Table Of Contents
show mpoa client statistics
show mpoa default-atm-addresses
show mpoa server
show mpoa server cache
show mpoa server statistics
show pxf accounting
show pxf crash
show pxf feature cef
show pxf feature nat
show pxf interface
show route-map ipc
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindwait
show tag-switching atm-tdp capability
show tag-switching atm-tdp summary
show tag-switching cos-map
show tag-switching forwarding-table
show tag-switching forwarding vrf
show tag-switching interfaces
show tag-switching prefix-map
show tag-switching tdp bindings
show mpoa client statistics
To display all the statistics collected by an MPC, use the show mpoa client statistics command in EXEC mode.
show mpoa client [name mpc-name] statistics
Syntax Description
name mpc-name
|
(Optional) Specifies the name of the MPC.
|
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.3(3a)WA4(5)
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
This command displays all the statistics collected by an MPC.
Examples
The following is sample output from the show mpoa client statistics command for the MPC named ip_mpc:
Router# show mpoa client name ip_mpc statistics
MPC Name: ip_mpc, Interface: ATM1/0, State: Up
MPC actual operating address: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.0010A6943825.00
Shortcut-Setup Count: 1, Shortcut-Setup Time: 1
MPOA Resolution Requests 2 0
MPOA Resolution Replies 0 2
MPOA Cache Imposition Requests 0 0
MPOA Cache Imposition Replies 0 0
MPOA Cache Purge Requests 0 0
MPOA Cache Purge Replies 0 0
Invalid MPOA Data Packets Received: 0
show mpoa default-atm-addresses
To display the default ATM addresses for the MPC, use the show mpoa default-atm-addresses command in EXEC mode.
show mpoa default-atm-addresses
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.3(3a)WA4(5)
|
This command was introduced.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show mpoa default-atm-addresses command when the switch prefix is NOT available:
Router# show mpoa default-atm-addresses
MPOA Server: ...006070174824.**
MPOA Client: ...006070174825.**
note: ** is the MPS/MPC instance number in hex
MPOA Server: ...006070174844.**
MPOA Client: ...006070174845.**
note: ** is the MPS/MPC instance number in hex
The following is sample output from the show mpoa default-atm-addresses command when the switch prefix is available:
Router# show mpoa default-atm-addresses
MPOA Server: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.006070174824.**
MPOA Client: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.006070174825.**
note: ** is the MPS/MPC instance number in hex
MPOA Server: 47.100000000000000000000000.006070174844.**
MPOA Client: 47.100000000000000000000000.006070174845.**
note: ** is the MPS/MPC instance number in hex
Table 82 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 82 show mpoa default-atm-addresses Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
interface ATM1/0
|
Specified interface.
|
MPOA Server
|
ATM address of the MPOA server on the interface.
|
MPOA Client
|
ATM address of the MPOA client on the interface.
|
show mpoa server
To display information about any specified MPS or all MPSs in the system, depending on whether the name of the required MPS is specified, use the show mpoa server command in EXEC mode.
show mpoa server [name mps-name]
Syntax Description
name mps-name
|
(Optional) Specifies the name of the MPOA server.
|
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.3(3a)WA4(5)
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
The command displays information about server configuration parameters. It also displays information about LAN Emulated Clients (LECs) that are bound to the MPOA server neighbors (both MPC and MPS).
