show smds addresses through waas export

show smds addresses

To display the individual addresses and the interface they are associated with, use the show smds addresses privileged EXEC command.

show smds addresses

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show smds addresses command:


Router# show smds addresses
SMDS address - Serial0   c141.5555.1212.FFFF	

The table below describes the fields shown in the display.

Table 1. show smds addresses Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Serial0

Interface to which this SMDS address has been assigned.

c141.5555.1212

SMDS address that has been assigned to the interface.

show smds map

To display all Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) addresses that are mapped to higher-level protocol addresses, use the show smds map privileged EXEC command.

show smds map

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show smds map command:


Router# show smds map
Serial0: ARP maps to e180.0999.9999.FFFF multicast
Serial0: IP maps to e180.0999.9999.FFFF	 172.16.42.112 255.255.255.0 multicast
Serial0: IPX 1ABC.000.0c00.d8db maps to c111.1111.1111.1111 -- dynamic, TTL: 4 min

The table below describes the fields shown in the output.

Table 2. show smds map Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Serial0

Name of interface on which SMDS has been enabled.

ARP maps to

Higher-level protocol address that maps to this particular SMDS address.

e180.0999.9999.FFFF

SMDS address. Includes all SMDS addresses entered with either the smds static-map command (static) or smds multicast command (multicast).

172.16.42.112

IP address.

255.255.255.0

Subnet mask for the IP address.

static/dynamic

The address was obtained from a static map or dynamic map.

TTL

Time to live.

show smds traffic

To display statistics about Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) packets the router has received, use the show smds traffic privileged EXEC command.

show smds traffic

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show smds traffic command:


Router# show smds traffic
624363 Input packets
759695 Output packets
2 DXI heartbeat sent
0 DXI heartbeat received
0 DXI DSU polls received
0 DXI DSU polls sent
0 DXI invalid test frames
0 Bad BA size errors
0 Bad Header extension errors
65 Invalid address errors
1 Bad tag errors

The table below describes the fields shown in the output.

Table 3. show smds traffic Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Input packets

Number of input packets.

Output packets

Number of output packets.

DXI heartbeat sent

Number of Data Exchange Interface (DXI) heartbeat polls transmitted.

DXI heartbeat received

Number of DXI heartbeat polls received.

DXI DSU polls sent

Number of DXI Data Service Unit (DSU) polls sent.

DXI DSU polls received

Number of DXI DSU polls received.

DXI invalid test frames

Number of invalid test frames seen.

Bad BA size errors

Number of packets that have a size less than 32 or greater than 9188 bytes.

DXI Header extension errors

Number of extended SMDS Interface Protocol (SIP) Layer 3 header errors.

DXI Invalid address errors

Number of address errors.

Bad tag errors

Status indicating the number of errors that occur when there is a mismatch between the Tag value in the header and the BeTag value in the trailer of an SMDS frame. This usually indicates that there is a misconfiguration (that is, a DXI is connected to a non-DXI) or that the SMDS data service unit (SDSU) is scrambling the Layer 2 protocol data units (PDUs).

show srcp

To display Simple Resource Coordination Protocol (SRCP) information, use the show srcp command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show srcp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.4(24)T

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.4(24)T.

Examples

The following is sample output for show srcp command:


Router# show srcp
SRCP Admin State ACTIVE, Oper State ACTIVE
SRCP UDP port 2428

The table below describes the fields shown in the display.

Table 4. show srcp Field Descriptions

Field

Description

SRCP Admin State

Administrative state of the SRCP daemon.

Oper State

Operational state of the SRCP daemon.

SRCP UDP Port

The User Datagram Protocol (UDP) port used for the specified connection.

show vc-group

To display the names of all virtual circuit (VC) groups, use the show vc-group command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show vc-group [group-name]

Syntax Description

group-name

(Optional) Name defined by the vc-group command. If this argument is not specified, the names of all VC groups in the system are displayed.

Command Default

The names of all VC groups in the system are displayed.

Command Modes


User EXEC
Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following example shows the default display of the show vc-group EXEC command:


Router# show vc-group
Name of All VC Groups:
======================
network-1

show vfi

To display information related to a virtual forwarding instance (VFI), use the show vfi command in privileged EXEC mode.

show vfi [checkpoint [summary] | mac static address | memory [detail] | name vfi-name [checkpoint | mac static address] | neighbor ip-addr vcid vcid mac static address]

Syntax Description

checkpoint

(Optional) Displays VFI checkpoint information.

summary

(Optional) Displays a summary of VFI checkpoint information.

mac static address

(Optional) Displays static MAC addresses in a bridge domain.

memory

(Optional) Displays VFI memory usage.

detail

(Optional) Displays details of VFI memory usage.

name

(Optional) Displays information for the specified VFI.

vfi-name

(Optional) Name of a specific VFI.

neighbor

(Optional) Displays VFI neighbor information.

ip-addr

(Optional) IP address of the neighbor (remote peer).

vcid

(Optional) Displays the virtual circuit (VC) ID for a peer.

vcid

(Optional) Integer from 1 to 4294967295 that identifies the virtual circuit.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(33)SRA

This command was updated to display the Virtual Private Network (VPN) ID.

12.2(33)SRC

This command was modified. The name keyword was added.

12.2(33)SRE

This command was modified. The following keywords and arguments were added: address , checkpoint , detail , mac , memory , neighbor ip-addr , static , summary , and vcid vcid .

12.2(50)SY

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(50)SY.

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.7S

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 3.7S.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to verify VFI configurations and for troubleshooting.

Examples

The following example shows status for a VFI named VPLS-2. The VC ID in the output represents the VPN ID; the virtual circuit is identified by the combination of the destination address and the virtual circuit ID.


Router# show vfi name VPLS-2
VFI name: VPLS-2, state: up
  VPN ID: 100
  Local attachment circuits:
    Vlan2
  Neighbors connected via pseudowires:
  Peer Address     VC ID     Split-horizon
  10.1.1.1          2             Y
  10.1.1.2          2             Y
  10.2.2.3          2             N

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 5. show vfi name Field Descriptions

Field

Description

VFI name

The name assigned to the VFI.

state

The status of the VFI (up or down).

Local attachment circuits

The interface or VLAN assigned to the VFI.

Peer Address

The IP address of the peer router.

VC ID

The VC ID assigned to the pseudowire.

Split-horizon

Indicates whether split horizon is enabled (Y) or disabled (N).

The following is sample output from the show vfi command. For the Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) autodiscovery feature, the command output from the command output includes autodiscovery information, as shown in the following example:


Note

VPLS autodiscovery is not supported in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(50)SY.



Router# show vfi
Legend: RT= Route-target, S=Split-horizon, Y=Yes, N=No
VFI name: VPLS1, state: up, type: multipoint
  VPN ID: 10, VPLS-ID: 9:10
  RD: 9:10, RT: 10.10.10.10:150
  Local attachment circuits:
    Ethernet0/0.2 
  Neighbors connected via pseudowires:
  Peer Address      VC ID       Discovered Router ID       S
  10.7.7.1           10          10.7.7.1                  Y
  10.7.7.2           10          10.1.1.2                  Y
  10.7.7.3           10          10.1.1.3                  Y
  10.7.7.4           10          10.1.1.4                  Y
  10.7.7.5           10          -                         Y
VFI name: VPLS2 state: up, type: multipoint
  VPN ID: 11, VPLS-ID: 10.9.9.9:2345
  RD: 10:11, RT: 10.4.4.4:151
  Local attachment circuits:
    Ethernet0/0.3 
  Neighbors connected via pseudowires:
  Peer Address      VC ID       Discovered Router ID      S
  10.7.7.1           11          10.7.7.1                 Y
  10.7.7.2           11          10.1.1.5                 Y

The table below describes the significant fields in the output related to VPLS autodiscovery.

Table 6. show vfi Field Descriptions for VPLS Autodiscovery

Field

Description

VPLS-ID

The identifier of the VPLS domain. VPLS autodiscovery automatically generates a VPLS ID using the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) autonomous system number and the configured VFI VPN ID.

RD

The route distinguisher (RD) to distribute endpoint information. VPLS autodiscovery automatically generates an RD using the BGP autonomous system number and the configured VFI VPN ID.

RT

The route target (RT). VPLS autodiscovery automatically generates a route target using the lower 6 bytes of the RD and VPLS ID.

Discovered Router ID

A unique identifier assigned to the PE router. VPLS autodiscovery automatically generates the router ID using the Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) global router ID.

The following is sample output from the show vfi command for a specified VFI named H-VPLS-A-VFI. Because the optional name keyword is entered, the checkpoint information for the specific VFI is displayed.

Router# show vfi name H-VPLS-A-VFI checkpoint
VFI Active RP
Checkpointing: Allowed
ISSU Client id: 2092, Session id: 65543, Compatible with peer
VFI VFI AC VFI PW
Bulk-sync 1 1 3
Checkpoint failures: 0 3 21
Recovered at switchover: 0 0 0
Recovery failures: 0 0 0
Legend: C=Checkpointed
VFI name: H-VPLS-A-VFI, state: up, type: multipoint
VPN ID: 12, Internal ID 1 C
Local attachment circuits:
Vlan200 16387 / 8195 C
Neighbors connected via pseudowires:
Peer ID VC ID SSM IDs
10.0.0.12 12 4096 / 12292 C
10.0.0.15 12 8193 / 16389 C
10.0.0.14 12 12290 / 20486 C

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 7. show vfi name checkpointing Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Checkpointing

Specifies whether checkpointing is allowed on this VFI.

ISSU Client id

The ID number assigned to the In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) client.

Session id

The current VFI session ID number.

VFI

Status of the VFI.

VFI AC

Status of the Attachment Circuit (AC).

VFI PW

Status of the pseudowire for this VFI.

Checkpoint failures

The number of checkpoint failures on this interface.

Recovered at switchover

The number of checkpoint failures recovered on this interface at switchover.

Recovery failures

The number of checkpoint failures recovered on this interface.

VFI name

The name assigned to the VFI.

state

Status of the VFI (up or down).

type

VFI type.

VPN ID

The ID number of the VPN.

Local attachment circuits

The Interface or VLAN assigned to the VFI.

Peer ID

The IP address of the peer router.

VC ID

The VC ID assigned to the pseudowire.

The following is sample output from the show vfi command using the memory and detail keywords.


Router# show vfi memory detail
  VFI memory                   In-use Asked-For/Allocated Count  Size  Cfg/Max
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  VFI structs                  In-use Asked-For/Allocated Count  Size  Cfg/Max
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  vfi_context_t           :        --        --/--           --    52   --/--  
  vfi_circuit_retry       :        --        --/--           --    24   --/--  
  Total allocated: 0.000 Mb, 0 Kb, 0 bytes

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 8. show vfi memory detail Field Descriptions

Field

Description

VFI memory

Amount of memory available for use.

In-use

Amount of memory actively used.

Asked-For/Allocated

Amount of memory originally requested/amount of memory allocated.

Count

Number of pieces of this named memory that exist.

Size

Size of the memory allocated by the system for this chunk.

Config/Max

Number of chunklets per chunk.

VFI structs

Data structures being used.

Total allocated

Total allocated memory.

show waas accelerator

To display information about WAAS Express accelerators, use the show waas accelerator command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas accelerator [detail | cifs-express | http-express | ssl-express]

Syntax Description

detail

(Optional) Displays detailed information about the status and configuration of an accelerator.

cifs-express

(Optional) Displays status and configuration information about Common Internet File System (CIFS)-Express accelerator.

http-express

(Optional) Displays status and configuration information about HTTP-Express accelerator.

ssl-express

(Optional) Displays status and configuration information about Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express accelerator.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas accelerator command:

Router# show waas accelerator

Accelerator    Config State    Operational State
-----------    ------------    -----------------
http-express    Enabled         Shutdown
cifs-express    Disabled        Shutdown
ssl-express     Disabled        Shutdown

The table below describes the fields shown in the display.

