fibre Channel networks, and devices outside the loop may need to communicate with them. The communication functionality is provided through TL ports. See the "Interface Modes" section.

TL port mode is not supported on the following hardware:

Generation 2 switching module interfaces

Cisco MDS 9124 Fabric Switch

Cisco Fabric Switch for HP c-Class BladeSystem

Cisco Fabric Switch for IBM BladeCenter

Table 2-6 lists the TL port translations supported in Cisco MDS 9000 Family switches.

Table 2-6 Supported TL Port Translations 

Translation from
Translation to
Example

Private initiator

Private target

From I1 to T1 or vice versa

Private initiator

Public target — N port

From I1 to T2 or vice versa

Private initiator

Public target — NL port

From I4 to T3 or vice versa

Public initiator — N port

Private target

From I2 to T1 or vice versa

Public initiator — NL port

Private target

From I3 to T1 or vice versa


Figure 2-3 shows examples of TL port translation support.

Figure 2-3 TL Port Translation Support Examples

TL Port ALPA Caches

Although TL ports cannot be automatically configured, you can manually configure entries in arbitrated loop physical address (ALPA) caches. Generally, ALPA cache entries are automatically populated when an ALPA is assigned to a device. Each device is identified by its port world wide name (pWWN). When a device is allocated an ALPA, an entry for that device is automatically created in the ALPA cache.

A cache contains entries for recently allocated ALPA values. These caches are maintained on various TL ports. If a device already has an ALPA, the Cisco NX-OS software attempts to allocate the same ALPA to the device each time. The ALPA cache is maintained in persistent storage and saves information across switch reboots. The maximum cache size is 1000 entries. If the cache is full, and a new ALPA is allocated, the Cisco NX-OS software discards an inactive cache entry (if available) to make space for the new entry. See the "TL Port" section for more information on TL ports.

Port Guard

The port guard feature is intended for use in environments where the system and application environment does not adapt quickly and efficiently to a port going down and back up, or to a port rapidly cycling up and down, which can happen in some failure modes. For example, if a system takes five seconds to stabilize after a port goes down, but the port is going up and down once a second, a more severe failure in the fabric might occur.

The port guard feature gives the SAN administrator the ability to prevent this issue from occurring in environments that are vulnerable to these problems. The port can be configured to stay down after the first failure or after a specified number of failures in a specified time period. This allows the SAN administrator to intervene and control the recovery, avoiding any problems caused by the cycling.

Using the port guard feature, you can restrict the number of error reports and bring a malfunctioning port to down state dynamically. A port can be configured to go into error-disabled state for specific types of failures.

A general link failure caused by link-down is the superset of all other causes. The sum of the number of all other causes equals to the number of link-down link failures. This means a port is brought to down state when it reaches the maximum number of allowed link failures or the number of specific causes.

The causes of link failure can be any of the following:

ESP trustsec-violation

Bit-errors

Signal loss

Sync loss

Link reset

Credit loss

Additional causes might be the following:

Not operational (NOS).

Too many interrupts.

Cable is disconnected.

Hardware recoverable errors.

The connected device rebooted (F ports only).

The connected linecard rebooted (ISL only).

Port Monitor

Port monitor helps to monitor the performance and the status of ports and generate alerts when problems occur. You can configure the thresholds for various counters and trigger an event when the values cross the threshold settings.

The default port monitor policy has the following threshold values:

Counter
Threshold Type
Interval (Seconds)
% Rising Threshold
Event
% Falling Threshold
Event

Link Loss

Delta

60

5

4

1

4

Sync Loss

Delta

60

5

4

1

4

Protocol Error

Delta

60

1

4

0

4

Signal Loss

Delta

60

5

4

1

4

Invalid Words

Delta

60

1

4

0

4

Invalid CRCs

Delta

60

5

4

1

4

RX Performance

Delta

60

2147483648

4

524288000

4

TX Performance

Delta

60

2147483648

4

524288000

4


Port Monitor Port Guard

Port monitor port guard is a feature that disables or shuts down a port when an event occurs. Depending on the configuration, when an event occurs the port is either error-disabled or flapped.

Port monitor port guard is a different or separate feature that functions based on the configuration of the errordisable command.

Port Group Monitor

Each line card or module has a predefined set of ports which share the same backplane bandwidth called port groups. While oversubscription is a feature, the port group monitor feature helps to monitor the spine bandwidth utilization. An alarm syslog is generated so that you can provision the ports across port groups evenly to manage the oversubscription better.

When the port group monitor feature is enabled and a policy consisting of polling interval in seconds, and the raising and falling thresholds in percentage are specified, port group monitor generates a syslog if a port group traffic goes above the specified percentage of the maximum supported bandwidth for that port group (for rx and for tx) and another syslog if the value falls below the specified threshold.

The default port group policy has the following threshold values:

Counter
Threshold Type
Interval (Seconds)
% Rising Threshold
% Falling Threshold

RX Performance

Delta

60

80

20

TX Performance

Delta

60

80

20


Local Switching

Local switching can be enabled in Generation 4 modules, which allows traffic to be switched directly with a local crossbar when the traffic is directed from one port to another on the same line card. By using local switching, an extra switching step is avoided, which decreases the latency.

When using local switching, note the following guidelines:

All ports need to be in shared mode, which usually is the default state. To place a port in shared mode, enter the switchport ratemode shared command.

E ports are not allowed in the module because they must be in dedicated mode.


Note Local Switching is not supported on MDS 9710.


Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

All data traffic between end devices in a SAN fabric is carried by Fibre Channel Class 3. In some cases, the traffic is carried by Class 2 services that use link-level, per-hop-based, and buffer-to-buffer flow control. These classes of service do not support end-to-end flow control. When there are slow devices attached to the fabric, the end devices do not accept the frames at the configured or negotiated rate. The slow devices lead to ISL credit shortage in the traffic destined for these devices and they congest the links. The credit shortage affects the unrelated flows in the fabric that use the same ISL link even though destination devices do not experience slow drain.

This feature provides various enhancements to detect slow drain devices that are causing congestion in the network and also provides a congestion avoidance function.

This feature is focused mainly on the edge ports that are connected to slow drain devices. The goal is to avoid or minimize the frames being stuck in the edge ports due to slow drain devices that are causing ISL blockage. To avoid or minimize the stuck condition, configure lesser frame timeout for the ports. No-credit timeout drops all packets once the slow drain is detected using the configured thresholds. The lesser frame timeout value helps to alleviate the slow drain condition that affects the fabric by dropping the packets on the edge ports sooner than the time they actually get timed out (500 ms). This function frees the buffer space in ISL, which can be used by other unrelated flows that do not experience slow drain condition.


Note This feature is used mainly for edge ports that are connected to slow edge devices. Even though this feature can be applied to ISLs as well, we recommend that you apply this feature only for edge F ports and retain the default configuration for ISLs as E and TE ports. This feature is not supported on Generation 1 modules.


Management Interfaces

You can remotely configure the switch through the management interface (mgmt0). To configure a connection on the mgmt0 interface, you must configure either the IP version 4 (IPv4) parameters (IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway) or the IP version 6 (IPv6) parameters so that the switch is reachable.

Before you begin to configure the management interface manually, obtain the switch's IPv4 address and subnet mask, or the IPv6 address.

The management port (mgmt0) is autosensing and operates in full-duplex mode at a speed of 10/100/1000 Mbps. Autosensing supports both the speed and the duplex mode. On a Supervisor-1 module, the default speed is 100 Mbps and the default duplex mode is auto. On a Supervisor-2 module, the default speed is auto and the default duplex mode is auto.


Note You need to explicitly configure a default gateway to connect to the switch and send IP packets or add a route for each subnet.


VSAN Interfaces

VSANs apply to Fibre Channel fabrics and enable you to configure multiple isolated SAN topologies within the same physical infrastructure. You can create an IP interface on top of a VSAN and then use this interface to send frames to this VSAN. To use this feature, you must configure the IP address for this VSAN. VSAN interfaces cannot be created for nonexisting VSANs.