Examples
The following is sample output from the show mpoa server command, with a specified name:
Router# show mpoa server name ip_mps
MPS Name: ip_mps, MPS id: 0, Interface: ATM1/0, State: up
network-id: 1, Keepalive: 25 secs, Holding time: 1200 secs
Keepalive lifetime: 75 secs, Giveup time: 40 secs
MPS actual operating address: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.006070174824.00
Lane clients bound to MPS ip_mps: ATM1/0.1 ATM1/0.2
MPC 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.00000C5A0C5D.00 vcds: 39(R,A)
MPC 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.0010A6943825.00 vcds: 40(R,A)
Table 83 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 83 show mpoa server Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
MPS Name
|
Name of the MPOA server.
|
MPS id
|
ID of the MPOA server.
|
Interface
|
Interface to which the MPS is attached.
|
State
|
State of the MPOA server: up or down.
|
network-id
|
Network ID used for partitioning.
|
Keepalive
|
Keepalive time value.
|
Holding time
|
Holding time value.
|
Keepalive lifetime
|
Keepalive lifetime value.
|
Giveup time
|
Minimum time to wait before giving up on a pending resolution request.
|
MPS actual operating address
|
Actual control address of this MPS.
|
Lane clients bound to MPS ip_mps
|
List of LANE clients served by the MPS.
|
Discovered neighbours
|
MPOA devices discovered by the clients bound to this MPS.
|
Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
clear mpoa server name
|
Clears the ingress and egress cache entries of one or all MPCs.
|
show mpoa server cache
To display ingress and egress cache entries associated with an MPS, use the show mpoa server cache command in EXEC mode.
show mpoa server [name mps-name] cache [ingress | egress] [ip-address ip-address]
Syntax Description
name mps-name
|
(Optional) Specifies the name of an MPOA server.
|
ingress
|
(Optional) Displays ingress cache entries associated with a server.
|
egress
|
(Optional) Displays egress cache entries associated with a server.
|
ip-address ip-address
|
(Optional) Displays the entries that match the specified IP address.
|
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
This command displays ingress and egress cache entries associated with an MPS.
Examples
The following is sample output from the show mpoa server cache command, with a name specified:
Router# show mpoa server name ip_mps cache
MPS Name: ip_mps, MPS id: 0, Interface: ATM1/0, State: up
network-id: 1, Keepalive: 25 secs, Holding time: 1200 secs
Keepalive lifetime: 75 secs, Giveup time: 40 secs
MPS actual operating address: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.006070174824.00
Number of Ingress cache entries: 1
Ingress Cache information:
IP address Ingress MPC ATM Address Remaining Time
20.20.20.1 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.0010A6943825.00 19:07
Number of Egress cache entries: 1
Egress Cache information:
Dst IP address Ingress MPC ATM Address Remaining Time
20.20.20.1 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.0010A6943825.00 19:06
src IP 20.20.20.2, cache Id 1
Table 84 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 84 show mpoa server cache Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
MPS Name
|
Name of the MPOA server.
|
MPS id
|
ID of the MPOA server.
|
Interface
|
Interface to which the MPS is attached.
|
State
|
State of the MPOA server: up or down.
|
network-id
|
Network ID used for partitioning.
|
Keepalive
|
Keepalive time value.
|
Holding time
|
Holding time value.
|
Keepalive lifetime
|
Keepalive lifetime value.
|
Giveup time
|
Minimum time to wait before giving up on a pending resolution request.
|
MPS actual operating address
|
Actual control address of this MPS.
|
Number of Ingress cache entries
|
Number of entries in the ingress cache.
|
Ingress Cache information
|
Information of ingress cache.
|
IP address
|
IP address of the MPC.
|
Ingress MPC ATM Address
|
ATM address of the ingress MPC.
|
Remaining Time
|
Time for which the cache entry is valid.
|
Number of Egress cache entries
|
Number of entries in the egress cache.
|
Egress Cache information
|
Information of egress cache.
|
Dst IP address
|
IP address of the destination.
|
src IP
|
IP address of the source MPS that originated the NHRP resolution request.
|
cache Id
|
Cache identifier.
|
show mpoa server statistics
To display all the statistics collected by an MPS, use the show mpoa server statistics command in EXEC mode.
show mpoa server [name mps-name] statistics
Syntax Description
name mps-name
|
(Optional) Specifies the name of an MPOA server.
|
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
This command will display all the statistics collected by an MPS. The statistics pertain to the ingress or egress cache entry creation, deletion, and failures.