Table 9. show waas accelerator Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Accelerator

Lists the name of accelerator—CIFS-Express, HTTP-Express, SSL-Express—configured on the WAAS Express device.

Config State

Configuration status of the accelerator, enabled or disabled.

Operational State

Operational status of the accelerator, running or shutdown.

The following is sample output from the show waas accelerator cifs-express command:

Router# show waas accelerator cifs-express

Accelerator     Config State    Operational State
------------    ------------    -----------------
cifs-express    Disabled        Shutdown

CIFS-Express:
   Accelerator Config Item              Value
   -----------------------              -----
   Read-Ahead Optimization              Enabled
                Read-Ahead size:        190
   Async-Write Optimization             Enabled
                Quota threshold:        20
   Ads Negative Cache Optimization      Enabled
                Timeout:                3

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 10. show waas accelerator cifs-express Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Read-Ahead Optimization

Configuration status of the read ahead feature.

Read-Ahead size

Configured value, in KB, of the data to read ahead per file.

Async-Write Optimization

Configuration status of the async write feature.

Quota threshold

Configured value, in MB, of the quota threshold for async write optimization.

Ads Negative Cache Optimization

Configuration status of the alternate data stream negative caching feature.

Timeout

Configured timeout value, in seconds, for negative caching entries.

The following is sample output from the show waas accelerator http-express command:

Router# show waas accelerator http-express

Accelerator     Config State    Operational State
------------    ------------    -----------------
http-express    Disabled        Shutdown

HTTP-Express:
   Accelerator Config Item              Value
   -----------------------              -----
   Suppress Server Encoding             Disabled
   DRE Hints                            Enabled
   Metadatacache                        Disabled
                MaxAge                  86400
                MinAge                  60
                Filter-extension        All
                Redirect                Enabled
                Unauthorized            Enabled
                Conditional             Enabled
   HTTPS Metadatacache                  Disabled

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 11. show waas accelerator http-express Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Suppress Server Encoding

Configuration status of the server encoding suppression feature.

DRE Hints

Configuration status of the Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) hints feature.

Metadatacache

Configuration status of HTTP metadata caching.

MaxAge

Configured maximum time, in seconds, for which cache entries are retained in the metadata cache table.

MinAge

Configured minimum time, in seconds, for which cache entries are retained in the metadata cache table.

Filter-extension

File extensions for which the metadata cache will be stored.

Redirect

Configuration status of the HTTP URL redirect feature.

Unauthorized

Configuration status of the HTTP authentication-redirect feature.

Conditional

Configuration status of the HTTP conditional requests feature.

HTTPS Metadatacache

Configuration status of HTTPS metadata caching.

The following is sample output from the show waas accelerator ssl-express command. The fields in the display are self-explanatory.

Router# show waas accelerator ssl-express

Accelerator     Config State    Operational State
------------    ------------    -----------------
ssl-express     Enabled         Running         

show waas alarms

To display WAAS Express status and alarms, use the show waas alarms command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas alarms

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display the status and alarms for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express accelerator parameters.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display the status of the WAAS Express device and display the alarms that are enabled in the system.

Examples

The following output from the show waas alarms command shows that alarms are enabled when the WAAS Express feature license expires:

Device# show waas alarms

Alarms
    Connection limit exceeded:              										off
    Too many peers discovered:              										off
    WAAS license expired:                   										off
    WAAS license revoked:                   										off
    WAAS license deleted:                   										on
				WAAS SSL-Express CA enrolled trustpoint deleted:  off
    WAAS SSL-Express router certificate deleted:      off
    High CPU:                               										off

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 12. show waas alarms Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Connection limit exceeded

Device exceeds the connection limit.

High CPU

CPU reaches maximum utilization.

show waas auto-discovery

To display autodiscovery information for the WAAS Express device, use the show waas auto-discovery command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas auto-discovery {list | blacklist}

Syntax Description

list

Displays the relevant autodiscovery states for the current connections.

blacklist

Displays the autodiscovery blocked list including the server address and state (grey or black).

Command Default

Autodiscovery information for the WAAS Express device is displayed with the associated connection states.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display connections being optimized and connections on which optimization is being negotiated.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas auto-discovery list command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas auto-discovery list
E: Established, S: Syn, A: Ack, F: Fin, R: Reset M: eMbryonic
s: sent, r: received, O: Options, P: Passthrough
	Src-IP:Port 						Dst-IP:Port     						Orig-St			Term-St
	192.168.111.111:65531 						192.168.200.200:65531						Sr 			SOs

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 13. show waas auto-discovery list Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Src-IP:Port

Source IP port number

Dst-IP:Port

Destination IP port number

Orig-St

Originating state

Term-St

Terminating state

The following is sample output from the show waas auto-discovery blacklist command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas auto-discovery blacklist
		Server IP           	 							Insert Time 							State
		192.168.111.111:65531 								Tue Jul 27 16:16:19 2010 							Grey

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 14. show waas auto-discovery blacklist Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Server IP

The server address.

Insert Time

The blocked list insert time.

State

  • Grey indicates that one acknowledgment was received without option 33. Grey also indicates that WAAS Express is in the validation state to add the IP address to the blocked list.

  • Black indicates that two acknowledgments were received without option 33. Black also indicates that packets are dropped with WAAS Express TCP options and are added to the blocked list. This enables WAAS Express to perform optimization.

show waas cache http-express metadatacache

To display WAAS Express HTTP metadata cache entries, use the show waas cache http-express metadatacache command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas cache http-express metadatacache {all | conditional-response | redirect-response | unauthorized-response}

Syntax Description

all

Displays all types of metadata caches.

conditional-response

Displays conditional-response metadata cache entries.

redirect-response

Displays redirect-response metadata cache entries.

unauthorized-response

Displays unauthorized-response metadata cache entries.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas cache http-express metadatacache all command:

Device# show waas cache http-express metadatacache all

Redirect cache
Active HTTP entries: 0, Active HTTPS entries: 0 Max Entries: 400

Conditional cache
Active HTTP entries: 0, Active HTTPS entries: 0 Max Entries: 2800

Unauthorized cache
Active HTTP entries: 0, Active HTTPS entries: 0 Max Entries: 800

The table below describes the fields shown in the display.

Table 15. show waas cache http-express metadatacache all Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Redirect cache

Active HTTP entries

Displays the number of current HTTP redirect cache entries. The cache entries are also displayed.

Active HTTPS entries

Displays the number of current HTTPS redirect cache entries. The cache entries are not displayed.

Max Entries

Displays the maximum number of redirect cache entries allowed.

Conditional cache

Active HTTP entries

Displays the number of current HTTP conditional cache entries. The cache entries are also displayed.

Active HTTPS entries

Displays the number of current HTTPS conditional cache entries. The cache entries are not displayed.

Max Entries

Displays the maximum number of conditional cache entries allowed.

Unauthorized cache

Active HTTP entries

Displays the number of current HTTP unauthorized cache entries. The cache entries are also displayed.

Active HTTPS entries

Displays the number of current HTTPS unauthorized cache entries. The cache entries are not displayed.

Max Entries

Displays the maximum number of unauthorized cache entries allowed.

show waas connection

To display the information for a Wide-Area Application Services (WAAS) Express connection, use the show waas connection command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas connection [closed] [conn-id conn-id] [client-ip client-ip] [client-port client-port] [server-ip server-ip] [server-port server-port] [peer-id peer-id] [brief | detailed]

Syntax Description

closed

(Optional) Displays the list of closed connections.

conn-id conn-id

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified connection ID.

client-ip client-ip

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified client.

client-port client-port

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified client port.

server-ip server-ip

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified server.

server-port server-port

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified server port.

peer-id peer-id

(Optional) Displays connection information for the specified peer.

brief

(Optional) Displays the connection summary.

detailed

(Optional) Displays information in a detailed format.

Command Default

For each connection, the following information is displayed:

  • Connection ID

  • Destination IP address and port number

  • Negotiated policy

  • Peer ID

  • Source IP address and port number

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display connection details for the following three WAAS Express accelerators: Common Internet File System (CIFS)-Express, Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express, and HTTP-Express.

15.2(4)M

This command was modified. The output was modified to display time in the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) format.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display the following WAAS Express connection information:

  • Client and server information

  • Compression used to optimize traffic

  • Time when a connection was initiated and closed

  • Reason for closing a connection

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas connection command:

Device# show waas connection

ConnID	Source IP:Port	    Dest IP:Port	        PeerID	Accel
1	192.168.20.99:51558	192.168.40.99:80	0021.5586.13df	  TLD

The following is sample output from the show waas connection detailed command:

Device# show waas connection detailed

connection  ID:                         6
Peer Id:                                0016.9d39.20bd
Connection Type:                        External
Start Time:                             03:16:07 UTC Jan 7 2012
Source IP Address:                      192.168.22.99
Source Port Number:                     43526
Destination IP Address:                 192.168.42.99
Destination Port Number:                443
Application Name:                       SSL
Classifier Name:                        HTTPS
Peer Policy:                            TFO
Configured Policy:                      TFO
Negotiated Policy:                      TFO, LZ, DRE
Configured Accelerator:                 SSL-Express
Derived Accelerator:                    SSL-Express
Applied Accelerator:                    SSL-Express, HTTP-Express
Hist. Accelerator:                      None
Bytes Read Orig:                        1905360
Bytes Written Orig:                     1054
Bytes Read Opt:                         28103
Bytes Written Opt:                      56378
Auto-discovery information:
    Orig-St                             E
    Term-St                             EO
TFO information:
    TFO Frames Read:                    215
    TFO Frames Written:                 232
LZ section

    Encode stats
        Bytes in                      265204
        Bytes out                     37421
        Bypass bytes                  8988
        Compression gain              85%
        Avg Latency in Cef            0 usec
        Avg Latency in Proc           722 usec

    Decode stats
        Bytes in                      68
        Bytes out                     72
        Bypass bytes                  9642
        Compression gain              5%
        Avg Latency in Cef            0 usec
        Avg Latency in Proc           1 usec
DRE section

    Encode stats
        R-tx total                    0
        R-tx chunk-miss               0
        R-tx collision                0
        Bytes in                      1884160
        Bytes out                     273638
        Bypass bytes                  467
        Compression gain              85%
        Avg latency                   1774 usec

    Decode stats
        Nacks generated               0
        Bytes in                      72
        Bytes out                     25
        Bypass bytes                  0
        Compression gain              0%
        Avg latency                   53 usec
SSL-Express AO section

        LAN Bytes read                      1905360
        LAN Bytes written                   1054
        WAN Bytes read                      28103
        WAN Bytes written                   58250

        LAN Handshake Bytes read            262
        LAN Handshake Bytes written         932
        WAN Handshake Bytes read            1362
        WAN Handshake Bytes written         340

        C2S version                         SSL 3.0
        W2W version                         TLS 1.0
        C2S cipher                          rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha
        W2W cipher                          rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha
HTTP-Express AO section

        LAN Bytes read                      1884627
        LAN Bytes written                   25
        WAN Bytes read                      25
        WAN Bytes written                   1884627

The following is sample output from the show waas connection closed detailed command:

Device# show waas connection closed detailed

connection  ID:                         2
Peer Id:                                0016.9d39.2209
Connection Type:                        External
Start Time:                             01:03:54 UTC May 18 2012
End Time:                               01:03:55 UTC May 18 2012
End Reason:                             Closed.
Source IP Address:                      192.168.12.99
Source Port Number:                     38798
Destination IP Address:                 192.168.32.99
Destination Port Number:                8080
Application Name:                       Web
Classifier Name:                        HTTP
Peer Policy:                            TFO, LZ, DRE
Configured Policy:                      TFO, LZ, DRE
Negotiated Policy:                      TFO, LZ, DRE
Configured Accelerator:                 HTTP-Express
Derived Accelerator:                    HTTP-Express
Applied Accelerator:                    HTTP-Express, SSL-Express
Hist. Accelerator:                      None
Bytes Read Orig:                        691
Bytes Written Orig:                     1969
Bytes Read Opt:                         2910
Bytes Written Opt:                      1301
Auto-discovery information:
    Orig-St                             E
    Term-St                             EO
TFO information:
    TFO Frames Read:                    4
    TFO Frames Written:                 2
    TFO EOT State:                      CONN_CLOSE
    TFO EOT:                            RS AR RR AS LFR LFS WFR WFS
LZ section

    Encode stats
        Bytes in                      0
        Bytes out                     0
        Bypass bytes                  400
        Compression gain              0%
        Avg Latency in Cef            0 usec
        Avg Latency in Proc           13 usec

    Decode stats
        Bytes in                      329
        Bytes out                     393
        Bypass bytes                  63
        Compression gain              16%
        Avg Latency in Cef            2 usec
        Avg Latency in Proc           3 usec
DRE section

    Encode stats
        R-tx total                    0
        R-tx chunk-miss               0
        R-tx collision                0
        Bytes in                      0
        Bytes out                     0
        Bypass bytes                  314
        Compression gain              0%
        Avg latency                   0 usec

    Decode stats
        Nacks generated               0
        Bytes in                      399
        Bytes out                     332
        Bypass bytes                  0
        Compression gain              0%
        Avg latency                   23 usec
SSL-Express AO section

        LAN Bytes read                      548
        LAN Bytes written                   1892
        WAN Bytes read                      2688
        WAN Bytes written                   1030

        LAN Handshake Bytes read            314
        LAN Handshake Bytes written         1509
        WAN Handshake Bytes read            2077
        WAN Handshake Bytes written         392

        C2S version                         SSL 3.0
        W2W version                         TLS 1.0
        C2S cipher                          dhe-rsa-with-aes-256-cbc-sha
        W2W cipher                          rsa-with-aes-128-cbc-sha
HTTP-Express AO section

        LAN Bytes read                      310
        LAN Bytes written                   328
        WAN Bytes read                      332
        WAN Bytes written                   314
Table 16. show waas connection Field Descriptions

Field

Description

ConnID

Connection ID.

Source IP:Port

Source IP address and port number.

Dest IP:Port

Destination IP address and port number.

PeerID

Peer ID.

Accel

Type of accelerator(s) used in the connection. Possible values include the following:
  • C—CIFS-Express accelerator

  • D—Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE)

  • G—Generic

  • H—HTTP-Express accelerator

  • L—Lempel-Ziv (LZ)

  • S—SSL-Express accelerator

  • T—Transport Flow Optimization (TFO)

connection ID

Connection ID.

Peer Id

IP address of a peer.

Connection Type

Type of connection established with a peer.

Start Time

Date and time when a connection was initiated.

End Time

Date and time when a connection was terminated.

Source IP Address

Source IP address.

Source Port Number

Source IP port number.

Destination IP Address

Destination IP address.

Destination Port Number

Destination IP port number.

Application Name

Name of the application traffic on a connection.

Classifier Name

Name of the application classifier on a connection.

Peer Policy

Names of optimization policies that a peer WAAS device requires on a particular connection.

Configured Policy

Names of optimization policies configured on a connection.

Negotiated Policy

Names of optimization policies derived from configured and peer policies.

Configured Accelerator

Accelerators configured locally on a device.

Derived Accelerator

Accelerator derived after negotiation with a peer.

Applied Accelerator

Accelerator applied to the current flow.

Hist. Accelerator

Accelerators historically used.

Bytes Read Orig

Number of bytes received on the unoptimized side (LAN).

Bytes Written Orig

Number of bytes sent on the unoptimized side.

Bytes Read Opt

Number of bytes received on the optimized side (WAN).

Bytes Written Opt

Number of bytes sent on the optimized side (WAN).

Auto-discovery information

Orig-St

Originating state.

Term-St

Terminating state.

LZ section

Displays LZ compression or decompression statistics.

Encode stats

Bytes in

Bytes out

Number of bytes encoded using the LZ compression and resulting number of output bytes.

Bypass bytes

Number of bytes that bypassed the LZ module due to low compressibility.

Avg Latency in Cef

Latency, in microseconds, introduced by LZ compression while compressing data in the Cisco Express Forwarding packet path.

Avg Latency in Proc

Latency, in microseconds, introduced by LZ compression while compressing data in the process path.

Decode stats

Bytes in

Bytes out

Number of bytes decoded using the DRE compression and the resulting number of output bytes.

DRE section

Displays DRE compression or decompression statistics.

R-tx total

Total number of retransmissions.

R-tx chunk-miss

Number of DRE message retransmissions due to missing chunks.

R-tx collision

Number of DRE message retransmissions due to signature collisions.

Avg latency

Average time, in microseconds, taken to compress, send, decompress, and display data using DRE.

Nacks generated

Number of negative acknowledgment (NACK) messages generated.

SSL-Express AO section

Displays SSL-Express accelerator (also known as application optimizer [AO]) optimization statistics.

C2S version

SSL version used on the client-to-server (C2S) connection.

W2W version

SSL version used on the WAN-to-WAN (W2W) connection.

HTTP-Express AO section

Displays HTTP-Express accelerator optimization statistics.

show waas statistics accelerator

To display statistical information about Wide-Area Application Services (WAAS) Express accelerators, use the show waas statistics accelerator command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics accelerator {cifs-express [detail] | http-express [debug | detail | https] | ssl-express [ciphers | debug | peering]}

Syntax Description

cifs-express

Displays Common Internet File System (CIFS)-Express accelerator statistics.

detail

(Optional) Displays CIFS-Express accelerator statistics in detailed format.

http-express

Displays Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)-Express accelerator statistics.

debug

(Optional) Displays HTTP-Express accelerator debugging information.

detail

(Optional) Displays HTTP-Express accelerator statistics in detailed format.

https

(Optional) Displays HTTP Secure (HTTPS) statistics.

ssl-express

Displays Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express accelerator statistics.

ciphers

(Optional) Displays a list of ciphers.

debug

(Optional) Displays SSL-Express accelerator debugging information.

peering

(Optional) Displays information about WAAS-to-WAAS sessions.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(4)M

This command was modified. The HTTP-Express accelerator debug keyword was added. The output of this command was modified to display time in the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) format.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics accelerator cifs-express detail command:

Device# show waas statistics accelerator cifs-express detail

CIFS-Express AO Statistics detail

Parameter                                                         Value
---------                                                         -----
Time Accelerator was started:                                     00:58:58 UTC May 18 2012
Time Statistics were Last Reset/Cleared:                          00:58:58 UTC May 18 2012
Total Handled Connections:                                        0
Total Optimized Connections:                                      0
Total Dropped Connections:                                        0
Current Active Connections:                                       0
Current pipe through connections:                                 0
Maximum Active Connections:                                       0
Total LAN bytes read:                                             0
Total LAN bytes written:                                          0
Total WAN bytes read:                                             0
Total WAN bytes written:                                          0
Messages received from the LAN:                                   0
Messages sent to the LAN:                                         0
Messages received from the WAN:                                   0
Messages sent to the WAN:                                         0
Disk space query Messages sent to the WAN:                        0
Unsupported dialects / CIFS version:                              0
Currently active unsupported dialects / CIFS version:             0
Unsupported due to signing:                                       0
Total Number of Bytes Read by Clients:                            0
Total Number of Bytes Written by Clients:                         0
Total Number of Bytes Read from File Servers:                     0
Total Number of Bytes Written to File Servers:                    0
Number of current active commands:                                0

Request types                           Frequency
-------------                           ---------
CLOSE:                                  0
OPEN_ANDX:                              0
READ_ANDX:                              0
WRITE_ANDX:                             0
TRANS2:                                 0
NT_TRANS:                               0
TREE_CONNECT:                           0
TREE_DISCONNECT:                        0
NEGOTIATE:                              0
SETUP_ANDX:                             0
LOGOFF_ANDX:                            0
NT_CREATE_ANDX:                         0
WRITE:                                  0
CANCEL:                                 0
RENAME:                                 0
LOCKING_ANDX:                           0
SESSION_SETUP WITH TREE_CONNECT:        0
ECHO:                                   0
OTHER ANDX:                             0
OTHER:                                  0

Read Ahead:
Parameter                               Value
---------                               -----
Passed through FIDs:                    0
Optimized FIDs:                         0
Reads served:                           0
    Local replies:                      0
    Accelerated replies:                0
    Passed through replies:             0
Read-aheads sent:                       0
Served file ranges:                     0
No fid:                                 0
Wrong locking level:                    0
Optimization disabled:                  0
Optimization disabled (pipeline):       0
Read-ahead processing error:            0
Invalidate LRU cache due to out of buf: 0
Read-ahead responses with NULL fid:     0
Allocates RA buffers:                   0
RA buffers pending for delete:          0

Async Write:
Parameter                               Value
---------                               -----
Writes served:                          0
    Local replies:                      0
    Not a file:                         0
    No oplock:                          0
    No quota:                           0
    Andx command:                       0
    No tid:                             0
Outstanding writes:                     0
Async errors:                           0

Negative-Cache:
Parameter                               Value
---------                               -----
Current entries:                        0
Entries added:                          0
Entries removed:                        0
ADS opens served:                       0
    Local replies:                      0
    Entry timed out:                    0
    Not in cache:                       0
    Invalidated:                        0
    Flow miss-match:                    0
    Not a file or ADS:                  0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 17. show waas statistics accelerator cifs-express detail Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Time Accelerator was started

Time and date stamp when an accelerator (also known as an application optimizer [AO]) was started. The value is updated if the accelerator is restarted.

Time Statistics were Last Reset/Cleared

Time when the statistics were last reset or cleared.

Total Handled Connections

Number of connections handled since an accelerator was started or the statistics were reset.

Total Optimized Connections

Number of connections previously or currently optimized by an accelerator.

Total Connections Handed-off with Compression Policies Unchanged

Number of connections initially accepted by the accelerator but later handed off for generic optimization without policy changes so that currently negotiated policies are used for compression (Data Redundancy Elimination [DRE] or Lempel-Ziv [LZ]).

Total Dropped Connections

Number of connections dropped for reasons other than client or server socket errors.

Current Active Connections

Number of connections currently established on the WAN that are either in use or free for fast connection use.

Maximum Active Connections

Highest number of active connections since the accelerator was last started or restarted.

Total LAN bytes read

Number of bytes read by an accelerator from the original side of the flow.

Total LAN bytes written

Number of bytes written by an accelerator on the original side of the flow.

Total WAN bytes read

Number of bytes read by an accelerator from the optimized side of the flow.

Total WAN bytes written

Number of bytes written by an accelerator on the optimized side of the flow.

Local replies

Number of requests that resulted in the WAAS Express generating a local reply.

Messages received from the LAN

Number of CIFS messages received from the LAN.

Messages sent to the LAN

Number of CIFS messages sent to the LAN.

Messages received from the WAN

Number of CIFS messages received from the WAN.

Messages sent to the WAN

Number of CIFS messages sent to the WAN.

Disk space query Messages sent to the WAN

Number of messages sent over the WAN to query disk space on a remote server.

Unsupported dialects / CIFS version

Number of unsupported dialects of Server Message Block (SMB) or unsupported CIFS version.

Currently active unsupported dialects / CIFS version

Number of unsupported dialects of SMB or unsupported CIFS version in active connections.

Unsupported due to signing

Number of unsupported flows due to SMB packet signing.

Read Ahead Parameter

Passed through FIDs

Number of file IDs (FIDs) passed through.