Prerequisites for Interfaces

Before you begin configuring the interfaces, ensure that the modules in the chassis are functioning as designed. To verify the status of a module at any time, enter the show module command in EXEC mode. For information about verifying the module status, refer to the Cisco NX-OS Fundamentals Configuration Guide.

Guidelines and Limitations

This section includes the following topics:

Generation 1 Interface Configuration Guidelines

Private Loop Configuration Guidelines

VSAN Interface Configuration Guidelines

Generation 1 Interface Configuration Guidelines

The Generation 1 interfaces configuration guidelines apply to the following hardware:

The 32-port, 2-Gbps or 1-Gbps switching module interfaces

The Cisco MDS 9140 and 9120 switch interfaces


Note Due to the hardware design of the MDS 9134 switch, we do not support interface out-of-service action on either of its two 10-Gigabit ports. This is because no internal port hardware resource is released when an out-of-service action is performed on these 10-Gigabit ports.


When configuring these host-optimized ports, the following port mode guidelines apply:

You can configure only the first port in each 4-port group (for example, the first port in ports 1-4, the fifth port in ports 5-8, and so on) as an E port. If the first port in the group is configured as an E port, the other three ports in each group (ports 2-4, 6-8, and so on) are not usable and remain shutdown.

If you execute the write erase command on a 32-port switching module, and then copy a saved configuration to the switch from a text file that contains the no system default switchport shutdown command, you need to copy the text file to the switch again for the E ports to come up without manual configuration.

If any of the other three ports are enabled, you cannot configure the first port as an E port. The other three ports continue to remain enabled.

The auto mode is not allowed in a 32-port switching module or the host-optimized ports in the Cisco 9100 Series (16 host-optimized ports in the Cisco MDS 9120 switch and 32 host-optimized ports in the Cisco MDS 9140 switch).

The default port mode is Fx (Fx negotiates to F or FL) for 32-port switching modules.

The 32-port switching module does not support FICON.


Note We recommend that you configure your E ports on a 16-port switching module. If you must configure an E port on a 32-port host-optimized switching module, the other three ports in that 4-port group cannot be used.



Note In the Cisco MDS 9100 Series, the groups of ports that are located on the left and outlined in white are full line rate. The other ports are host-optimized. Each group of 4 host-optimized ports have the same features as for the 32-port switching module.


Private Loop Configuration Guidelines

Follow these guidelines when configuring private loops:

A maximum of 64 fabric devices can be proxy to a private loop.

Fabric devices must be in the same zone as private loop devices to be proxy to the private loop.

Each private device on a TL port may be included in a different zone.

All devices on the loop are treated as private loops. You cannot mix private and public devices on the loop if the configured port mode is TL.

The only FC4-type supported by TL ports is SCSI (FCP).

Communication between a private initiator to a private target on the same private loop does not invoke TL port services.

VSAN Interface Configuration Guidelines

Follow these guidelines when creating or deleting VSAN interfaces:

Create a VSAN before creating the interface for that VSAN. If a VSAN does not exist, the interface cannot be created.

Create the interface VSAN—it is not created automatically.

If you delete the VSAN, the attached interface is automatically deleted.

Configure each interface only in one VSAN.


Tip After configuring the VSAN interface, you can configure an IP address or Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) feature. See the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS IP Services Configuration Guide.


Default Settings

Table 2-7 lists the default settings for interface parameters.

Table 2-7 Default Interface Parameters 

Parameters
Default

Interface mode

Auto

Interface speed

Auto

Administrative state

Shutdown (unless changed during initial setup)

Trunk mode

On (unless changed during initial setup) on non-NPV and NPIV core switches. Off on NPV switches.

Trunk-allowed VSANs or VF-IDs

1 to 4093

Interface VSAN

Default VSAN (1)

Beacon mode

Off (disabled)

EISL encapsulation

Disabled

Data field size

2112 bytes


Configuring Interfaces

This section includes the following topics:

Configuring Fibre Channel Interfaces

Setting the Interface Administrative State

Configuring Interface Modes

Configuring System Default Port Mode F

Configuring Port Administrative Speeds

Configuring Port Speed Group

Configuring the Interface Description

Specifying a Port Owner

Configuring Beacon Mode

Disabling Bit Error Threshold

Configuring Switch Port Attribute Default Values

Configuring TL Ports

Manually Inserting Entries into the ALPA Cache

Clearing the ALPA Cache

Configuring Port Guard

Configuring Port Monitor

Configuring Port Group Monitor

Configuring Management Interfaces

Creating VSAN Interfaces

Configuring Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

For more information on configuring mgmt0 interfaces, refer to the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fundamentals Configuration Guide and Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS IP Services Configuration Guide.

For more information on configuring Gigabit Ethernet interfaces, see the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS IP Services Configuration Guide.

Configuring Fibre Channel Interfaces

Detailed Steps

To configure a Fibre Channel interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Note When a Fibre Channel interface is configured, it is automatically assigned a unique world wide name (WWN). If the interface's operational state is up, it is also assigned a Fibre Channel ID (FC ID).

To configure a range of interfaces, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1 - 4 , fc2/1 - 3

switch(config-if)#

Selects the range of Fibre Channel interfaces and enters interface configuration submode3.

Note In this command, provide a space before and after the comma.

For the Cisco Fabric Switch for HP c-Class BladeSystem and the Cisco Fabric Switch for IBM BladeCenter, you can configure a range of interfaces among internal ports or external ports, but you cannot mix both interface types within the same range. For example, "bay 1-10, bay 12" or "ext 0, ext 15-18" are valid ranges, but "bay 1-5, ext 15-17" is not.

Setting the Interface Administrative State

Detailed Steps

To gracefully shut down an interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# shutdown

Gracefully shuts down the interface and administratively disables traffic flow (default).

To enable traffic flow, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# no shutdown

Enables traffic flow to administratively allow traffic when the no prefix is used (provided the operational state is up).

Configuring Interface Modes

Detailed Steps

To configure the interface mode, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# switchport mode F

switch(config-if)#

Configures the administrative mode of the port. You can set the operational state to auto, E, F, FL, Fx, TL, NP, or SD port mode.

Note Fx ports refers to an F port or an FL port (host connection only), but not E ports.

switch(config-if)# switchport mode auto

switch(config-if)#

Configures the interface mode to auto-negotiate an E, F, FL, or TE port mode (not TL or SD port modes) of operation.

Note TL ports and SD ports cannot be configured automatically. They must be administratively configured.

Note You cannot configure Fibre Channel interfaces on SSMs in auto mode.

Configuring System Default Port Mode F

The system default switchport mode F command sets the administrative mode of all Fibre Channel ports to mode F, while avoiding traffic disruption caused by the formation of unwanted Inter-Switch Links (ISLs). This command is part of the setup utility that runs during bootup after a write erase or reload. It can also be executed from the command line in configuration mode. This command changes the configuration of the following ports to administrative mode F:

All ports that are down and that are not out-of-service.

All F ports that are up, whose operational mode is F, and whose administrative mode is not F.

This command does not affect the configuration of the following ports:

All user-configured ports, even if they are down.

All non-F ports that are up; however, if non-F ports are down, this command changes the administrative mode of those ports.

Restrictions

To ensure that ports that are part of ISLs do not get changed to port mode F, configure the ports in port mode E, rather than in Auto mode.

When the command is executed from the command line, switch operation remains graceful. No ports are flapped.

Detailed Steps

To set the administrative mode of Fibre Channel ports to mode F in the CLI, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# system default switchport mode F

Sets the administrative mode of Fibre Channel ports to mode F (if applicable).

 

switch(config)# no system default switchport mode F

Sets the administrative mode of Fibre Channel ports to the default (unless user configured).


Note For detailed information about the switch setup utility, see the Cisco MDS 9000 Family NX-OS Fundamentals Configuration Guide.


Example 2-1 shows the command in the setup utility, and Example 2-2 shows the command from the command line.