Examples
The following is a sample output from the show mpoa server statistics command, with a name specified:
Router# show mpoa server name ip_mps statistics
MPS Name: ip_mps, MPS id: 0, Interface: ATM1/0, State: up
network-id: 1, Keepalive: 25 secs, Holding time: 1200 secs
Keepalive lifetime: 75 secs, Giveup time: 40 secs
MPS actual operating address: 47.00918100000000613E5A2F01.006070174824.00
Opcode Transmitted Received
---------------------------------------------------------
MPOA Resolution Requests 2
MPOA Resolution Replies 2
MPOA Cache Imposition Requests 1
MPOA Cache Imposition Replies 1
MPOA Egress Cache Purge Requests 0
MPOA Egress Cache Purge Replies 0
NHRP Resolution Requests 0 0
NHRP Resolution Replies 0 0
Table 85 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 85 show mpoa server statistics Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
MPS Name
|
Name of the MPOA server.
|
MPS id
|
ID of the MPOA server.
|
Interface
|
Specified interface.
|
State
|
State of the MPOA server: up or down.
|
network-id
|
Network ID used for partitioning.
|
Keepalive
|
Keepalive time value.
|
Holding time
|
Holding time value.
|
Keepalive lifetime
|
Keepalive lifetime value.
|
Giveup time
|
Minimum time to wait before giving up on a pending resolution request.
|
MPS actual operating address
|
Actual control address of this MPS.
|
show pxf accounting
To show PXF switching statistics for individual interfaces, use the show pxf accounting EXEC command.
show pxf accounting interface [slot/port]
Syntax Description
interface
|
Specifies the type of interface to display.
|
slot
|
(Optional) Backplane slot number. On the Cisco 7200 VXR series routers, the value can be from 0 to 6.
|
port
|
(Optional) Port number of the interface. On the Cisco 7200 VXR series routers, the value can be from 0 to 5.
|
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(1)E
|
This command was introduced.
|
12.1(5)T
|
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(5)T.
|
Usage Guidelines
You can display information about the following interface types using the show pxf accounting command, as shown in Table 86:
Table 86 show pxf accounting Interface Types
Keyword
|
Interface Type
|
atm
|
ATM interface.
|
ethernet
|
Ethernet interface.
|
fastethernet
|
FastEthernet interface.
|
hssi
|
High Speed Serial interface.
|
null
|
Null interface.
|
pos
|
Packet-over-SONET interface.
|
serial
|
Synchronous serial interface.
|
summary
|
PXF summary statistics.
|
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting ? command:
Router# show pxf accounting ?
FastEthernet FastEthernet IEEE 802.3
Hssi High Speed Seriel Interface
summary PXF summary statistics
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting ethernet command using an Ethernet interface in slot 4 on a Cisco 7200 VXR series router:
Router# show pxf accounting ethernet 4/0
Interface Pkts In Chars In Pkts Out Chars Out Punted Dropped
Ethernet4/0 0 0 122 11490 4 0
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting null command using a null interface in slot 0 on a Cisco 7200 VXR series router:
Router# show pxf accounting null 0/0
Interface Pkts In Chars In Pkts Out Chars Out Punted Dropped
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting pos command using a Packet-over-SONET interface in slot 4 on a Cisco 7200 VXR series router:
Router# show pxf accounting pos
Interface Pkts In Chars In Pkts Out Chars Out Punted Dropped
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting serial command using a serial interface in slot 5 on a Cisco 7200 VXR series router:
Router# show pxf accounting serial 5/0
Interface Pkts In Chars In Pkts Out Chars Out Punted Dropped
The following is sample output from the show pxf accounting summary command:
Router# show pxf accounting summary
Pkts Dropped RP Processed Ignored
" CEF no adjacency : 7788
Packets ignored: 0 | ring space:
shadow ring full: 0 | shadow ring: 16384
in ring full: 0 | inring: 968
tx credits: 16230330 | delayed credits: 0
holdq enqueues: 0 | requeue drops: 0
interrupts: 40538 | interrupt misses: 1947
Interface Pkts In Chars In Pkts Out Chars Out Punted Dropped
Fa0/0 0 0 30000000 1740000000 970 0
PO4/0 30000000 1440000000 0 0 963 0
Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
show pxf crash
|
Displays PXF crash information.