Optimized FIDs

Number of FIDs optimized.

Reads served

Number of reads served locally.

Local replies

Number of local replies sent to a client.

Accelerated replies

Number of accelerated replies sent to clients.

Passed through replies

Number of replies passed through to a WAN.

Read-aheads sent

Number of read-ahead requests sent over a WAN.

Served file ranges

Number of nonoverlapping file ranges served.

No fid

Number of read requests received without an FID.

Wrong locking level

Number of read requests received without an opportunistic locking (oplock) level.

Optimization disabled

Number of flows for which optimization is disabled based on the global configuration.

Optimization disabled (pipeline)

Number of flows for which read-ahead optimization is disabled since pipelining was detected.

Read-ahead processing error

Number of error messages generated while processing read requests.

Invalidate LRU cache due to out of buf

Number of least recently used (LRU) cache entries invalidated to make space for new entries in the buffer.

Read-ahead responses with NULL fid

Number of read responses received with a NULL FID.

Allocates RA buffers

Number of read-ahead buffers allocated.

RA buffers pending for delete

Number of read-ahead buffers pending deletion after successfully sending the entire data in buffers.

Async Write Parameter

Writes served

Number of async writes served.

Local replies

Number of local replies sent to clients.

Not a file

Number of write requests for processing an unknown file in sync mode.

No oplock

Number of write requests received without an oplock level.

No quota

Number of flows not optimized because a disk space quota is not allocated on a remote server.

Andx command

Number of AndX requests received.

No tid

Number of failures that occurred while finding a tree ID (TID).

Async errors

Number of async errors encountered.

Negative-Cache Parameter

Current entries

Number of entries in the negative cache.

Entries added

Number of entries added to the negative cache.

Entries removed

Number of entries removed from the negative cache.

ADS opens served

Number of alternate-data-stream (ADS) open requests handled.

Entry timed out

Number of timed-out entries in the cache.

Not in cache

Number of cache misses.

Invalidated

Number of invalidated entries in the cache.

Flow miss-match

Number of times that a matching flow ID entry is not found in the cache.

Not a file or ADS

Number of requests that are not in the form of a regular file or an alternate data stream.

show waas statistics aoim

To display WAAS Express peer information and negotiated capabilities, use the show waas statistics aoim command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics aoim

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(2)T

This command was modified. The command output was updated to display information about HTTP and SSL Application Optimizers (AOs).

Usage Guidelines

This command displays information about the peer and the negotiations.

Examples

The following example shows how to display WAAS peer information and negotiated capabilities:

Device> enable
Device# show waas statistics aoim

Total number of peer syncs:                     1
Current number of peer syncs in progress:       0
Number of peers:                                1
Number of local application optimizations (AO): 3
Number of AO discovery successful:              1
Number of AO discovery failure:                 0

Local AO statistics
		Local AO:	                                  TFO 
				Total number of incompatible connections: 0
				Version:                                  0.11
				Registered:                               Yes
		Local AO:                                   HTTP
				Total number of incompatible connections: 0
				Version:                                  1.1
				Registered:                               Yes
		Local AO:                                   SSL
				Total number of incompatible connections: 0
				Version:                                  1.0
				Registered:                               Yes

Peer AOIM Statistics
Number of Peers:               1
		Peer:                        0021.5586.1399
		Peer IP:                     50.0.0.2
		Peer Expiry Time:            00:00:04
		Peer Compatible:             Yes
		Peer active connections:     0	
		Peer Aoim Version:           1.0
		Peer sync in progress:       No
		Peer valid:                  Yes
		Peer Software Version:       4.4.0(b168)
		Peer AOs:
				Peer AO:             TFO
						Compatible:        Yes
						Version:           0.20
				Peer AO:             HTTP
						Compatible:        Yes
						Version:           1.3
				Peer AO:             SSL
						Compatible:        Yes
						Version:           1.0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 18. show waas statistics aoim Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Total number of peer syncs

Number of times the AO Information Manager (AOIM) on the WAAS device has synchronized with a peer WAAS device.

Current number of peer syncs in progress

Number of currently active peer synchronization is in progress.

Number of peers

Number of known or encountered peer WAAS devices.

Number of local application optimizations (AO)

Number of locally registered AOs on the WAAS device.

Number of AO discovery successful

Number of times AO discovery succeeded on peer WAAS devices.

Number of AO discovery failure

Number of times AO discovery failed on peer WAAS devices. Possible reasons include AO not enabled, AO not running on the peer Wide-area Application Engine (WAE), or license not configured for the AO.

Local AO statistics

Local AO

Name of the locally registered AO. The possible values include TFO, HTTP, and SSL.

Total number of incompatible connections

Number of times a connection was not passed to the locally registered AO due to software incompatibility with the peer AO after synchronization with the peer WAAS device was complete.

Version

Software version of the locally registered AO.

Registered

Registration status of the locally registered AO.

Number of Peers

Number of peer WAAS devices encountered.

Peer

MAC address of the peer WAAS device, and whether it has been formally registered with the AO information database.

Peer IP

IP address of the primary network interface of the peer WAAS device.

Peer Expiry Time

Time elapsed since the last AOIM negotiation with the peer WAAS device.

Peer Compatible

Compatibility status of the peer WAAS device. The compatibility of the peer WAAS device depends on the TFO version. If the TFO version on the peer WAAS device is incompatible with the local TFO version, the peer is considered incompatible and connections with this peer are not optimized.

Peer active connections

Number of active connections with the peer.

Peer Aoim Version

The AOIM module version on the peer WAAS device negotiated during AOIM handshake.

Peer sync in progress

Indicates whether synchronization with the peer WAAS device is in progress.

Peer valid

Indicates the validity of the entry in the peer table.

Peer Software Version

Software version and build number of IOS WAAS running on the peer WAAS device.

Peer AO

Name of the registered AO on the peer WAAS device. The possible values include TFO, HTTP, and SSL.

Compatible

Compatibility status of the AO on the peer WAAS device with a matching, locally registered AO. Possible values include Y (yes/compatible), N (no/incompatible), and U (unknown). The compatibility status may be unknown if no matching AO is registered locally. The AO compatibility status is discovered during AOIM negotiation.

  • If a peer WAAS device is incompatible (indicated by the Peer Compatible field), connections with the peer are not optimized, even if a peer AO on this peer WAAS device is compatible with a matching, locally registered AO.

  • If the peer is compatible but a peer AO is not, then the peer AO is not negotiated during autodiscovery. However, connections with the peer are optimized.

Version

Software version of the registered AO on the peer WAAS device.

show waas statistics application

To display WAAS Express policy application statistics, use the show waas statistics application command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics application [app-name app-name]

Syntax Description

app-name app-name

(Optional) Displays statistics for a specific WAAS policy application.

Command Default

Statistics are displayed for all WAAS policy applications.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display statistical information about the WAAS policies.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics application command::


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics application waas-default
Application:     waas-default
TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type     Inbound                             Outbound
Opt TCP Plus        5054526                             13969693
Orig TCP Plus       35202552                            35202552
Opt TCP Only        0                                          0
Orig TCP Only       0                                          0
Internal Client     0                                          0
Internal Server     0                                          0
TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type     Active               Completed
Opt TCP Plus        0                           18
Opt TCP Only        0                            0
Internal Client     0                            0
Internal Server     0                            0
Pass Through Connection Counts
Connection Type     Completed      
PT Asymmetric       0              
PT Capabilities     0              
PT Intermediate     0              
PT_Other            0              
Connection Reset:   0              
Cleared connections 0 

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 19. show waas statistics application Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Opt TCP Plus Bytes

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP bytes.

Opt TCP Plus Packets

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP packets.

Orig TCP Plus Bytes

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP bytes.

Orig TCP Plus Packets

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP packets.

Opt TCP Only Bytes

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP bytes.

Opt TCP Only Packets

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP packets.

Orig TCP Only Bytes

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP bytes.

Orig TCP Only Packets

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP packets

Internal Client Bytes

Packets terminating at the router where the router is a client.

Internal Server Bytes

Packets terminating at the router where the router is the server (WCM-NGWO).

Opt TCP Plus

Optimized TCP plus connection count.

Opt TCP Only

Optimized TCP only connection count.

Internal Client

Internal client connection count.

Internal Server

Internal server connection count.

PT Asymmetric

Pass-through asymmetric connection count.

PT Capabilities

Pass-through incompatible connection count.

PT Intermediate

Pass-through intermediate connection count.

PT_Other

Pass-through other connection count.

show waas statistics auto-discovery

To display the autodiscovery statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics auto-discovery command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics auto-discovery [blacklist]

Syntax Description

blacklist

(Optional) Displays blocked list tables lookups, size, and the maximum hold time.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display statistics for autodiscovery states, success, and failures.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics auto-discovery command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics auto-discovery
Packets:
Total Sent: 										3
Total Received: 										3
Ack dropped in synack received state:										0
Non Syn dropped in nostate state:										0
Aoim sync syn-ack drop: 										0
Aoim sync ack drop:										0
Auto discovery failure:
Total Failure: 										0
Insufficient option space:										0
Invalid connection state:										0
Sequence number override:										0
Connection split failed:										0
Set sequence number failed:										0
Get sequence number failed:										0
Setting BIC failed:										0
External module init failed:										0
Deleting options failed:										0
Set window size failed:										0
AOIM handover failed:										0
AOIM force sync failed:										0
AOIM peer addition failed:										0
AOIM synchronization reset:										0
TFO handover failed:										0
Setting timestamp failed:										0
Setting window scale failed:										0
Setting send window failed:										0
Setting sack failed:										0
Setting keepalive failed:										0
FD association failed:										0
Auto discovery success SYN retransmission:
Zero retransmit:										1
One retransmit:										0
Two+ retransmit:										0
Auto discovery Miscellaneous:
RST received:										0
SYNs with our device id:										0
Zero device ID:										0
Non standard option length:										0
Replication mode turned on:										0
ADM mode turned on:										0
Capabilities mismatch:										0
Intermediate device:										0
Invalid option content:										0
Version mismatch:										0
Peer AOIM incompatible:										0
Peer AOIM in progress:										0
AOIM peertable full:										0
AOIM multiple sync request passthrough:	0
No peer:										0
Missing Ack conf:										0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 20. show waas statistics auto-discovery Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Packets:

Total Sent

Packets sent by autodiscovery.

Total Received

Packets received by autodiscovery.

Ack dropped in synack received state

Acknowledgment packet dropped within an AD state.

Non Syn dropped in nostate state

Nonsynchronization control packet dropped since no synchronization packet has been received.

Aoim sync syn-ack drop

Sychronization and acknowledgment dropped while AOIM synchronization is in progress.

Aoim sync ack drop

Acknowledgment dropped while AOIM synchronization is in progress.

Auto discovery failure:

Total Failure

Number of failed flows.

Insufficient option space

Unable to add TCP options.

Invalid connection state

Connection state invalid.

Sequence number override

Sequence numbers out of sync.

Connection split failed

Unable to connect to a proxy.

Set sequence number failed

Sequence number bump failed.

Get sequence number failed

Unable to read sequence number.

Setting BIC failed

Binary Increased Congestion Control (BIC) initialization failure.

External module init failed

Module initialization failure.

Deleting options failed

WAAS Express TCP option deletion failure.

Set window size failed

Window size adjustment failure.

AOIM handover failed

AOIM handover failure.

AOIM force sync failed

AOIM sync failure.

AOIM peer addition failed

AOIM peer could not be added.

TFO handover failed

TFO handover failure.

Setting timestamp failed

Unable to set the time stamp.

Setting window scale failed

Unable to set the windows scale.

Setting send window failed

Unable to set send the window on connection.

Setting sack failed

Unable to set the Selective Acknowledgment (SACK) on connection.