Example 2-1 Setup Utility

Configure default switchport mode F (yes/no) [n]: y

Example 2-2 Command Line

switch(config)# system default switchport mode F

Configuring ISL between Two Switches


Note Ensure the FC cable is connected between the ports and do a no-shut on each port.


E-port mode is used when the port functions as one end of an Inter-Switch Link (ISL) setting. When you set the port mode to E, you restrict the port coming up as an E port (trunking or non-trunking, depending on the trunking port mode).

switch# conf t --------> Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
switch(config)# interface fc <Slot No/Port No>
switch(config-if)# switchport mode E
switch(config-if)# end

Ensure you follow this on both the switches between which you are attempting to bring up the ISL link.

Configuring 10-Gbps FC Mode

The 48-port 8-Gbps Advanced Fibre Channel module (DS-X9248-256K9) and the 32-port 8-Gbps Advanced Fibre Channel module (DS-X9232-256K9)can switch between two speed modes—the 1-, 2-, 4-, 8-Gbps or 10-Gbps. By default, the modules are online in the 1-, 2-, 4-, and 8-Gbps modes when they are loaded for the first time. There are two ways to change the ports to the 10-Gbps speed mode:

Using the 10G-speed mode command, which is the recommended method.

Using the generic speed configuration switchport speed command which has certain constraints.

The following conditions apply when the ports in the module can be configured to 10-Gbps speed mode:

The ports in the module can be configured to 10-Gbps speed only when the DS-13SLT-FAB3 module bandwidth is 256-G. Any other combination of fabric modules will not let the ports come up in 10-Gbps.

When in 10-Gbps mode, the ports in the module that are not 10-Gbps capable are disabled and will be in out-of-service state.

The ports function only in full rate mode. They cannot be moved to shared rate mode.

The ports cannot be configured in any other speed.

Ports that are capable of 10-Gbps that are disabled or out-of-service cannot be put back in service using the no out-of-service command. To put these ports back in service, all ports in the module first have to be moved to the out-of-service state. Then they can be brought back to the in service state.

Local switching must be disabled, otherwise, ports cannot be configured in dedicated mode.

Only certain ports on the 48-port and 32-port 8-Gbps Advanced Fibre Channel modules are 10-Gbps capable. When running in 10-Gbps mode, the non-10-Gbps ports cannot be operational. They have to be either in shut state or out-of-service state.

Detailed Steps

To configure the interface mode, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1-12

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Note Ensure that one full ASIC range of ports are selected before executing this command. For example, /1-12 for a 48-port module or fcY/1-8 for a 32-port module.

The first ASIC on the 48-port module has ports fc1/1-12.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# 10G-speed-mode

Configures all the ports (fc1 to 12) to out-of-service state.

Moves the ports that are capable of a10-Gbps configuration (fc1/4-8 and fc1/10) to in-service state.

Sets the speed on ports fc1/4-8 and fc1/10 to 10-Gbps.

Sets port modes on these ports to dedicated.

Performs a no shut on these ports.

switch(config-if)# no 10G-speed-mode

Reverts the settings and puts all the ports (fc1 to 12) in out-of-service state and moves them to in-service state.

Configuring Port Administrative Speeds

Restrictions

Changing the port administrative speed is a disruptive operation.

Detailed Steps

To configure the port speed of the interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc 1/1

Selects the fc interface and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# switchport speed 1000

Configures the port speed of the interface to 1000 Mbps.

The number indicates the speed in megabits per second (Mbps).

switch(config-if)# switchport speed 10000

Configures the port speed of the interface to 10000 Mbps (for 10-Gbps).

Note All the 10-Gbps capable interfaces, except the interface that is being configured, must be in the out-of-service state. At least one other 10-Gbps capable interface must be in the in-service state.

switch(config-if)# no switchport speed

Reverts the factory default (auto) administrative speed of the interface.

Configuring Port Speed Group

Detailed Steps

To configure the port speed group of the interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc 1/1

Selects the fc interface and enters interface configuration mode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# speed group 10g

Configures the port speed group to 10 Gbps.

Note The preferred way of changing the speed group is the 10g-speed-mode command.

switch(config-if)# no speed group 10g

Unsets the port speed group and reverts to the factory default (auto) administrative speed group of the interface.

Configuring the Interface Description

The interface description can be any alphanumeric string.

Detailed Steps

To configure a description for an interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# switchport description cisco-HBA2

Configures the description of the interface. The string can be up to 80 characters long.

switch(config-if)# no switchport description

Clears the description of the interface.

Specifying a Port Owner

Using the port owner feature, you can specify the owner of a port and the purpose for which a port is used so that the other administrators are informed.


Note The port guard and port owner features are available for all ports regardless of the operational mode.


Detailed Steps

To specify or remove the port owner, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

Selects the port interface.

Step 3 

switch(config)# switchport owner description

Specifies the owner of the switch port. The description can include name of the owner and the purpose for which the port is used. The description can be up to 80 characters long.

switch(config)# no switchport owner

Removes (default) the port owner description.

To display the owner description specified for a port, use the following commands:

switch# show running interface fc module-number/interface-number
switch# show port internal info interface fc module-number/interface-number

Configuring Beacon Mode

By default, the beacon mode is disabled on all switches. The beacon mode is indicated by a flashing green light that helps you identify the physical location of the specified interface. Configuring the beacon mode has no effect on the operation of the interface.

Detailed Steps

To enable beacon mode for a specified interface or range of interfaces, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

switch(config)#

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# switchport beacon

Enables the beacon mode for the interface.

switch(config-if)# no switchport beacon

Disables the beacon mode for the interface.

Troubleshooting Tips

The flashing green light turns on automatically when an external loopback is detected that causes the interfaces to be isolated. The flashing green light overrides the beacon mode configuration. The state of the LED is restored to reflect the beacon mode configuration after the external loopback is removed.

Disabling Bit Error Threshold

Detailed Steps

To disable the bit error threshold for an interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

switch(config-if)#

Selects a Fibre Channel interface and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# switchport ignore bit-errors

Prevents the detection of bit error threshold events from disabling the interface.

switch(config-if)# no switchport ignore bit-errors

Prevents the detection of bit error threshold events from enabling the interface.

Troubleshooting Tips

Regardless of the setting of the switchport ignore bit-errors command, the switch generates a syslog message when bit-error threshold events are detected.

Configuring Switch Port Attribute Default Values

You can configure attribute default values for various switch port attributes. These attributes will be applied globally to all future switch port configurations, even if you do not individually specify them at that time.

Detailed Steps

To configure switch port attributes, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# no system default switchport shutdown

switch(config)#

Configures the default setting for administrative state of an interface as Up. (The factory default setting is Down).

Tip This command is applicable only to interfaces for which no user configuration exists for the administrative state.

switch(config)# system default switchport shutdown

switch(config)#

Configures the default setting for administrative state of an interface as Down. This is the factory default setting.

Tip This command is applicable only to interfaces for which no user configuration exists for the administrative state.

switch(config)# system default switchport trunk mode auto

switch(config)#

Configures the default setting for administrative trunk mode state of an interface as Auto.

Note The default setting is trunk mode on.

Configuring TL Ports

Private loops require setting the interface mode to TL.

Use the switchport mode command to configure a TL port. See the "Configuring Interface Modes" section.

Manually Inserting Entries into the ALPA Cache

Detailed Steps

To manually insert entries into the ALPA cache, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# tlport alpa-cache interface fc1/2 pwwn 22:00:00:20:37:46:09:bd alpa 0x02

Configures manual entries into the ALPA cache.

Step 3 

switch(config)# tlport alpa-cache interface fc1/3 pwwn 22:00:00:20:37:46:09:bd

Removes this entry from the ALPA cache.

Clearing the ALPA Cache

The clear tlport alpa-cache command clears the entire content of the ALPA cache.

Configuring Port Guard

Detailed Steps

To enable or disable the port guard for a port, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface fc1/1

Selects the port interface.