|
show pxf feature
|
Displays the PXF routing feature tables for enabled PXF features.
|
show pxf interface
|
Displays a summary of the interfaces in the router and the PXF features or capabilities enabled on these interfaces.
|
show pxf crash
To show PXF crash information, use the show pxf crash EXEC command.
show pxf crash
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(1)E
|
This command was introduced.
|
12.1(5)T
|
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(5)T.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show pxf crash command:
EX_ID(b0~3,16~17) = 0x00400
CPU_EX_ID(b0~15) = 0x0004
Pipeline:7FDEFD pdone[3210]:1F 17 17 1D
ICM0(b4~13) = 0x00000 ICM1(b4~13) = 0x00000
ICM2(b4~13) = 0x00010 ICM3(b4~13) = 0x00000
LOCK0(b0~4) = 0x00000 LOCK1(b0~4) = 0x00000
LOCK2(b0~4) = 0x00000 LOCK3(b0~4) = 0x00000
CPU0/2: SW EX Type=0x00000000 LBUS EX Type=0x00000081 HW EX
CPU:row=0x0 column=0x2 cpu=0x2
PC:0000098E LR:0000087F CR:002C4C00
r0:00000000 r1:8001CEA0 r2:80784390 r3:00000000
r4:00005400 r5:80D3BA04 r6:80A7CA00 r7:00000004
r8:00000000 r9:00000008 r10:80092324 r11:800A6200
r12:00000033 r13:00000008 r14:00000000 r15:00000000
misr1a:00000000 misr1bhi:00000000 misr1blo:00000000 misr2hi:00000000
misr2lo:00000000 reserve:00000000 reserve:00000000 reserve:00000000
sisr1a:01000040 sisr1b:00000000 irhi:4402200F irlo:00000000
cAll:C20DE822 DCD1:00020400 DCD2:00000002 CNTL:00000000
TBuf addr 0:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 0:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 0:804FD600
TBuf addr 1:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 1:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 1:804FD600
TBuf addr 2:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 2:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 2:804FD600
TBuf addr 3:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 3:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 3:804FD600
TBuf addr 4:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 4:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 4:804FD600
TBuf addr 5:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 5:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 5:804FD600
TBuf addr 6:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 6:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 6:804FD600
TBuf addr 7:005E6800 TBuf sblock1 7:8078A374 TBuf sblock0 7:804FD600
show pxf feature cef
To display PXF routing feature tables for Cisco Express Forwarding (CEF), use the show pxf feature cef EXEC command.
show pxf feature cef entry
Syntax Description
entry
|
Display the PXF entry.
|
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(1)E
|
This command was introduced.
|
12.1(5)T
|
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(5)T.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show pxf feature cef command:
Router# show pxf feature cef entry
Shadow 16-4-4-8 PXF Mtrie:
41 leaves, 1968 leaf bytes, 15 nodes, 267000 node bytes
refcounts: 66746 leaf, 66720 node
Prefix/Length Refcount Parent
171.69.12.128/27 34 0.0.0.0/0
171.69.12.128/32 3 171.69.12.128/27
171.69.12.129/32 3 171.69.12.128/27
171.69.12.130/32 3 171.69.12.128/27
171.69.12.131/32 3 171.69.12.128/27
171.69.12.147/32 3 171.69.12.128/27
Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
show pxf feature nat
|
Displays PXF routing feature tables for NAT.
|
show pxf feature nat
To display PXF routing tables for Network Address Translation (NAT), use the show pxf feature nat EXEC command.