Setting keepalive failed

Failure to initialize keepalive.

FD association failed

Unable to associate file descriptor.

Auto discovery success SYN retransmission:

Zero retransmit

Connections optimized for which a single synchronization was received.

One retransmit

Connections optimized for which a retransmitted synchronization was received.

Two+ retransmit

Two or more synchronization retransmissions.

Auto discovery Miscellaneous:

RST received

Reset received during autodiscovery.

SYNs with our device id

Indicates synchronization with the WAAS Express device.

Zero device ID

Zero device ID advertised.

Non standard option length

Invalid WAAS Express TCP option.

Replication mode turned on

Connection bypass due to replication mode turned on.

ADM mode turned on

Connection bypass due to directed mode turned on.

Capabilities mismatch

Advertised capability mismatch.

Intermediate device

Intermediate WAAS Express device.

Invalid option content

Invalid WAAS Express TCP option.

Version mismatch

Administrative distance (AD) version mismatch.

Peer AOIM incompatible

Peer AOIM incompatible.

Peer AOIM in progress

Peer AOIM synchronization in progress.

AOIM peertable full

AOIM peer table full.

AOIM multiple sync request passthrough

Pass through requested due to multiple simultaneous AOIM synchronization requests.

No peer

No peer for this connection.

Missing Ack conf

Missing autodiscovery confirmation.

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics auto-discovery blacklist command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics auto-discovery
 blacklist
Auto-Discovery Blacklist Table Statistics
Operation Status:											1
Total Lookups:											0
Hits: 											0
Miss (Grey Entry):											0
Miss (No Entry):											0
Table Insertions:											0
Total Entries (Free & Used):											1024
Current Free Entries:											1024
Current Used Entries:											0
Peak Used Entries:											0
Oldest Entry Hold Time (sec):											3600
IP Address Retrieval Failure:											0
Unexpected Threshold:											0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 21. show waas statistics auto-discovery blacklist Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Operation Status

Indicates whether the blocked list is enabled, which is 1.

Total Lookups

Total number of blocked list lookups.

Hits

The number of blocked list hits.

Miss (Grey Entry)

Hits in the grey list.

Miss (No Entry)

No blocked list found.

Table Insertions

Blocked list insertions.

Total Entries (Free & Used)

Total possible entries.

Current Free Entries

Free entries.

Current Used Entries

Used entries.

Peak Used Entries

Peak used entries.

Oldest Entry Hold Time (sec)

Active entry time period.

IP Address Retrieval Failure

Unable to locate IP address.

Unexpected Threshold

Invalid blocked list threshold.

show waas statistics class

To display statistical information about the class in WAAS Express, use the show waas statistics class command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics class [class-name class-name]

Syntax Description

class-name class-name

(Optional) Specifies the class-name.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command displays statistical information about the class specified in WAAS Express. If a class name is not specified, the command displays the output for all the classes in WAAS Express.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics class command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics class
Number of Classes :             3
Class          FTP-Control
TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type     Inbound                             Outbound
Opt TCP Plus        0                                          0
Orig TCP Plus       0                                          0
Opt TCP Only        0                                          0
Orig TCP Only       0                                          0
Internal Client     0                                          0
Internal Server     0                                          0
TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type     Active               Completed
Opt TCP Plus        0                            0
Opt TCP Only        0                            0
Internal Client     0                            0
Internal Server     0                            0
Pass Through Connection Counts
Connection Type     Completed      
PT Asymmetric       0              
PT Capabilities     11             
PT Intermediate     0              
PT_Other            0              
Connection Reset:   0              
          
Class          waas-default
TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type     Inbound                             Outbound
Opt TCP Plus        0                                          0
Orig TCP Plus       0                                          0
Opt TCP Only        0                                          0
Orig TCP Only       0                                          0
Internal Client     0                                          0
Internal Server     0                                          0
          
TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type     Active               Completed
Opt TCP Plus        0                            0
Opt TCP Only        0                            0
Internal Client     0                            0
Internal Server     0                            0
          
Pass Through Connection Counts
Connection Type     Completed      
PT Asymmetric       0              
PT Capabilities     0              
PT Intermediate     0              
PT_Other            0              
Connection Reset:   0              
          
Class          FTP-Data
TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type     Inbound                             Outbound
Opt TCP Plus        722                                      573
Orig TCP Plus       0                                         24
Opt TCP Only        0                                          0
Orig TCP Only       0                                          0
Internal Client     0                                          0
Internal Server     0                                          0
          
TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type     Active               Completed
Opt TCP Plus        0                            4
Opt TCP Only        0                            0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 22. show waas statistics class Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Class

The class name.

TCP Data Volumes

Indicates the volume of data in terms of connections, optimizations, and so on.

Connection Type

The type of connection.

Opt TCP Plus

Optimized TCP plus connection count.

Orig TCP Plus

Inbound/outbound originating TCP packets.

Opt TCP Only

Optimized TCP only connection count.

Orig TCP Only

Inbound/outbound originating TCP packets.

Internal Client

Internal client connection count.

Internal Server

Internal server connection count.

PT Asymmetric

Pass-through asymmetric connection count.

PT Capabilities

Pass-through incompatible connection count.

PT Intermediate

Pass-through intermediate connection count.

PT_Other

Pass-through other connection count.

show waas statistics dre

To display WAAS Express Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics dre command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics dre [peer]

Syntax Description

peer

(Optional) Displays DRE peer statistics.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display upload DRE information.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics dre command:

Device# show waas statistics dre

DRE Status:                                 Enabled             
Cache
    Cache Status:                           Ready               
    Oldest data age:                        00:07:35            
    Total data storage size:                1468006400          
    Total index size:                       11513600            
AckQ size:                                  5242880
AckQ in storage:                            0
AckQ full:                                  0
AckQ high:                                  0
WaitQ size:                                 0                   
WaitQ in storage:                           0                   
Connections
    Total:                                  24                  
    Active:                                 0                   
Encode Statistics
    Dre msgs:                               0                   
    R-tx total:                             0
    R-tx chunk-miss:                        0
    R-tx collision:                         0
    Bytes in:                               67344
    Bytes out:                              8840
    Bypass bytes:                           35714
    Bytes Matched:                          59355
    Bytes Skipped:                          0
    Compression gain:                       86%
    Average latency:                        2191 usec
    Encode Message Size Distribution:
        0-1K   = 4              %
        1-5K   = 31             %
        5-15K  = 14             %
        15-25K = 0              %
        25-40K = 0              %
        >40K   = 0              %
Decode Statistics
    Dre msgs:                               318                 
    Nacks generated:                        0                   
    Bytes in:                               8494760             
    Bytes out:                              13780812            
    Bypass bytes:                           35556               
    Compression gain:                       38%
    Average latency:                        1471 usec     
    Decode Message Size Distribution:       
        0-1K   = 4              %
        1-5K   = 0              %
        5-15K  = 5              %
        15-25K = 9              %
        25-40K = 23             %
        >40K   = 55             %

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics dre peer command:

Device# show waas statistics dre peer

DRE Status:                                 Enabled

Current number of connected peers           0
Current number of active peers              1

Peer-ID                                     0016.9d38.ca1d
Hostname                                    WAE2.cisco.com
IP reported from peer                       20.0.0.2
Peer version                                4.4.0(b167)

Cache:
    Cache in storage                        614017 B
    Age                                     21:22:40

AckQ:
    AckQ in storage                         0 B

WaitQ:
    WaitQ in storage                        756 B
    WaitQ size                              0 B

Sync-clock:
    Local-head                              457161116 ms
    Local-tail                              457438528 ms
    Remote-head                             372192000 ms
    Remote-head-safe                        4294967296 ms

Encode Statistics
    DRE msgs:                               64
    R-tx total:                             0
    R-tx chunk-miss:                        0
    R-tx collision:                         0
    Bytes in:                               67344
    Bytes out:                              8840
    Bypass bytes:                           35714
    Compression gain:                       86%
Decode Statistics
    DRE msgs:                               14
    Bytes in:                               490
    Bytes out:                              416
    Bypass bytes:                           0
    Compression gain:                       0%
    Nacks generated:                        0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.

Table 23. show waas statistics dre Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Cache

Displays DRE cache statistics.

AckQ size

The maximum size of the DRE ACK queue (AckQ). The AckQ is an internal data structure used by DRE.

AckQ in storage

The current size of the DRE AckQ.

AckQ full

The number of times the DRE AckQ became full.

AckQ high

The number of times the size of DRE AckQ has reached the high water mark.

WaitQ size

The maximum size of the DRE wait queue (WaitQ). The WaitQ is an internal data structure used by DRE.

WaitQ in storage

The current size of the DRE WaitQ.

Connections

Total number of connections completed.

Dre msgs

The number of DRE messages encoded/decoded by DRE.

R-tx total

Total number of retransmissions.

R-tx chunk-miss

Number of DRE message retransmissions due to missing chunks.

R-tx collision

Number of DRE message retransmissions due to signature collisions.

Bytes in

Bytes out

Number of bytes encoded/decoded using the DRE compression and the resulting output bytes.

Bypass bytes

Number of bytes bypassed by DRE.

Bytes Matched

Number of bytes that matched the DRE cache.

Bytes Skipped

Number of bytes skipped by DRE encoder due to hints received from accelerators.

Compression gain

The compression gain achieved by DRE. It is calculated by using the following percentage:

(Bytes_in X 100) / (Bytes_in + Bytes_out)

Average latency

The interval of the number of bytes encoded or decoded using the DRE compression.

Nacks generated

Number of negative acknowledgement (NACK) messages generated.

Message size distribution

Indicates the distribution of messages across bytes in percentages.

show waas statistics errors

To display error statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics errors command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics errors

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display error statistics for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express accelerator.

Examples

The following example shows how to display WAAS Express error statistics:

Device# show waas statistics errors

Unexpected EOT message:                        								0
TFO close failure:                             								0
DRE message delayed for transmission:          								0
Invalid input for TFO decode:                  								0
RST ignored because EOT ACK sent:              								0
RST ignored because EOT REQ sent:              								0
Unknown TCP Control packet received:           								0
DRE encode failed:                             								0
Connection reset by peer:                      								0
Connection timed out:                          								0
No data to read:                               								0
Buffer allocation failed:                      								0
Error reading input particle:                  								0
Received control packet when expecting data:   								0
Return value not handled:                      								0
Lock condition:                                								0
Out of transmit buffers:                       								0
Error received from L4F:                       								0
Error writing data:                            								0
Error processing data:                         								0
Error processing control packet:               								0
Error sending data:                            								0
Unable to find peer in table:                  								0
Flow semaphore acquisition failures:                   0
Encryption/decryption failure:                         0
Error processing SSL packet:                           0
SSL-Express AO failed to allocate packet:              0
SSL-Express AO failed to allocate sub-block:           0
SSL-Express AO received invalid packet:                0
SSL-Express AO vector copy failed:                     0
SSL-Express AO invalid record length in LAN-WAN:       0
SSL-Express AO invalid record length in WAN-LAN:       0
SSL-Express AO failed to retrieve sub-block:           0
SSL-Express AO invalid session received on WAN:        0
SSL-Express AO invalid packet in pipe queue:           0
SSL-Express AO invalid packet in receive queue:        0
SSL-Express AO encountered misbehaving client:         0
SSL-Express AO Packet enqueue to queue failed:         0
SSL-Express AO Connection closed during SSL handshake: 0
SSL-Express AO Connection reset when pending data:     0
SSL-Express AO received invalid protocol in key-packet:0
SSL-Express AO session create failed:                  0
SSL-Express AO received invalid SSL record:            0
SSL-Express AO session delete failed:                  0
SSL-Express AO failed to load key-packet:              0
SSL-Express AO memory allocation failed:               0
SSL-Express AO W2W handshake failed:                   0
SSL-Express AO encountered rehandshake on W2W session: 0
SSL-Express AO W2W session setup failed:               0
SSL-Express AO received invalid module:                0
SSL-Express AO Encrypt/decrypt allocation failures:    0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 24. show waas statistics errors Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Unexpected EOT message

Number of messages generated during End of Transmission (EOT) handshake.