Step 3 

switch(config)# errdisable detect cause link-down

Brings the port to down state if the link flaps once.

switch(config)# errdisable detect cause link-down [num-times number duration seconds]

Enables the port guard configuration for the interface. Brings the port to down state if the link flaps for the number of instances within the specified seconds.

switch(config)# no errdisable detect cause link-down

Removes (default) the port guard configuration for the interface. The link resumes flapping and sending error reports normally.

Step 4 

switch(config)# errdisable detect cause {trustsec-violation | bit-errors | credit-loss | link-reset | signal-loss | sync-loss}

Brings the port to down state if the specified error occurs even once.

switch(config)# errdisable detect cause {trustsec-violation | bit-errors | credit-loss | link-reset | signal-loss | sync-loss} [num-times number duration seconds]

Brings the port to down state if the specified error occurs for the number of instances within the specified seconds.

switch(config)# no errdisable detect cause {trustsec-violation | bit-errors | credit-loss | link-reset | signal-loss | sync-loss}

Removes (default) the port guard configuration for the interface. The link resumes flapping and sending error reports normally.

Examples

This example shows how to configure port guard to bring a port to down state if the link flaps 5 times within 120 seconds based on multiple causes:

Switch# config t 
Switch (config)# interface fc1/1 
Switch (config-if)# errdisable detect cause link-down num-times 5 duration 120 
Switch (config-if)# errdisable detect cause bit-errors num-times 5 duration 120 
Switch (config-if)# errdisable detect cause credit-loss num-times 5 duration 120 

The above example sets the configuration to the following status:

The port will be error-disabled due to bit errors if the port suffers link failure due to bit errors 5 times in 120 seconds.

The port will be error-disabled due to credit loss if the port suffers link failure due to credit loss 5 times in 120 seconds.

The port will be error-disabled due to link down if the port suffers link failure due to bit errors 2 times and link-failure due to credit loss 3 times in 120 seconds.

This example shows the internal information about a port in down state because of TrustSec violation:

Switch# show port internal info interface fc8/3 
fc8/3 is down (Error disabled - port down due to trustsec violation)
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser w/o OFC (SN)
    Port WWN is 21:c3:00:0d:ec:10:57:80
    Admin port mode is E, trunk mode is on
    snmp link state traps are enabled
    Port vsan is 1
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      11274 frames input, 1050732 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC, 0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      11242 frames output, 971900 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      11 input OLS, 34 LRR, 10 NOS, 0 loop inits
      72 output OLS, 37 LRR, 2 NOS, 0 loop inits
    Interface last changed at Sun Nov 27 07:34:05 1988
   admin port-down trustsec-violation(3) num_times 0, duration = 0 
    state reason (Error disabled - port down due to trustsec violation) 
    Port guard trustsec violation is Enabled
    errdisabled on trustsec violation TRUE, oper cnt = 1
    port guard first trustsec violation Sun Nov 27 07:34:05 1988 

Troubleshooting Tips

Link down is the superset of all other causes. A port is brought to down state if the total number of other causes equals to the number of allowed link-down failures.

Even if the link does not flap due to failure of the link, and port guard is not enabled, the port goes into a down state if too many invalid FLOGI requests are received from the same host. Use the shut and the no shut commands consecutively to bring up the link.

Configuring Port Monitor

This section includes the following topics:

Enabling Port Monitor

Configuring a Port Monitor Policy

Activating a Port Monitor Policy

Enabling Port Monitor

Detailed Steps

To enable port monitor, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-monitor enable

Enables (default) port monitoring.

switch(config)# no port-monitor enable

Disables port monitoring.

Configuring a Port Monitor Policy

Detailed Steps

To configure a port monitor policy, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-monitor name policyname

Specifies the policy name and enters the port monitoring policy configuration mode.

switch(config)# no port-monitor name policyname

Removes the policy.

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 3 

switch(config-port-monitor)# port-type access-port

Applies the policy to the access ports.

switch(config-port-monitor)# port-type trunks

Applies the policy to the trunk ports.

switch(config-port-monitor)# port-type all

Applies the policy to all ports.

Step 4 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter credit-loss-reco poll-interval seconds percentage1 event event-id delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id

Specifies the delta credit loss recovery counter, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events.

Step 5 

switch(config-port-monitor)# monitor counter err-pkt-from-port1

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter err-pkt-from-port1 poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold eventcount1 event event-id falling-threshold2 eventcount2 event event-id

Activates the err-pkt-from-port counter.

Specifies the delta err-pkt-from-port counter, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events.

Step 6 

switch(config-port-monitor)# monitor counter err-pkt-from-xbar1

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter err-pkt-from-xbar1 poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold eventcount1 event event-id

Activates the err-pkt-from-xbar counter.

Specifies the delta err-pkt-from-xbar counter, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in the count of error frame events, and the event IDs of events.

Step 7 

switch(config-port-monitor)# monitor counter err-pkt-to-xbar1

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter err-pkt-to-xbar1 poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold eventcount1 event event-id falling-threshold2 eventcount2 event event-id

Activates the err-pkt-to-xbar counter.

Specifies the delta err-pkt-to-xbar counter, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in the count of error frame events, and the event IDs of events.

Step 8 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter invalid-crc poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta invalid CRC, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 9 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter invalid-words poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta invalid words, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 10 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter link-loss poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta link failure counter, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 11 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter protocol-error poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta protocol error poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 12 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter rx-performance poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta Rx counter poll interval in seconds and thresholds in percentage.

Step 13 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter signal-loss poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta signal loss poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 14 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter state-change poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta state change poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 15 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter sync-loss poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta sync loss poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered.

Step 16 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter tx-performance poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold2 percentage2 event event-id

Specifies the delta Tx counter poll interval in seconds and thresholds in percentage.

Step 17 

switch(config-port-monitor)# no counter sync-loss

Reverts to the default policy for sync loss performance counter values.

Step 18 

switch(config-port-monitor)# no counter tx-performance

Reverts to the default policy for Tx performance counter values.

Step 19 

switch(config-port-monitor)# monitor counter rx-datarate

Turns on Rx performance counter.

switch(config-port-monitor)# monitor counter tx-datarate

Turns on Tx performance counter.

switch(config-port-monitor)# no monitor counter tx-datarate

Turns off Tx performance counter.

switch(config-port-monitor)# no monitor counter sync-loss

Turns off monitoring sync loss.

switch(config-port-monitor)# no monitor counter state-change

Turns off monitoring state change.

1 The error-pkt-port counter, the err-pkt-from xbar counter, and the err-pkt-to-xbar counter are all ASIC counters. All ASIC counters are turned off by default. The Asic counters are queried every 10 seconds. If the ASIC corresponding to a specific ASIC counter sends or receives any error packets during a 10-second interval, an error frame event occurs during the interval for that counter.

2 Falling-threshold value should be less than the rising-threshold value.

Activating a Port Monitor Policy

Detailed Steps

To activate a port monitor policy, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-monitor activate policyname

Activates the specified port monitor policy.

switch(config)# port-monitor activate

Activates the default port monitor policy.

switch(config)# no port-monitor activate policyname

Deactivates the specified port monitoring policy.

Configuring a Port Monitor Port Guard

Detailed Steps

To configure a port monitor policy, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-monitor name policyname

Specifies the policy name and enters the port monitoring policy configuration mode.

switch(config)# no port-monitor name policyname

Removes the policy.

Step 3 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter link-loss poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold percentage2 event event-id

portguard flap

Specifies the delta link loss, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered. It also specifies that the port is flappped (is up or down) when the event occurs.

Step 4 

switch(config-port-monitor)# counter link-loss poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 event event-id falling-threshold percentage2 event event-id

portguard errordisable

Specifies the delta link loss, poll interval in seconds, the thresholds in percentage, and the event IDs of events to be triggered. It also specifies that the interface is down (error disabled) when the event occurs.


Note By default, the port monitor port guard is disabled. To enable this feature, you must explicitly configure the port monitor port guard feature on a particular counter by performing Step 3 or Step 4.