show pxf feature nat [entry | stat | tcp]
Syntax Description
entry
|
Displays NAT information.
|
stat
|
Displays NAT processing information.
|
tcp
|
Displays NAT TCP logging information.
|
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(1)E
|
This command was introduced.
|
12.1(5)T
|
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(5)T.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show pxf feature command:
Router# show pxf feature nat 1
--- 171.69.12.175 192.168.0.129 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.163 192.168.0.7 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.161 192.168.0.13 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.162 192.168.0.3 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.165 192.168.0.8 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.168 192.168.0.14 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.170 192.168.0.12 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.166 192.168.0.15 --- ---
--- 171.69.12.164 192.168.0.16 --- ---
Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
show pxf feature cef
|
Displays PXF routing feature tables for CEF.
|
show pxf interface
To show a summary of the interfaces on the router and the PXF features or capabilities enabled on these interfaces, use the show pxf interface command.
show pxf interface
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.1(3a)E
|
This command was introduced.
|
12.1(5)T
|
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(5)T.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show pxf interface command:
Router# show pxf interface
Fa0/0 3 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 101)
Et1/1 5 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 13)
Se2/0 8 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 5)
Se2/1 9 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 5)
Se2/2 10 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 5)
Se2/3 11 Raw, Encap, QoS(Cr 0, Thrsh 2, Max 5)
Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
show pxf feature
|
Displays the PXF routing feature tables for enabled PXF features.
|
show route-map ipc
To display counts of the one-way route map IPC messages sent from the RP to the VIP when NetFlow policy routing is configured, use the show route-map ipc command in EXEC mode.
show route-map ipc
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0(3)T
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
If you execute this command on the RP, the messages are shown as "Sent." If you execute this command on the VIP console, the IPC messages are shown as "Received."
Examples
The following is sample output of the show route-map ipc command when it is executed on the RP:
Router# show route-map ipc
Route-map RP IPC Config Updates Sent
The following is sample output of the show route-map ipc command when it is executed on the VIP:
Router# show route-map ipc
Route-map LC IPC Config Updates Received
Table 87 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 87 show route-map ipc Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
Route-map RP IPC Config Updates Sent
|
Indicates that IPC messages are being sent from the RP to the VIP.
|
Name:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the name of the route map.
|
Match access-list:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the access list.
|
Match length
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the length to match.
|
Set precedence:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the precedence.
|
Set tos:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the type of service (ToS).
|
Set nexthop:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the next hop.
|
Set interface:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the interface.
|
Set default nexthop:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the default next hop.
|
Set default interface:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about the default interface.
|
Clean all:
|
Number of IPC messages sent about clearing the policy routing configuration from the VIP. When dCEF is disabled and reenabled, the configuration related to policy routing must be removed (cleaned) from the VIP before the new information is downloaded from the RP to the VIP.
|
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings
To display the requested entries from the ATM LDP label bindings database, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings EXEC command.
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings [A.B.C.D {mask | length}][local-tag | remote-tag vpi vci]
[neighbor atm slot/subslot/port][remote-tag vpi vci]
Syntax Description
A.B.C.D
|
(Optional) Destination of the prefix.
|
mask
|
(Optional) Destination netmask prefix.
|
length
|
(Optional) Netmask length, in the range from 1 to 32.
|
local-tag vpi vci
|
(Optional) Matches locally assigned label values.
|
neighbor atm slot/subslot/port
|
(Optional) Matches labels assigned by a neighbor on the specified ATM interface.
|
remote-tag vpi vci
|
(Optional) Matches remotely assigned label values.
|
Defaults
Displays all database entries.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0(5)T
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
The display output can show the entire database or a subset of entries based on the prefix, the VC label value, or an assigning interface.