TFO close failure

Number of messages generated during failure of Transport Flow Optimization (TFO) to close connection during EOT handshake.

Error reading input particle

Number of error messages generated while reading noncontiguous packets.

Lock condition

Number of messages generated when a client resets a connection while data is pending for that connection.

Error received from L4F

Number of error messages received from Layer 4 forwarding (L4F).

Flow semaphore acquisition failures

Number of messages generated during failure of flow synchronization check logic.

SSL-Express AO vector copy failed

Number of messages generated during failure to copy data from one set of buffers to another set of buffers. Accelerators are also known as application optimizers (AOs).

SSL-Express AO Packet enqueue to queue failed

Number of messages generated during failure to insert packet to a FIFO queue.

show waas statistics global

To display global statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics global command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics global

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display the Cleared Connections field.

Examples

The following example shows how to display global statistics for a WAAS Express device:

Device# show waas statistics global

TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type     Inbound                             Outbound
Opt TCP Plus        0                                          0
Orig TCP Plus       0                                          0
Opt TCP Only        244                                      161
Orig TCP Only       0                                          0
Internal Client     0                                          0
Internal Server     0                                          0

TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type     Active               Completed
Opt TCP Plus        0                            0
Opt TCP Only        0                            1
Internal Client     0                            0
Internal Server     0                            0

Pass Through Connection Counts
Connection Type     Completed
PT Asymmetric       0
PT Capabilities     0
PT Intermediate     0
PT_Other            0
Connection Reset:   1
Cleared connections 0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 25. show waas statistics global Field Descriptions

Field

Description

TCP Data Volumes

Volume of data in terms of connections, optimizations, and so on.

Connection Type

Type of connection.

Opt TCP Plus

Optimized TCP plus connection count.

Orig TCP Plus

Inbound/outbound originating TCP packets.

Opt TCP Only

Optimized TCP-only connection count.

Orig TCP Only

Inbound/outbound originating TCP-only packets.

Internal Client

Internal client connection count.

Internal Server

Internal server connection count.

TCP Connection Counts

Number of TCP connections intercepted by WAAS Express.

Pass Through Connection Counts

Number of connections made to pass through.

PT Asymmetric

Number of connections made to pass through due to asymmetric route detection during the autodiscovery phase.

PT Capabilities

Number of connections made to pass through due to the configured policy on the device.

PT Intermediate

Number of connections made to pass through because this WAAS Express device lies between two other WAAS Express devices that are closer to the client and the server, but farthest from each other in the network.

PT_Other

Number of connections made to pass through due to other reasons. For more details, see the show waas statistics pass-through command output.

Connection Reset

Number of connections reset by the WAAS Express device.

Cleared connections

Number of connections cleared or reset by an administrator using the clear waas connection command.

show waas statistics lz

To display the Lempel-Ziv compression statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics lz command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics lz

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to display WAAS Express LZ statistics:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics lz
LZ Status:										Enabled
Memory used 										30328 KB
Connections
    Total:										75
    Active:										0
Encode Statistics
    Bytes in:										0
    Bytes out:										0
    Bypass bytes:										10886
    Compression gain:										0%
    Average latency in CEF path:										0 usec
    Average latency in process path:										293 usec 
Decode Statistics
    Bytes in:										25595
    Bytes out:										71977
    Bypass bytes:										776
    Compression gain:										64%
    Average latency in CEF path:										37 usec
    Average latency in process path:										9 usec

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 26. show waas statistics lz Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Memory used

Memory usage

Connections:

LZ connection statistics

Encode Statistics

Displays the number of bytes encoded using the LZ compression, and the resulting output bytes.

Bypass bytes

Number of bytes that bypassed the LZ module due to low compressibility.

Compression gain

Compression gain achieve by encoding or decoding. This does not include bytes that LZ bypassed.

Average latency in CEF path

The interval, in milliseconds, between bytes encoded using the LZ compression.

Average latency in process path

The interval, in milliseconds, between bytes encoded using the LZ compression.

Decode Statistics

Displays the number of bytes decoded and the resulting output bytes.

show waas statistics pass-through

To display the pass-through statistics for a WAAS Express device, use the show waas statistics pass-through command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics pass-through

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics pass-through command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics pass-through
Pass Through Statistics:
Overall:                                1 
No Peer:                                0 
Rejected due to Capabilities:           0 
Rejected due to Resources:              0 
Interface Application config:           1 
Interface Global config:                0 
Asymmetric setup:                      0 
Peer sync was in progress:              0 
IOS WAAS is intermediate router:        0 
Internal error:                         0 
Other end is in black list:            0 
AD version mismatch:                    0 
Incompatable AO:                        0 
Connection limit exceeded:              0 
AOIM peertable full:                    0 
AOIM multiple sync request passthrough: 0 
Others:                                 0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 27. show waas statistics pass-through Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Overall

Overall connection pass-through's.

No Peer

No peer found for the connection.

Rejected due to Capabilities

Pass-through due to mismatch of capabilities.

Rejected due to Resources

Pass-through due to lack of resources.

Interface Application config

Interface application pass-through.

Interface Global config

Global configuration pass-through.

Asymmetric setup

Possible asymmetric setup.

Peer sync was in progress

Pass-through due to AOIM synchronization in progress.

IOS WAAS is intermediate router

Intermediate WAAS Express device.

Internal error

Internal error

Other end is in black list

Blocked list passthrough

AD version mismatch

Autodiscovery version mismatch.

Incompatable AO

Incompatible optimization.

Connection limit exceeded

Connection limited exceeded.

AOIM peertable full

Unable to add more AOIM peers.

AOIM multiple sync request passthrough

Pass through requested due to multiple simultaneous AOIM synchronization requests.

Others

Other conditions.

show waas statistics peer

To display inbound and outbound statistics for peer Wide-area Application Engines (WAEs) devices, use the show waas statistics peer command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas statistics peer [id peer-id [conn]]

Syntax Description

id peer-id

(Optional) Displays statistics for that peer ID.

conn

(Optional) Displays current optimized connections to that peer.

Command Default

Inbound and outbound statistics are displayed for all peer WAE devices. Current optimized connections are not displayed.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display inbound and outbound statistics for all peer WAE devices.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas statistics peer command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas statistics peer
Number of Peers : 							1
Peer:							0021.5586.13df
TCP Data Volumes
Connection Type 							Inbound 				Outbound
Opt TCP Plus							765708				2698
Orig TCP Plus							335				10486305
Opt TCP Only							0				0
Orig TCP Only							0				0
Internal Client							0				0
Internal Server							0				0
TCP Connection Counts
Connection Type							Active				Completed
Opt TCP Plus							0				2
Opt TCP Only							0				0
Internal Client							0				0
Internal Server							0				0
Pass Through Connection Counts
Connection Type							Completed 
PT Asymmetric							0 
PT Capabilities							0 
PT Intermediate							0 
PT_Other							0 
Connection Reset:							1
Connection Closed:							0

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 28. show waas statistics peer Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Peer

MAC address of peer

TCP Data Volumes

Indicates the volume of data in terms of connections, optimizations, and so on.

Connection Type

The type of connection.

Opt TCP Plus

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP bytes.

Orig TCP Plus

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP bytes.

Opt TCP Only

Inbound/outbound optimized (WAN) TCP bytes.

Orig TCP Only

Inbound/outbound originating (LAN) TCP bytes.

Internal Client

Packets terminating at the router where the router is a client.

Internal Server

Packets terminating at the router where the router is the server (WCM-NGWO).

Opt TCP Plus

Optimized TCP plus connection count.

Opt TCP Only

Optimized TCP only connection count.

Internal Client

Internal client connection count.

Internal Server

Internal server connection count.

PT Asymmetric

Pass-through asymmetric connection count.

PT Capabilities

Pass-through incompatible connection count.

PT Intermediate

Pass-through intermediate connection count.

PT_Other

Pass-through other connection count.

show waas status

To display the status of Wide Area Application Services (WAAS) Express, use the show waas status command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas status [ extended]

Syntax Description

extended

(Optional) Displays complete status information for WAAS Express in a single request.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display the status for the following three WAAS Express accelerators: Common Internet File System (CIFS)-Express, Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express, and HTTP-Express.

15.2(4)M3

This command was modified. The extended keyword was added.

Examples

The following is a sample output from the show waas status command. The fields in the output are self-explanatory.

Device# show waas status

IOS Version: 15.3(1.12)T
WAAS Express Version: 2.0.0

WAAS Enabled Interface        Policy Map

WAAS Feature License
    License Type:                           EvalRightToUse
    Evaluation total period:                8  weeks 4  days
    Evaluation period left:                 8  weeks 4  days

DRE Status                        : Disabled
LZ Status                         : Disabled
CIFS-Express AO Status            : Disabled
SSL-Express AO Status             : Disabled
HTTP-Express AO Status            : Disabled

Maximum Flows                     : 50
Total Active connections          : 0
Total optimized connections       : 0


The possible values for the License Type field include:

  • Permanent

  • One of the Right to Use (RTU) values: EvalRightToUse or RightToUse

    The RTU license is considered to be in evaluation mode for the first 60 days, which is when the License Type field displays the value EvalRightToUse. After 60 days, the RTU license transitions to the value RightToUse.

If the License Type field is RightToUse, the show waas status command output does not display the Evaluation total period and Evaluation period left fields.

If the License Type field is EvalRightToUse, the show waas status command output also displays the Evaluation total period and Evaluation period left fields.

The following is a sample output from the show waas status command with the extended keyword. The fields in the output are self-explanatory.

Device# show waas status extended

Platform:              Cisco (CISCO3945-CHASSIS)
Hostname:              c3945-5
IOS Version:           15.3(1.12)T
Persistent trustpoint: None
WAAS Express Version:  2.0.0
Device ID:             1cdf.0f58.e400

show waas token

To display the value of the WAAS Express configuration token, use the show waas alarms command in privileged EXEC mode.

show waas token

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to display the values of the WAAS Express configuration token.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show waas token command:


Router> enable
Router# show waas token
Config Token:	1292

The table below describes the significant field shown in the display.

Table 29. show waas token Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Config Token

Monotonically increasing 32-bit number (unsigned integer).

show x25 context

To display operating configuration status details of an X.25 link, use the show x25 context command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 context [xot | interface serial number [dlci number] | cmns-interface-type number [mac mac-address]]

Syntax Description

xot

(Optional) Displays information specific to X.25 over TCP (XOT) contexts.

interface serial number

(Optional) Specific serial interface.

dlci number

(Optional) Specific data-link connection identifier (DLCI) link.

cmns-interface-type number

(Optional) Local Connection Mode Network Service (CMNS) interface type and number. CMNS interface types are Ethernet, Token Ring, and FDDI. The interface numbering scheme depends on the router interface hardware.

mac mac-address

(Optional) Hardware address of the CMNS interface.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(3)T

This command was introduced.

12.1(5)T

This command was modified to display information about X.25 failover.