Configuring Port Group Monitor

This section includes the following topics:

Enabling Port Group Monitor

Configuring a Port Group Monitor Policy

Reverting to the Default Policy for a Specific Counter

Turning Off the Monitoring of Specific Counter

Activating a Port Group Monitor Policy

Enabling Port Group Monitor

Detailed Steps

To enable port group monitor, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-group-monitor enable

Enables (default) port group monitoring.

switch(config)# no port-group-monitor enable

Disables port group monitoring.

Configuring a Port Group Monitor Policy

Detailed Steps

To configure port group monitor policy, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-group-monitor name policyname

Specifies the policy name and enters the port group monitoring policy configuration mode.

switch(config)# no port-group-monitor name policyname

Removes the policy.

Step 3 

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# counter rx-performance poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 falling-threshold percentage2

Specifies the delta Rx counter poll interval in seconds and thresholds in percentage.

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# counter tx-performance poll-interval seconds delta rising-threshold percentage1 falling-threshold percentage2

Specifies the delta Tx counter poll interval in seconds and thresholds in percentage.

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# no counter tx-performance

1 Reverts to the 2 default policy.

Step 4 

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# monitor counter rx-performance

Turns on Rx performance monitoring.

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# monitor counter tx-performance

Turns on Tx performance monitoring.

switch(config-port-group-monitor)# no monitor counter tx-performance

3 Turns off Tx performance monitoring.

1 See Reverting to the Default Policy for a Specific Counter.

2 See Port Group Monitor

3 See Turning Off the Monitoring of Specific Counter.

Reverting to the Default Policy for a Specific Counter

When the no counter command is used in the config-port-group-monitor mode, the specified counter polling values will revert to the default values as seen in the following example:

switch(config)# port-group-monitor name PGMON_policy
switch(config-port-group-monitor)# counter tx-performance poll-interval 100 delta 
rising-threshold 65 falling-threshold 25
switch(config)# show port-group-monitor PGMON_policy
Policy Name  : PGMON_policy
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- --------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
TX Performance   Delta      100      65                   25 
switch(config)# port-group-monitor name PGMON_policy
switch(config-port-group-monitor)# no counter tx-performance
switch(config)# show port-group-monitor PGMON_policy
Policy Name  : PGMON_policy
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ----------------------
RX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
TX Performance   Delta      60      80                   10 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Turning Off the Monitoring of Specific Counter

When the no monitor counter command is used in the config-port-group-monitor mode, it turns off the monitoring of the specified counter in the given policy as seen in the following example:

switch(config)# show port-group-monitor PGMON_policy
Policy Name  : PGMON_policy
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ----------------------
RX Performance   Delta      26       450                  250 
TX Performance   Delta      60       100                  80 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
switch(config)# port-group-monitor name PGMON_policy
switch(config-port-group-monitor)# no monitor counter rx-performance
switch(config)# show port-group-monitor PGMON_policy
Policy Name  : PGMON_policy
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ---------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      26       450                  250 
TX Performance   Delta      60       100                  80 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Activating a Port Group Monitor Policy

To activate a port group monitor policy, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# port-group-monitor activate policyname

Activates the specified port group monitor policy.

switch(config)# port-group-monitor activate

Activates the default port group monitor policy.

switch(config)# no port-group-monitor activate policyname

Deactivates the specified port group monitor policy.

Configuring Management Interfaces

Detailed Steps

To configure the mgmt0 Ethernet interface to connect over IPv4, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config terminal

switch(config)#

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface mgmt0

switch(config-if)#

Selects the management Ethernet interface on the switch and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# ip address 10.16.1.2 255.255.255.0

Configures the IPv4 address and IPv4 subnet mask.

Step 4 

switch(config-if)# no shutdown

Enables the interface.

Step 5 

switch(config-if)# exit

switch(config)#

Returns to configuration mode.

Step 6 

switch(config)# ip default-gateway 1.1.1.4

Configures the default gateway IPv4 address.

Step 7 

switch(config)# exit

switch#

Returns to EXEC mode.

Step 8 

switch# copy running-config startup-config

(Optional) Saves your configuration changes to the file system.

Note If you want to save your configuration, you can enter this command at any time.

To configure the mgmt0 Ethernet interface to connect over IPv6, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config terminal

switch(config)#

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface mgmt0

switch(config-if)#

Selects the management Ethernet interface on the switch and enters interface configuration submode.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# ipv6 enable

Enables IPv6 and assigns a link-local address on the interface.

Step 4 

switch(config-if)# ipv6 address ipv6 address 2001:0db8:800:200c::417a/64

Specifies an IPv6 unicast address and prefix length on the interface.

Step 5 

switch(config-if)# no shutdown

Enables the interface.

Step 6 

switch(config-if)# end

switch#

Returns to EXEC mode.

Step 7 

switch# copy running-config startup-config

(Optional) Saves your configuration changes to the file system.

Note If you want to save your configuration, you can enter this command at any time.

Creating VSAN Interfaces

Detailed Steps

To create a VSAN interface, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# interface vsan 2

switch(config-if)#

Configures a VSAN with the ID 2.

Step 3 

switch(config-if)# no shutdown

Enables the VSAN interface.

Configuring Slow Drain Device Detection and Congestion Avoidance

This section includes the following topics:

Configuring Congestion Frame Timeout Value

Configuring Stuck Frame Timeout Value

Configuring No-Credit Timeout Value

Configuring Credit Loss Recovery Threshold and Action

Configuring Average Credit Nonavailable Duration Threshold and Action

Configuring Congestion Frame Timeout Value

The default congestion frame timeout value is 500 milliseconds. We recommend that you retain the default configuration for the ISLs and configure a value that does not exceed the default value for the edge ports. If the frame is in the switch for a longer time than the configured congestion frame timeout, it gets dropped, which empties the buffer space in the ISL and alleviates the congestion.

To configure the congestion frame timeout value, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# system default interface congestion timeout milliseconds mode {core | edge}

Configures a new congestion frame timeout value in milliseconds and the port mode for the device.

Step 3 

switch(config)# system default interface congestion mode {core | edge}

Configures the default congestion frame timeout value in milliseconds and the port mode for the device.

The congestion timeout range is 100-1000 milliseconds.

Step 4 

switch# show logging onboard flow-control request-timeout

(Optional) Displays the request timeout for a source-destination pair per module with the timestamp information.

Configuring Stuck Frame Timeout Value

The default stuck frame timeout value is 500 ms. We recommend that you retain the default configuration for ISLs and configure a value not exceeding 500 ms (100 to 200 ms) for fabric F ports.

To configure the stuck frame timeout value, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# system timeout congestion-drop seconds mode E|F

Specifies the stuck frame timeout value in ms and the port mode for the switch.

switch(config)# system timeout congestion-drop default mode E|F

Specifies the default stuck frame timeout port mode for the switch.

Configuring No-Credit Timeout Value

When the port does not have the credits for the configured period, no-credit timeout can be enabled on that port. This will result in all frames coming to that port getting dropped in the egress. This will free the buffer space in the ISL link, which carries traffic for this port. This will help reduce fabric slow down and congestion on other unrelated flows using the same link.

The frames that will be dropped would have just entered the switch or would have stayed in the switch for the configured timeout value. These are preemptive drops and will clear the congestion completely compared to the stuck frame timeout value.

No-credit timeout feature is disabled by default. We recommend that you retain the default configuration for ISLs and configure a value not exceeding 500 ms (200 to 300 ms) for fabric F ports.


Note The no-credit timeout value and stuck frame timeout value are interlinked. The no-credit timeout value must always be greater than the stuck frame timeout value.


To configure the no-credit timeout value, follow these steps:

 
Command
Purpose

Step 1 

switch# config t

Enters configuration mode.

Step 2 

switch(config)# system timeout no-credit-drop seconds mode E|F

Specifies the no-credit timeout value and port mode for the switch.

switch(config)# system timeout no-credit-drop default mode E|F

Specifies the default no-credit timeout value port mode for the switch.