Examples
The following is sample output from this command:
Switch# show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings
Destination: 13.13.13.6/32
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (2 hops) 1/33 Active, VCD=8, CoS=available
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (2 hops) 1/34 Active, VCD=9, CoS=standard
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (2 hops) 1/35 Active, VCD=10, CoS=premium
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (2 hops) 1/36 Active, VCD=11, CoS=control
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (1 hop) 1/37 Active, VCD=4, CoS=available
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (1 hop) 1/34 Active, VCD=5, CoS=standard
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (1 hop) 1/35 Active, VCD=6, CoS=premium
Headend Router ATM1/0.1 (1 hop) 1/36 Active, VCD=7, CoS=control
Destination: 13.0.0.18/32
Tailend Router ATM1/0.1 1/33 Active, VCD=8
Table 88 describes the significant fields in the sample command output shown above.
Table 88 show tag-switching atm-tdp bindings Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
Destination:
|
Destination IP address or length of the netmask
|
Headend Router
|
VC type:
• Headend—VC that originates at this router
• Tailend—VC that terminates at this router
|
ATM1/0.1
|
ATM interface .
|
1/33
|
VPI/VCI.
|
Active
|
LVC state. Can be either of the following:
• Active—Set up and working
• Bindwait—Waiting for response
|
Related Commands
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindwait
To display the number of bindings waiting for label assignments from a remote MPLS ATM switch, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp bindwait EXEC command.
show tag-switching atm-tdp bindwait
Syntax Description
This command has no keywords or arguments.
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0(5)T
|
This command was introduced.
|
Related Commands
show tag-switching atm-tdp capability
To display the ATM LDP label capabilities, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp capability command in privileged EXEC mode.
show tag-switching atm-tdp capability
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.1 CT
|
This command was introduced.
|
Examples
The following example shows the display from the show tag-switching atm-tdp capability command:
Router> show tag-switching atm-tdp capability
VPI VCI Alloc Odd/Even VC Merge
ATM0/1/0 Range Range Scheme Scheme IN OUT
Negotiated [100 - 101] [33 - 1023] UNIDIR - -
Local [100 - 101] [33 - 16383] UNIDIR EN EN
Peer [100 - 101] [33 - 1023] UNIDIR - -
VPI VCI Alloc Odd/Even VC Merge
ATM0/1/1 Range Range Scheme Scheme IN OUT
Negotiated [201 - 202] [33 - 1023] BIDIR - -
Local [201 - 202] [33 - 16383] UNIDIR ODD NO NO
Peer [201 - 202] [33 - 1023] BIDIR EVEN - -
Table 89 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 89 show tag-switching atm-tdp capability Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
VPI Range
|
Minimum and maximum number of VPIs supported on this interface.
|
VCI Range
|
Minimum and maximum number of VCIs supported on this interface.
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Alloc Scheme
|
UNIDIR—Unidirectional capability indicates that the peer device can, within a single VPI, support binding of the same VCI to different prefixes on different directions of the link.
BIDIR—Bidirectional capability indicates that within a single VPI, a single VCI can appear in one binding only. In this case, one peer device allocates bindings in the even VCI space, and the other in the odd VCI space. The system with the lower LDP identifier will assign even-numbered VCIs.
The negotiated allocation scheme is UNIDIR if and only if both peer devices have UNIDIR capability. Otherwise it is BIDIR.
|
Odd/Even Scheme
|
Indicates whether the local device or the peer device is assigning an odd- or even-numbered VCI when the negotiated scheme is BIDIR. It does not display any information when the negotiated scheme is UNIDIR.
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VC Merge
|
Indicates the type of VC merge support on this interface.
IN—Indicates input interface merge capability. IN accepts the following values:
• EN—The hardware interface supports VC merge and VC merge is enabled on the device.
• DIS—The hardware interface supports VC merge and VC merge is disabled on the device.
• NO—The hardware interface does not support VC merge.
OUT—Indicates output interface merge capability. OUT accepts the same values as the input merge side.