12.2(8)T

The xot keyword was added to display information specific to XOT contexts.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 context command with the xot keyword:


Router# show x25 context xot
 
XOT Access-group 2 
PROFILE mod128 station DXE/DTE, address 2222, state R1, modulo 128, timer 0 
      Defaults: idle VC timeout 0 
        input/output window sizes 80/80, packet sizes 256/256 
      Timers: T20 180, T21 200, T22 180, T23 180 
      RESTARTs 0/0 CALLs 5+0/7+0/0+0 DIAGs 0/0 
XOT Access-group 3 
station DXE/DTE, address <none>, state R1, modulo 8, timer 0 
      Defaults: idle VC timeout 0 
        input/output window sizes 2/2, packet sizes 128/128 
      Timers: T20 180, T21 200, T22 180, T23 180 
      RESTARTs 0/0 CALLs 21+0/50+0/0+0 DIAGs 0/0 

The following is sample output from the show x25 context command:


Router# show x25 context interface serial 1
Serial1 DLCI 20 
PROFILE DCE, address <none>, state R1, modulo 8, timer 0
      Defaults: idle VC timeout 0
        input/output window sizes 2/2, packet sizes 128/128
      Timers: T10 60, T11 180, T12 60, T13 60
      Channels: Incoming-only none, Two-way 1-1024, Outgoing-only none
      RESTARTs 1/0 CALLs 0+0/0+0/0+0 DIAGs 0/0
  LAPB DCE, state CONNECT, modulo 8, k 7, N1 12056, N2 20
      T1 3000, T2 0, interface outage (partial T3) 0, T4 0
      VS 7, VR 6, tx NR 6, Remote VR 7, Retransmissions 0
      Queues: U/S frames 0, I frames 0, unack. 0, reTx 0
      IFRAMEs 111/118 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 SABM/Es 14/1 FRMRs 0/0 DISCs 0/0

The following is sample output from the show x25 context command when the X.25 Failover feature is configured. The “Fail-over delay” field appears when the primary interface has gone down and come back up again. The number of seconds indicates the time remaining until the secondary interface will reset.


Router# show x25 context
Serial1 DLCI 33
  PROFILE dxe/DCE, address 3032, state R1, modulo 8, timer 0
      Defaults:idle VC timeout 0
        input/output window sizes 2/2, packet sizes 128/128
      Timers:T20 180, T21 200, T22 180, T23 180
      Channels:Incoming-only none, Two-way 1-4095, Outgoing-only none
      RESTARTs 12/0 CALLs 5+4/0+0/0+0 DIAGs 0/0
      Fail-over delay:16 seconds remaining on Dialer0
  LAPB dxe/DCE, state CONNECT, modulo 8, k 7, N1 12056, N2 20
      T1 3000, T2 0, interface outage (partial T3) 0, T4 0
      VS 1, VR 1, tx NR 1, Remote VR 1, Retransmissions 0
      Queues:U/S frames 0, I frames 0, unack. 0, reTx 0
      IFRAMEs 97/88 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 SABM/Es 55490/12 FRMRs 186/0 DISCs

The following table describes significant fields shown in the displays.

Table 30. show x25 context Field Descriptions

Field

Description

XOT Access-group

Number of the XOT access group.

PROFILE

X.25 profile associated with the XOT access group.

address

Address to which the interface is connected.

state

State of the interface. Possible values are as follows:

R1-- normal ready state

R2--DTE1 restarting state

R3--DCE2 restarting state

If the state is R2 or R3, the interface is awaiting acknowledgment of a Restart packet.

modulo

Modulo packet sequence numbering scheme.

timer

Interface timer value (zero unless the interface state is R2 or R3).

Defaults: idle VC timeout

Inactivity time before clearing the virtual circuit.

input/output window sizes

Default window sizes (in packets) for the interface. The x25 facility interface configuration command can be used to override these default values for the switched virtual circuits originated by the router.

packet sizes

Default maximum packet sizes (in bytes) for the interface. The x25 facility interface configuration command can be used to override these default values for the switched virtual circuits originated by the router.

Timers

Values of the X.25 timers are as follows:

T10 through T13 for a DCE device

T20 through T23 for a DTE device

Channels

Virtual circuit ranges for this interface.

RESTARTs

Restart packet statistics for the interface using the format Sent/Received.

CALLs

(number of successful calls sent + calls failed)/(calls received + calls failed)/(calls forwarded + calls failed). Calls forwarded are counted as calls sent.

DIAGs

Number of diagnostic messages sent and received.

Fail-over delay

Number of seconds remaining until secondary interface resets.

1 DTE = data terminal equipment
2 DCE = data communications equipment

show x25 cug

To display information about all closed user groups (CUGs) or specific CUGs (defined by the local or network CUG number), use the show x25 cug command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 cug {local-cug [number] | network-cug [number] }

Syntax Description

local-cug

Displays CUGs by locally significant CUG identifier.

number

(Optional) Local CUG number (0 to 9999). If you do not specify a CUG number, information for all CUGs will be displayed.

network-cug

Displays CUGs by network-translated CUG identifier.

number

(Optional) Network CUG number (0 to 9999). If you do not specify a CUG number, information for all CUGs will be displayed.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(7)T

This command was introduced.

12.1(5)T

This command was modified to show information about CUG selection facility suppression.

12.2(13)T

This command was modified to display information about all or specific CUGs configured on terminal lines.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

You must designate either the local CUG or the network CUG by the choice of keyword. Within that designation you can view all CUGs or a specific CUG defined by its local or network CUG identifier.

Examples

Examples

The following is sample output for the show x25 cug command when CUG selection facility is suppressed for all CUGs on serial interface 1/2 and for the preferential CUG on the X.25 profile named “cug”.


Router# show x25 cug local-cug
 
X.25 Serial1/2, 2 CUGs subscribed with no public access 
  CUG selection facility suppressed for all CUGs 
  local-cug 100 <-> network-cug 10 
  local-cug 1 <-> network-cug 11 
PROFILE cug, 2 CUGs subscribed with incoming public access 
  CUG selection facility suppressed for preferential CUG 
  local-cug 0 <-> network-cug 0 , preferential 
  local-cug 100 <-> network-cug 100 
  local-cug 200 <-> network-cug 200 

Examples

The following sample output from the show x25 cug local-cug command displays information about all local CUGs on configured on the router.


Router# show x25 cug local-cug
X.25 Serial1/1, 3 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  local-cug 99 <-> network-cug 9999, no-incoming, preferential
  local-cug 100 <-> network-cug 1000 
  local-cug 101 <-> network-cug 1001 
PROFILE cugs, 2 CUGs subscribed with with incoming public access
  local-cug 1 <-> network-cug 10, no-outgoing
  local-cug 2 <-> network-cug 20, no-incoming, preferential
Line: 129 aux 0  , 1 CUGs subscribed with outgoing public access
  local-cug 1 <-> network-cug 10 
Line: 130 vty 0  , 4 CUGs subscribed with incoming and outgoing public access
  local-cug 1 <-> network-cug 10 
  local-cug 50 <-> network-cug 5, preferential
  local-cug 60 <-> network-cug 6, no-incoming
  local-cug 70 <-> network-cug 7, no-outgoing
Line: 131 vty 1   , 1 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  local-cug 1 <-> network-cug 10 

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 cug network-cug command specifically for network number 10 showing that local CUG 1 is associated with it.


Router# show x25 cug network-cug 10
X.25 Serial1/2, 5 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  network-cug 10 <-> local-cug 1
PROFILE cugs, 2 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  network-cug 10 <-> local-cug 1 , no-outgoing
Line: 129 aux 0   , 1 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  network-cug 10 <-> local-cug 1 
Line: 130 vty 0   , 4 CUGs subscribed with incoming and outgoing public access
  network-cug 10 <-> local-cug 1 
Line: 131 vty 1   , 1 CUGs subscribed with no public access
  network-cug 10 <-> local-cug 1

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.

Table 31. show x25 cug Field Descriptions

Field

Description

X.25 Serial...

DCE interface with X.25 CUG service subscription.

PROFILE

X.25 profile with X.25 CUG service subscription.

Line

Terminal line with X.25 CUG service subscription.

local-cug

Local CUG details.

network-cug

Network CUG details.

preferential

Identifies which CUG, if any, is preferred. A single CUG listed for an interface is assumed to be preferred.

show x25 hunt-group

To display hunt groups and view detailed interface statistics and distribution methods, use the show x25 hunt-group command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 hunt-group [name]

Syntax Description

name

(Optional) Displays the specific hunt group named.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(3)T

This command was introduced.

12.0(5)T

The command output status field was modified to include “unoperational” as a type of interface status.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

Use the clear counters or the clear x25 commands in EXEC mode to clear the count of VCs in use in the “status” field and the number of bytes of data transmitted and received in the “traffic” field. Since the “uses” field is a hunt-group-specific counter, it will not be cleared using the clear counters or clear x25 commands. The “uses” field is only cleared at boot time or when the hunt group is defined.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 hunt-group command:


Router# show x25 hunt-group
 
   ID      Type      Target                    uses      status    traffic(out/in)
 =================================================================================
 HG1       rotary    Serial1                   2         next      1158/1691 
                     Serial2                   2         next      1328/2146 
                     xot 172.17.125.54         2         last_used 137/3154 
                     xot 172.17.125.34         1         next      137/3154 
 
 
 HG2       vc-count  Serial2                   4         5 VCs     6921/1364 
                     Serial3                   2         1 VC      70/1259

The table below describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 32. show x25 hunt-group Field Descriptions

Field

Description

ID

Hunt group name.

Type

Method of load balancing (rotary or vc-count).

Target

Range of interfaces that a call within the hunt group can go to.

uses

Total number of call attempts (failed plus successful) made to the interface.

status

State of interface at that moment. The status of an interface may be one of the following:

  • next--Interface will be used next for rotary distribution method.

  • last used--Interface was just used for rotary distribution method.

  • unavailable--Interface is shutdown.

  • full--All logical channels on the interface are in use.

  • # VC--(vc-count only) Number of VCs currently in use on the interface.

  • unoper--All VCs on the interface are unoperational.

traffic (out/in)

Number of data bytes transmitted through the interface.

show x25 interface

To display information about virtual circuits (VCs) that use an X.25 interface and, optionally, about a specified virtual circuit, use the show x25 interface EXEC command.

show x25 interface [serial number | cmns-interface mac mac-address]

Syntax Description

serial number

(Optional) Keyword serial and number of the serial interface used for X.25.

cmns-interface mac mac-address

(Optional) Local CMNS interface type and number, plus the MAC address of the remote device. CMNS interface types are Ethernet, Token Ring, or FDDI. The interface numbering scheme depends on the router interface hardware.

Command Modes


EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

11.2

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following show x25 interface sample output displays X.25 information about VCs on serial interface 0:


Router# show x25 interface serial 0
SVC 1,  State: D1,  Interface: Serial0
  Started 00:13:52, last input 00:00:05, output never
  Connects 3334 <-> ip 3.3.3.4
  Call PID ietf, Data PID none
  Window size input: 7, output: 7
  Packet size input: 512, output: 512
  PS: 0  PR: 6  ACK: 1  Remote PR: 0  RCNT: 5  RNR: no
  P/D state timeouts: 0  timer (secs): 0
  data bytes 0/2508 packets 0/54 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0
SVC 32,  State: D1,  Interface: Serial0.11
  Started 00:16:53, last input 00:00:37, output 00:00:28
  Connects 3334 <-> clns
  Call PID cisco, Data PID none
  Window size input: 7, output: 7
  Packet size input: 512, output: 512
  PS: 5  PR: 4  ACK: 4  Remote PR: 4  RCNT: 0  RNR: no
  P/D state timeouts: 0  timer (secs): 0
  data bytes 378/360 packets 21/20 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

show x25 map

To display information about configured address maps, use the show x25 map command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 map

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(8)T

This command was modified to display record boundary preservation information for address maps.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

The show x25 map command displays information about the following:

  • Configured maps (defined by the x25 map command)

  • Maps implicitly defined by encapsulation permanent virtual circuits (PVCs) (defined by the encapsulating version of the x25 pvc command)

  • Dynamic maps (from the X.25 Defense Data Network [DDN] or Blacker Front End [BFE] operations)

Examples

Examples

The following is sample output of the show x25 map command for a router that is configured with record boundary preservation (RBP) using the x25 pvc rbp remote command:


Router# show x25 map
Serial1/0:-> rbp, destination host 10.0.0.33 port 9999
  PVC, 1 VC:1/P

The following is sample output of the show x25 map command for a router that is configured with RBP using the x25 map rbp remote command:


Router# show x25 map
Serial3/0:12132 -> rbp, destination host 10.0.0.32 port 9999
  permanent, 1 VC:1024

The following is sample output of the show x25 map command for a router that is configured with RBP using the x25 pvc rbp local command:


Router# show x25 map
Serial3/0:<- rbp, listening at port 9999
  PVC, 1 VC:2/P

The following is sample output of the show x25 map command for a router that is configured with RBP using the x25 map rbp local command:


Router# show x25 map
Serial1/0:12131 <- rbp, listening at port 9999
  permanent, 1 VC:1

The table below describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 33. show x25 map Field Descriptions for Maps That Use Record Boundary Preservation

Field

Description

Serial1/0

Interface on which this map is configured.