Configuring Credit Loss Recovery Threshold and Action

When the port detects the credit loss condition and recovers, then the port can be error-disabled, a trap can be sent with interface details, and a syslog can be generated with interface details. When the configured threshold is exceeded, one or more of these actions can be combined together. These actions can be turned on or off depending on situation. The port monitor feature provides the command line interface to configure the thresholds and action.

The thresholds are that the credit loss recovery can be between 1 and 10 and the interval can be 1 second to 1 hour. The default value is 3 in 10 minutes and generates a syslog.

When the port sees the credit loss condition and fails to recover, the port flaps. This function is already part of port guard, and you can configure the supported actions using the Port Guard feature.

To configure credit loss recovery threshold and action, refer to the following example. The following example shows the credit loss recovery threshold and action configuration:

switch# show port-monitor
Policy Name  : Cisco
Admin status : Active
Oper status  : Active
Port type    : All Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter                  Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  
event Portguard 
------- ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ ----- --------- ---
Link Loss                Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
Sync Loss                Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
Protocol Error           Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled 
Signal Loss              Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
Invalid Words            Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled 
Invalid CRC's            Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
RX Performance           Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
Not enabled 
TX Performance           Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
Not enabled 
TX Discards              Delta      60       200              4     10                 4     
Not enabled 
LR RX                    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
LR TX                    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
Timeout Discards         Delta      60       200              4     10                 4     
Not enabled 
Credit Loss Reco         Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled 
TX Credit Not Available  Delta      60       10               4     0                  4     
Not enabled 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following default port monitor policy will be active when the switch comes up:

Policy Name  : slowdrain
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------
Counter                  Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  
event Portguard
-------                  ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ 
----- ---------     ------
Credit Loss Reco         Delta      5        4                4     1                  4     
Not enabled 
TX Credit Not Available  Delta      1        20               4     10                 4     
Not enabled 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Configuring Average Credit Nonavailable Duration Threshold and Action

When the average credit nonavailable duration exceeds the set threshold, the port can be error-disabled, a trap can be sent with interface details, and a syslog can be generated with interface details. One or more of these actions can also be combined together. These actions can be turned on or off depending on the situation. The port monitor feature provides the command line interface to configure the thresholds and action. The threshold configuration can be a percentage of credit nonavailable duration in an interval.

The thresholds are that the credit nonavailable duration can be 0 percent to 100 percent in multiples of 10, and the interval can be 1 second to 1 hour. The default is 10 percent in 1 second and generates a syslog.

To configure average credit nonavailable duration threshold and action, refer to the "Port Monitor" section.


Note This feature is not supported on 1 RU fabric switches.


Verifying Interfaces Configuration

This section includes the following topics:

Displaying Interface Information

Displaying TL Port Information

Displaying the ALPA Cache Contents

Displaying Port Monitor Status and Policies

Displaying Port Group Monitor Status and Policies

Displaying Management Interface Configuration

Displaying VSAN Interface Information

Displaying Interface Information

The show interface command is invoked from the EXEC mode and displays the interface configurations. Without any arguments, this command displays the information for all the configured interfaces in the switch. See Examples 2-3 to 2-10.

Example 2-3 Displays All Interfaces

switch# show interface 
fc1/1 is up
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser
    Port WWN is 20:0b:00:05:30:00:8d:de
    Admin port mode is F
    Port mode is F, FCID is 0x610000
    Port vsan is 2
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 3
    Receive B2B Credit is 16
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      134 frames input, 8468 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC, 0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      154 frames output, 46072 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      1 input OLS, 1 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
      1 output OLS, 0 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.
. . .
fc1/9 is trunking
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is long wave laser cost reduced
    Port WWN is 20:09:00:05:30:00:97:9e
    Peer port WWN is 20:0b:00:0b:5f:a3:cc:00
    Admin port mode is E, trunk mode is on
    Port mode is TE
    Port vsan is 100
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 255
    Receive B2B Credit is 255
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    Trunk vsans (admin allowed and active) (1,100,3000)
    Trunk vsans (up)                       (1,100,3000)
    Trunk vsans (isolated)                 ()
    Trunk vsans (initializing)             ()
    5 minutes input rate 280 bits/sec, 35 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 176 bits/sec, 22 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      4609939 frames input, 8149405708 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC, 0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      4638491 frames output, 7264731728 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      3 input OLS, 9 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
      9 output OLS, 7 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.
. . .
fc1/13 is up
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser
    Port WWN is 20:0d:00:05:30:00:97:9e
    Admin port mode is auto, trunk mode is on
    Port mode is F, FCID is 0x650100
    Port vsan is 100
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 3
    Receive B2B Credit is 16
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      8696 frames input, 3227212 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC, 0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      16799 frames output, 6782444 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      0 input OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
      1 output OLS, 1 LRR, 0 NOS, 1 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.
. . .
sup-fc0 is up
    Hardware is Fibre Channel
    Speed is 1 Gbps
    139597 packets input, 13852970 bytes
      0 multicast frames, 0 compressed
      0 input errors, 0 frame, 0 overrun 0 fifo
    139516 packets output, 16759004 bytes, 0 underruns
      0 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 fifo
      0 carrier errors

You can also specify arguments (a range of interfaces or multiple, specified interfaces) to display interface information. You can specify a range of interfaces by issuing a command with the following example format:

interface fc1/1 - 5 , fc2/5 - 7

Note The spaces are required before and after the dash ( - ) and before and after the comma ( , ).


Example 2-4 Displays Multiple, Specified Interfaces

switch# show interface fc3/13 , fc3/16
fc3/13 is up
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser
    Port WWN is 20:8d:00:05:30:00:97:9e
    Admin port mode is FX
    Port mode is F, FCID is 0x7b0300
    Port vsan is 1
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 3
    Receive B2B Credit is 12
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      1856 frames input, 116632 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC,  0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      1886 frames output, 887712 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      0 input OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 1 loop inits
      1 output OLS, 1 LRR, 0 NOS, 1 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.
fc3/16 is up
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser
    Port WWN is 20:90:00:05:30:00:97:9e
    Admin port mode is FX
    Port mode is F, FCID is 0x7d0100
    Port vsan is 3000
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 3
    Receive B2B Credit is 12
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    5 minutes input rate 504 bits/sec, 63 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 520 bits/sec, 65 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      47050 frames input, 10311824 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC,  0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      62659 frames output, 10676988 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      0 input OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
      1 output OLS, 1 LRR, 0 NOS, 1 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.

Example 2-5 Displays a Specific Interface

switch# show interface fc2/2
fc2/2 is trunking
    Port description is Trunk to Core-4
    Hardware is Fibre Channel, SFP is short wave laser
    Port WWN is 20:42:00:05:30:00:97:9e
    Peer port WWN is 20:cc:00:05:30:00:50:9e
    Admin port mode is E, trunk mode is on
    Port mode is TE
    Port vsan is 1
    Speed is 2 Gbps
    Transmit B2B Credit is 255
    Receive B2B Credit is 255
    Receive data field Size is 2112
    Beacon is turned off
    Belongs to port-channel 2
    Trunk vsans (admin allowed and active) (1,100,3000)
    Trunk vsans (up)                       (1)
    Trunk vsans (isolated)                 (100,3000)
    Trunk vsans (initializing)             ()
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 32 bits/sec, 4 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
      2214834 frames input, 98673588 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
        0 CRC, 0 unknown class
        0 too long, 0 too short
      2262415 frames output, 343158368 bytes
        0 discards, 0 errors
      1 input OLS, 1 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
      2 output OLS, 1 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.