The VC merge capability is meaningful only on ATM switches. It is not negotiated.
|
Negotiated
|
Set of options that both LDP peer devices have agreed to share on this interface. For example, the VPI or VCI allocation on either peer device remains within the negotiated ranges.
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Local
|
Options supported locally on this interface.
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Peer
|
Options supported by the remote LDP peer device on this interface.
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Related Commands
show tag-switching atm-tdp summary
To display summary information on ATM label bindings, use the show tag-switching atm-tdp summary command in privileged EXEC mode.
show tag-switching atm-tdp summary
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.1 CT
|
This command was introduced.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show tag-switching atm-tdp summary command:
Router> show tag-switching atm-tdp summary
Total number of destinations: 788
TC-ATM bindings summary
interface total active bindwait local remote other
ATM0/0/0 594 592 1 296 298 1
ATM0/0/1 590 589 0 294 296 1
ATM0/0/2 1179 1178 0 591 588 1
ATM0/0/3 1177 1176 0 592 585 1
ATM0/1/0 1182 1178 4 590 588 0
Waiting for bind on ATM0/0/0 10.21.0.0/24
Table 90 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 90 show tag-switching atm-tdp summary Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
Total number of destinations
|
The number of known destination address prefixes.
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interface
|
The name of an interface that has associated ATM label bindings.
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total
|
The total number of ATM labels on this interface.
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active
|
The number of ATM labels in an "active" state that are ready to be used for data transfer.
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bindwait
|
The number of bindings that are waiting for a label assignment from the neighbor LSR.
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local
|
The number of ATM labels assigned by this LSR on this interface.
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remote
|
The number of ATM labels assigned by the neighbor LSR on this interface.
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other
|
The number of ATM labels in a state other than "active" or "bindwait."
|
Waiting for bind on ATM0/0/0
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A list of the destination address prefixes (on a particular interface) that are waiting for ATM label assignment from the neighbor LSR.
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Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
show isis database verbose
|
Displays the requested entries from the ATM LDP label binding database.
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show tag-switching cos-map
To display the QoS map used to assign a quantity of label VCs (LVCs) and an associated QoS of those LVCs, use the show tag-switching cos-map EXEC command in EXEC mode.
show tag-switching cos-map
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0(5)T
|
This command was introduced.
|
Examples
The following example shows output from this command:
Router# show tag-switching cos-map
Table 91 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 91 show tag-switching cos-map Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
cos-map
|
Configures a class map, which specifies how classes map to MPLS VCs when combined with a prefix map.
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class
|
The IP precedence.
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tag-VC
|
An ATM VC that is set up through ATM LSR label distribution procedures.
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Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
class (MPLS)
|
Configures an MPLS CoS map that specifies how classes map to LVCs when combined with a prefix map.
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tag-switching cos-map
|
Creates a class map that specifies how classes map to LVCs when combined with a prefix map.
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show tag-switching forwarding-table
The show tag-switching forwarding-table command is replaced by the show mpls forwarding-table command. See the show mpls forwarding-table command for more information.
show tag-switching forwarding vrf
The show tag-switching forwarding vrf command is replaced by the show mpls forwarding-table command. See the show mpls forwarding-table command for more information.
show tag-switching interfaces
The show tag-switching interfaces command is replaced by the show mpls interfaces command. See the show mpls interfaces command for more information.
show tag-switching prefix-map
To show the prefix map used to assign a QoS map to network prefixes matching a standard IP access list, use the show tag-switching prefix-map command in EXEC mode.
show tag-switching prefix-map [prefix-map]
Syntax Description
prefix-map
|
(Optional) Specifies the prefix-map number.
|
Defaults
No default behavior or values.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
12.0(5)T
|
This command was introduced.
|
Examples
The following is sample output from the show tag-switching prefix-map command:
Router# show tag-switching prefix-map
prefix-map 2 access-list 2 cos-map 2
Table 92 describes the significant fields shown in the output.