Example 2-6 Displays Port Description

switch# show interface description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface          Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fc3/1              test intest
fc3/2              --
fc3/3              --
fc3/4              TE port
fc3/5              --
fc3/6              --
fc3/10             Next hop switch 5
fc3/11             --
fc3/12             --
fc3/16             --
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface          Description
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
port-channel 1     --
port-channel 5     --
port-channel 6     --

Example 2-7 Displays Interface Information in a Brief Format

switch# show interface brief
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface  Vsan   Admin  Admin   Status          SFP   Oper  Oper   Port
                  Mode   Trunk                          Mode  Speed  Channel
                         Mode                                 (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fc1/1      1      E      on      trunking         swl    TE      2    1
fc1/2      1      E      on      trunking         swl    TE      2    1
fc1/3      1      auto   on      SFPAbsent       --     --           --
fc1/4      1      auto   on      SFPAbsent       --     --           --
fc1/5      3000   auto   on      up               swl    F       2    --
...
fc2/2      1      E      on      trunking         swl    TE      2    2
fc2/3      1      auto   on      down             c1610  --           --
fc2/4      1      auto   on      down             c1590  --           --
fc2/5      3000   auto   on      notConnected     lwcr   --           --
fc2/6      1      auto   on      SFPAbsent       --     --           --
...
fc3/16     3000   FX     --      up               swl    F       2    --
fc3/17     1      FX     --      SFPAbsent       --     --           --
...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface               Status     IP Address        Speed        MTU
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GigabitEthernet4/1      SFPAbsent --                auto         1500
...
GigabitEthernet4/6      down       10.1.1.2/8        auto         3000
GigabitEthernet4/7      down       10.1.1.27/24      auto         1500
GigabitEthernet4/8      down       --                auto         1500
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface           Status              Oper Mode           Oper Speed
                                                            (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
iscsi4/1            down                --
...
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface          Status                            Speed
                                                     (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
sup-fc0            up                                1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface               Status     IP Address        Speed        MTU
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
mgmt0                   up         172.19.48.96/25   100 Mbps     1500
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface               Vsan     Admin    Status            Oper   Oper
                                 Trunk                      Mode   Speed
                                 Mode                              (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
port-channel 1          1        on       trunking          TE     4
port-channel 2          1        on       trunking          TE     4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface  Vsan   Admin  Admin   Status       Oper  Profile  Port-channel
                  Mode   Trunk                Mode
                         Mode
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fcip10     1      auto   on      notConnected --     10      --

Example 2-8 Displays Interface Counters

switch# show interface counters
fc3/1
    5 minutes input rate 24 bits/sec, 3 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 16 bits/sec, 2 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    3502 frames input, 268400 bytes
      0 discards, 0 CRC, 0 unknown class
      0 too long, 0 too short
    3505 frames output, 198888 bytes
      0 discards
    1 input OLS, 1 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
    2 output OLS, 1 LRR, 1 NOS, 0 loop inits
    1 link failures, 1 sync losses, 1 signal losses
.
.
.
fc9/8
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    0 frames input, 0 bytes
      0 class-2 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-3 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-f frames, 0 bytes
      0 discards, 0 CRC, 0 unknown class
      0 too long, 0 too short
    0 frames output, 0 bytes
      0 class-2 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-3 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-f frames, 0 bytes
      0 discards
    0 input OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
    0 output OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
    0 link failures, 0 sync losses, 0 signal losses
      16 receive B2B credit remaining
      3 transmit B2B credit remaining.
. . .
sup-fc0
    114000 packets input, 11585632 bytes
      0 multicast frames, 0 compressed
      0 input errors, 0 frame, 0 overrun 0 fifo
    113997 packets output, 10969672 bytes, 0 underruns
      0 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 fifo
      0 carrier errors
mgmt0
    31557 packets input, 2230860 bytes
      0 multicast frames, 0 compressed
      0 input errors, 0 frame, 0 overrun 0 fifo
    26618 packets output, 16824342 bytes, 0 underruns
      0 output errors, 0 collisions, 7 fifo
      0 carrier errors
vsan1
    0 packets input, 0 bytes, 0 errors, 0 multicast
    0 packets output, 0 bytes, 0 errors, 0 dropped
.
.
.
port-channel 1
    5 minutes input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    5 minutes output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 bytes/sec, 0 frames/sec
    0 frames input, 0 bytes
      0 class-2 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-3 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-f frames, 0 bytes
      0 discards, 0 CRC, 0 unknown class
      0 too long, 0 too short
    0 frames output, 0 bytes
      0 class-2 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-3 frames, 0 bytes
      0 class-f frames, 0 bytes
      0 discards
    0 input OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
    0 output OLS, 0 LRR, 0 NOS, 0 loop inits
    0 link failures, 0 sync losses, 0 signal losses

Note Interfaces 9/8 and 9/9 are not trunking ports and display class 2, 3, and F information as well.


Example 2-9 Displays Interface Counters in Brief Format

switch# show interface counters brief
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface          Input (rate is 5 min avg)      Output (rate is 5 min avg)
                   -----------------------------  -----------------------------
                   Rate     Total                 Rate     Total
                   Mbits/s  Frames                Mbits/s  Frames
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fc3/1              0        3871                  0        3874
fc3/2              0        3902                  0        4232
fc3/3              0        3901                  0        4138
fc3/4              0        3895                  0        3894
fc3/5              0        3890                  0        3897
fc9/8              0        0                     0        0
fc9/9              0        5                     0        4
fc9/10             0        4186                  0        4182
fc9/11             0        4331                  0        4315
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface          Input (rate is 5 min avg)      Output (rate is 5 min avg)
                   -----------------------------  -----------------------------
                   Rate     Total                 Rate     Total
                   Mbits/s  Frames                Mbits/s  Frames
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
port-channel 1     0        0                     0        0
port-channel 2     0        3946                  0        3946

Note The show interface transceiver command can only be issued on a switch in the Cisco MDS 9100 Series if the SFP is present (see Example 2-10).


Example 2-10 Displays Transceiver Information

switch# show interface transceiver 
fc1/1 SFP is present
    name is CISCO-AGILENT
    part number is QFBR-5796L
    revision is
    serial number is A00162193
    fc-transmitter type is short wave laser
    cisco extended id is unknown (0x0)
...
fc1/9 SFP is present
    name is FINISAR CORP.
    part number is FTRJ-1319-7D-CSC
    revision is
    serial number is H11A6ER
    fc-transmitter type is long wave laser cost reduced
    cisco extended id is unknown (0x0)
...

Example 2-11 displays the entire running configuration with information for all interfaces. The interfaces have multiple entries in the configuration files to ensure that the interface configuration commands execute in the correct order when the switch reloads.

Example 2-11 Displays the Running Configuration for All Interfaces

switch# show running-config
...
interface fc9/1
  switchport speed 2000
...
interface fc9/1
  switchport mode E 
...
interface fc9/1
  channel-group 11 force
  no shutdown

Example 2-12 displays the running configuration information for a specified interface. The interface configuration commands are grouped together.

Example 2-12 Displays the Running Configuration for a Specified Interface

switch# show running-config interface fc1/1
interface fc9/1
  switchport speed 2000
  switchport mode E
  channel-group 11 force
  no shutdown

Example 2-13 displays the running configuration after the system default switchport mode F command is executed.

Example 2-13 Displays the Running Configuration After the System Default Switchport Mode F Command is Executed

switch# show running-config
version 3.1(3)
system default switchport mode F
interface fc4/1
interface fc4/2
interface fc4/3
interface fc4/4
interface fc4/5
interface fc4/6
interface fc4/7
interface fc4/8
interface fc4/9
interface fc4/10

Example 2-14 displays the running configuration after two interfaces are individually configured for mode FL.

Example 2-14 Displays the Running Configuration After Two Interfaces Are Individually Configured for Mode FL

switch# show running-config
version 3.1(3)
system default switchport mode F
interface fc4/1
  switchport mode FL
interface fc4/2
interface fc4/3
  switchport mode FL
interface fc4/4
interface fc4/5
interface fc4/6
interface fc4/7
interface fc4/8
interface fc4/9
interface fc4/1

Example 2-15 displays interface information in a brief format after the system default switchport mode F command is executed. Example 2-16 displays interface information in a brief format after two interfaces are individually configured for mode FL.

Example 2-15 Displays Interface Information in a Brief Format After the System Default Switchport Mode F Command is Executed

switch# show interface brief
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface  Vsan   Admin  Admin   Status          SFP    Oper  Oper   Port
                  Mode   Trunk                          Mode  Speed  Channel
                         Mode                                 (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fc4/1      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/2      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/3      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/4      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/5      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/6      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/7      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/8      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/9      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --

Example 2-16 Displays Interface Information in a Brief Format After Two Interfaces Are Individually Configured for Mode FL

switch# show interface brief
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interface  Vsan   Admin  Admin   Status          SFP    Oper  Oper   Port
                  Mode   Trunk                          Mode  Speed  Channel
                         Mode                                 (Gbps)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
fc4/1      1      FL     --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/2      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/3      1      FL     --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/4      1      F      --      notConnected     swl    --           --
fc4/5      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/6      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/7      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/8      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/9      1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --
fc4/10     1      F      --      sfpAbsent        --     --           --

Displaying TL Port Information

The show tlport command displays the TL port interface configurations. This command provides a list of all TL ports configured in a switch and shows the associated VSAN, the FC ID for the port (only domain and area are valid), and the current operational state of the TL port (up or initializing). See Example 2-17 through Example 2-20.

Example 2-17 Displays the TL Ports in All VSANs

switch# show tlport list 
------------------------------- 
Interface Vsan FC-ID    State 
------------------------- ------ 
fc1/16    1    0x420000 Init 
fc2/26    1    0x150000 Up 

TL ports allow a private device (devices that physically reside on the loop) to see a fabric device and vice-versa by proxying fabric devices on the loop. Fabric devices are proxied by allocating each fabric device an ALPA on this loop.

In addition to these proxied devices, other virtual devices (local or remote domain controller addresses) are also allocated ALPAs on the loop. A switch reserves the ALPA for its own communication with private devices, and the switch acts as a SCSI initiator.

The first column in the output of the show tlport interface command is the ALPA identity of the device on the loop. The columns that follow include the port WWNs, the node WWNs for each device, the device as a SCSI initiator or target, and the real FC ID of the device.

Example 2-18 Displays the Detailed Information for a Specific TL Port

switch# show tlport interface fc1/16 all 
fc1/16 is up, vsan 1, FCID 0x420000 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------  
alpa pWWN                    nWWN                    SCSI Type Device  FC-ID  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------  
0x01 20:10:00:05:30:00:4a:de 20:00:00:05:30:00:4a:de Initiator Proxied 0xfffc42  
0x73 22:00:00:20:37:39:ae:54 20:00:00:20:37:39:ae:54 Target    Private 0x420073  
0xef 20:10:00:05:30:00:4a:de 20:00:00:05:30:00:4a:de Initiator Switch  0x0000ef 

Example 2-19 Displays TL Port Information for Private Devices

switch# show tlport interface fc 1/16 private 
fc1/16 is up, vsan 1, FCID 0x420000 
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
alpa pWWN                    nWWN                    SCSI Type FC-ID 
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
0x73 22:00:00:20:37:39:ae:54 20:00:00:20:37:39:ae:54 Target    0x420073 
0x74 22:00:00:20:37:38:d3:de 20:00:00:20:37:38:d3:de Target    0x420074 

Example 2-20 Displays TL Port Information for Proxied Devices

switch# show tlport interface fc 1/16 proxied 
fc1/16 is up, vsan 1, FCID 0x420000 
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
alpa pWWN                    nWWN                    SCSI Type FC-ID 
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
0x01 20:10:00:05:30:00:4a:de 20:00:00:05:30:00:4a:de Initiator 0xfffc42 
0x02 21:00:00:e0:8b:01:95:e7 20:00:00:e0:8b:01:95:e7 Initiator 0x420100

Displaying the ALPA Cache Contents

The show tlport alpa-cache command displays the contents of the ALPA cache.

switch# show tlport alpa-cache
---------------------------------------------------------
alpa              pWWN               Interface
---------------------------------------------------------
0x02  22:00:00:20:37:46:09:bd     fc1/2
0x04  23:00:00:20:37:46:09:bd     fc1/2

The first entry indicates that if a device with a pWWN of 22:00:00:20:37:46:09:bd is exported on TL port fc1/2, then the pWWN is allocated an alpa 0x02 (if available).

Displaying Port Monitor Status and Policies

The following commands display information regarding port monitor:

switch# show port-monitor status
Port Monitor    : Enabled
Active Policies : sample
Last 10 logs :
switch# show port-monitor
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Port Monitor : enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Policy Name  : sample
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  event 
portguard
-------          ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ ----- -----
Link Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4	
Not enabled
Sync Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4 	
Not enabled
Protocol Error   Delta      60       1                4     0                  4 
Not enabled
Signal Loss      Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled
Invalid Words    Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled
Invalid CRC's    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4 
Not enabled
RX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
Not enabled
TX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4 
Not enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Policy Name  : default
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  event 
portguard
-------          ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ ----- -----
Link Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled
Sync Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled
Protocol Error   Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled
Signal Loss      Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled
Invalid Words    Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
Not enabled
Invalid CRC's    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
Not enabled
RX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
Not enabled
TX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
Not enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
switch# show port-monitor active
Policy Name  : sample
Admin status : Active
Oper status  : Active
Port type    : All Access Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  event 
portguard
-------          ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ ----- -----
Link Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Sync Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Protocol Error   Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
enabled
Signal Loss      Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Invalid Words    Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
enabled
Invalid CRC's    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
RX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
enabled
TX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
switch# show port-monitor sample
Policy Name  : sample
Admin status : Active
Oper status  : Active
Port type    : All Access Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval Rising Threshold event Falling Threshold  event 
portgurard
-------          ---------  -------- ---------------- ----- ------------------ ----- -----
Link Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Sync Loss        Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Protocol Error   Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
enabled
Signal Loss      Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
Invalid Words    Delta      60       1                4     0                  4     
enabled
Invalid CRC's    Delta      60       5                4     1                  4     
enabled
RX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
enabled
TX Performance   Delta      60       2147483648       4     524288000          4     
enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Displaying Port Group Monitor Status and Policies

The following commands display information about port group monitor:

switch# show port-group-monitor status
Port Group Monitor : Enabled
Active Policies : pgm2
Last 10 logs :
switch#
switch# show port-group-monitor
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Port Group Monitor : enabled
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Policy Name  : pgm1
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ---------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      60       50                   10 
TX Performance   Delta      60       50                   10 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Policy Name  : pgm2
Admin status : Active
Oper status  : Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ---------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
TX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Policy Name  : default
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ----------------------
RX Performance   Delta      60       80                   20 
TX Performance   Delta      60       80                   20 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
switch# show port-group-monitor active
Policy Name  : pgm2
Admin status : Active
Oper status  : Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ---------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
TX Performance   Delta      60       80                   10 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
switch# show port-group-monitor PGMON_policy
PPolicy Name  : PGMON_policy
Admin status : Not Active
Oper status  : Not Active
Port type    : All Port Groups
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Counter          Threshold  Interval %ge Rising Threshold %ge Falling Threshold 
-------          ---------  -------- -------------------- ---------------------- 
RX Performance   Delta      26       450                  250 
TX Performance   Delta      60       100                  80 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Displaying Management Interface Configuration

To display the management interface configuration, use the show interface mgmt 0 command.

switch# show interface mgmt 0
mgmt0 is up
    Hardware is FastEthernet
    Address is 000c.30d9.fdbc
    Internet address is 10.16.1.2/24
    MTU 1500 bytes, BW 100 Mbps full Duplex
    26388 packets input, 6101647 bytes
      0 multicast frames, 0 compressed
      0 input errors, 0 frame, 0 overrun 0 fifo
    10247 packets output, 2389196 bytes, 0 underruns
      0 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 fifo
      0 carrier errors

Displaying VSAN Interface Information

To display VSAN interface information, use the show interface vsan command.

switch# show interface vsan 2
vsan2 is up, line protocol is up
    WWPN is 10:00:00:05:30:00:59:1f, FCID is 0xb90100
    Internet address is 10.1.1.1/24
    MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit
    0 packets input, 0 bytes, 0 errors, 0 multicast
    0 packets output, 0 bytes, 0 errors, 0 dropped