Table 92 show tag-switching prefix-map Field Description
Field
|
Description
|
prefix-map
|
Unique number of a prefix map.
|
access-list
|
Unique number of an access list.
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cos- map
|
Unique number of a QoS map.
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Related Commands
Command
|
Description
|
tag-switching prefix-map
|
Displays the prefix map used to assign a QoS map to network prefixes matching a standard IP access list.
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show tag-switching tdp bindings
To display the contents of the label information base (LIB), use the show tag-switching tdp bindings command in privileged EXEC mode.
show tag-switching tdp bindings [network{mask | length} [longer-prefixes]] [local-tag tag
[- tag]] [remote-tag tag [- tag]] [neighbor address] [local]
Syntax Description
network
|
(Optional) Destination network number.
|
mask
|
(Optional) Network mask written as A.B.C.D.
|
length
|
(Optional) Mask length (1 to 32 characters).
|
longer-prefixes
|
(Optional) Selects any prefix that matches the mask with length value to 32.
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local-tag tag - tag
|
(Optional) Displays entries matching local label values by this router. Use the - tag argument to indicate the label range.
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remote-tag tag - tag
|
(Optional) Displays entries matching label values assigned by a neighbor router. Use the - tag argument to indicate the label range.
|
neighbor address
|
(Optional) Displays label bindings assigned by selected neighbor.
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local
|
(Optional) Displays local label bindings.
|
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
|
Modification
|
11.1 CT
|
This command was introduced.
|
Usage Guidelines
A request can specify that the entire database be shown, or it or can be limited to a subset of entries. A request to show a subset of entries can be based on the prefix, on input or output label values or ranges, or on the neighbor advertising the label.
Examples
The following is sample output from the show tag-switching tdp bindings command. This form of the command causes the contents of the entire LIB (TIB) to be displayed.
Router# show tag-switching tdp bindings
tib entry: 10.92.0.0/16, rev 28
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.102.0.0/16, rev 29
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 26
tib entry: 10.105.0.0/16, rev 30
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.205.0.0/16, rev 31
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.211.0.7/32, rev 32
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 28
tib entry: 10.220.0.7/32, rev 33
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 29
tib entry: 99.101.0.0/16, rev 35
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 100.101.0.0/16, rev 36
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 171.69.204.0/24, rev 37
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 172.27.32.0/22, rev 38
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 210.10.0.0/16, rev 39
local binding: tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 210.10.0.8/32, rev 40
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 27
The following is sample output from the show tag-switching tdp bindings 10.0.0.0 8 longer-prefixes neighbor 172.27.32.29 variant of the command; it displays labels learned from LSR (TSR) 172.27.32.29 for network 10.0.0.0 and any of its subnets. The use of the neighbor option suppresses the output of local labels and labels learned from other neighbors.
Router# show tag-switching tdp bindings 10.0.0.0 8 longer-prefixes neighbor 172.27.32.29
tib entry: 10.92.0.0/16, rev 28
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.102.0.0/16, rev 29
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 26
tib entry: 10.105.0.0/16, rev 30
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.205.0.0/16, rev 31
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: imp-null(1)
tib entry: 10.211.0.7/32, rev 32
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 28
tib entry: 10.220.0.7/32, rev 33
remote binding: tsr: 172.27.32.29:0, tag: 29
Table 93 describes the significant fields in the output.
Table 93 show tag-switching tdp bindings Field Descriptions
Field
|
Description
|
tib entry
|
Indicates that the following lines are the LIB (TIB) entry for a particular destination (network/mask). The revision number is used internally to manage label distribution for this destination.
|
remote binding
|
A list of outgoing labels for this destination learned from other Label Switching Routers (LSRs). Each item on this list identifies the LSR from which the outgoing label was learned and the label itself. The LSR is identified by its LDP identifier.
|
imp-null
|
The implicit null label. This label value instructs the upstream router to pop the label entry off the label stack before forwarding the packet.
|
Related Commands