12131

(For SVCs only) X.121 address of the remote host. If any call user data is configured, it will appear in this field also.

-> rbp

Indicates an outgoing TCP session that is configured to use RBP.

<- rbp

Indicates an incoming TCP session that is configured to use RBP.

destination host 10.0.0.32 port 9999

IP address and port number of the destination host for an outgoing TCP session.

listening at port 9999

Port number on which the router is listening for a TCP connection request for incoming TCP sessions.

permanent

Indicates that the address map was explicitly configured using the x25 map rbp local or x25 rbp remote command.

PVC

Indicates that the address map was created when a PVC was configured using the x25 pvc rbp local or x25 pvc rbp remote command.

1 VC:1

Number of circuits associated with the map, followed by a list of circuit numbers. /P indicates a PVC.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 map for five maps that were configured with the x25 map command:


Router# show x25 map
Serial0: X.121 1311001 <--> ip 172.20.170.1
  PERMANENT, BROADCAST, 2 VCS: 3 4
Serial0: X.121 1311005 <--> appletalk 128.1
  PERMANENT
Serial1: X.121 2194441 cud hello <--> pad
  PERMANENT, windowsize 5 5, accept-reverse, idle 5
Serial1: X.121 1311005 <--> bridge
  PERMANENT, BROADCAST
Serial2: X.121 001003 <--> apollo 1.3,
         appletalk 1.3,
         ip 172.20.1.3,
         decnet 1.3,
         novell 1.0000.0c04.35df,
         vines 00000001:0003, 
         xns 1.0000.0c04.35df, 
         clns
  PERMANENT, NVC 8, 1 VC: 1024

The display shows that five maps have been configured for a router: two for serial interface 0, two for serial interface 1, and one for the serial interface 2 (which maps eight protocols to the host).

The table below describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 34. show x25 map Field Descriptions for Typical X.25 Maps

Field

Description

Serial0

Interface on which this map is configured.

X.121 1311001

X.121 address of the mapped encapsulation host.

ip 172.20.170.1

Type and address of the higher-level protocols mapped to the remote host. Bridge maps do not have a higher-level address; all bridge datagrams are sent to the mapped X.121 address. Connectionless Network Service (CLNS) maps refer to a configured neighbor as identified by the X.121 address.

PERMANENT

Address-mapping type that has been configured for the interface in this entry. Possible values include the following:

  • CONSTRUCTED--Derived with the DDN or BFE address conversion scheme.

  • PERMANENT--Map was entered with the x25 map interface configuration command.

  • PVC--Map was configured with the x25 pvc interface command.

BROADCAST

If any options are configured for an address mapping, they are listed; the example shows a map that is configured to forward datagram broadcasts to the mapped host.

2 VCs:

If the map has any active virtual circuits, they are identified.

3 4

Identifies the circuit number of the active virtual circuits.

Note that a single protocol virtual circuit can be associated with a multiprotocol map.

show x25 profile

To view details of X.25 profiles on your router, use the show x25 profile command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 profile [name]

Syntax Description

name

(Optional) Name of X.25 profile.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(3)T

This command was introduced.

12.2(8)T

This command was modified to display the XOT access groups associated with an X.25 profile.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

When the X.25 profile name is not specified, the output shows all configured profiles for a given interface.

Examples

The following sample output from the show x25 profile command displays details about the X.25 profile called “XOT-DEFAULT”:


Router# show x25 profile XOT-DEFAULT
X.25 profile name: XOT-DEFAULT 
In use by: 
  Access-group 2 
  Access-group 10 
PROFILE dxe/DTE, address 12345, state R/Inactive, modulo 128, timer 0 
Defaults: idle VC timeout 0 
input/output window sizes 20/20, packet sizes 256/256 
Timers: T20 180, T21 200, T22 180, T23 180 
Channels: Incoming-only none, Two-way 1-4095, Outgoing-only none 

The following sample output from the show x25 profile command displays all profiles configured on the same interface:


Router# show x25 profile
X.25 profile name:NetworkNodeA
  Number of references:2 
  In use by:
      Annex G:Serial1 DLCI 20
      Annex G:Serial1 DLCI 30
  PROFILE DCE, address <none>, state R/Inactive, modulo 128, timer 0
      Defaults:idle VC timeout 5
        input/output window sizes 2/2, packet sizes 128/128
      Timers:T10 60, T11 180, T12 60, T13 60
      Channels:Incoming-only none, Two-way 1-128, Outgoing-only none
  LAPB DCE, modulo 8, k 7, N1 default, N2 20
      T1 3000, T2 0, interface outage (partial T3) 0, T4 0
X.25 profile name:NetworkNodeB
  Number of references:1 
  In use by:
      Annex G:Serial1 DLCI 40
  PROFILE DTE, address 1111, state R/Inactive, modulo 8, timer 0
      Defaults:idle VC timeout 0
        input/output window sizes 2/2, packet sizes 128/128
      Timers:T20 180, T21 200, T22 180, T23 180
      Channels:Incoming-only none, Two-way 1-1024, Outgoing-only none
LAPB DTE, modulo 8, k 7, N1 default, N2 20
      T1 3000, T2 0, interface outage (partial T3) 0, T4 0

The following table describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 35. show x25 profile Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Number of references

Number of X.25 connections using this profile.

In use by

Shows the interface, XOT access group, and X.25 service using this profile.

address

Address to which interface is connected.

state

State of the interface. Possible values are as follows:

R1--normal ready state

R2--DTE3 restarting state

R3--DCE4 restarting state

If the state is R2 or R3, the interface is awaiting acknowledgment of a Restart packet.

modulo

Value that determines the packet sequence numbering scheme used.

timer

Interface timer value (zero unless the interface state is R2 or R3).

Defaults: idle VC timeout

Inactivity time before clearing the virtual circuit.

input/output window sizes

Default window sizes (in packets) for the interface. The x25 facility interface configuration command can be used to override these default values for the switched virtual circuits originated by the router.

packet sizes

Default maximum packet sizes (in bytes) for the interface. The x25 facility interface configuration command can be used to override these default values for the switched virtual circuits originated by the router.

Timers

Values of the X.25 timers are as follows:

T10 through T13 for a DCE device

T20 through T23 for a DTE device

Channels:

Virtual circuit ranges for this interface.

3 DTE = data terminal equipment
4 DCE = data communications equipment

show x25 remote-red


Note

Effective with Cisco IOS Release 12.2, the show x25 remote-red command is not available in Cisco IOS Software.


To display the one-to-one mapping of the host IP addresses and the remote Blacker Front End (BFE) device’s IP addresses, use the show x25 remote-red command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 remote-red

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2

This command became unsupported.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 remote-red command:


Router# show x25 remote-red
Entry       REMOTE-RED     REMOTE-BLACK   INTERFACE
1           21.0.0.3       21.0.0.7       serial3
2           21.0.0.10      21.0.0.6       serial1
3           21.0.0.24      21.0.0.8       serial3

The table below describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 36. show x25 remote-red Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Entry

Address mapping entry.

REMOTE-RED

Host IP address.

REMOTE-BLACK

IP address of the remote BFE device.

INTERFACE

Name of interface through which communication with the remote BFE device will take place.

show x25 route

To display the X.25 routing table, use the show x25 route command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 route

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.0(5)T

The dns keyword was added.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following example shows output from the show x25 route command:


Router# show x25 route
# Match                      Substitute               Route To
1 dest ^1311001$                                      Serial0, 0 uses
2 dest ^1311002$                                      xot 172.20.170.10
3 dest 444                                            xot dns \0
4 dest 555                                            xot dns \0

The table below describes significant fields shown in the display.

Table 37. show x25 route Field Descriptions

Field

Description

#

Number identifying the entry in the X.25 routing table.

Match

The match criteria and patterns associated with this entry.

Route To

Destination to which the router will forward a call; X.25 destinations identify an interface; CMNS destinations identify an interface and host MAC address; XOT destinations either identify up to six IP addresses (#2), or the x25 route pattern for retrieving up to six IP addresses from the DNS (#3 and #4).

show x25 services

To display information pertaining to the X.25 services, use the show x25 services command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 services

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes


User EXEC
Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

11.2

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

This command is the default form of the show x25 command.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x25 services command:


Router# show x25 services
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
  3 configurations supporting 3 active contexts
  VCs allocated, freed and in use: 7 - 0 = 7
  VCs active and idle: 4, 3
XOT software, Version 2.0.0.
  VCs allocated, freed and in use: 2 - 1 = 1
  connections in-progress: 0 outgoing and 0 incoming
  active VCs: 1, connected to 1 remote hosts

show x25 vc

To display information about active switched virtual circuits (SVCs) and permanent virtual circuits (PVCs), use the show x25 vc command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 vc [lcn]

Syntax Description

lcn

(Optional) Logical channel number (LCN).

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

8.3

This command was introduced in a release prior to Release 8.3.

12.2(8)T

This command was modified to display information about record boundary preservation.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

To examine a particular virtual circuit number, add an LCN argument to the show x25 vc command.

This command displays information about virtual circuits (VCs). VCs may be used for a number of purposes, such as the following:

  • Encapsulation traffic

  • Traffic switched between X.25 services (X.25, Connection-Mode Network Service [CMNS], and X.25 over TCP/IP [XOT])

  • PAD traffic

  • QLLC traffic

The connectivity information displayed will vary according to the traffic carried by the VC. For multiprotocol circuits, the output varies depending on the number and identity of the protocols mapped to the X.121 address and the encapsulation method selected for the circuit.

Examples

The following is sample output of the show x25 vc command for a PVC configured with record boundary preservation (RBP):


Router# show x25 vc

PVC 2,  State:D1,  Interface:Serial3/0
  Started 00:08:08, last input 00:00:01, output 00:00:01
  recordsize:1500, connected
  local address 10.0.0.1 port 9999; remote address 10.0.0.5 port 11029
  deferred ack:1
  Window size input:2, output:2
  Packet size input:128, output:128
  PS:2  PR:2  ACK:1  Remote PR:2  RCNT:1  RNR:no
  P/D state timeouts:0  timer (secs):0
  data bytes 8000/8000 packets 80/80 Resets 9/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

The following table describes the fields shown in the sample output that are typical for virtual circuits.

Table 38. show x25 vc Field Descriptions

Field

Description

SVC n or PVC n

Identifies the type of virtual circuit (switched or permanent) and its LCN (also called its “virtual circuit number”).

State

State of the virtual circuit (which is independent of the states of other virtual circuits); D1 is the normal ready state. See the International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T)5 X.25 Recommendation for a description of virtual circuit states.

Interface

Interface or subinterface on which the virtual circuit is established.

Started

Time elapsed since the virtual circuit was created.

last input

Time of last input.

output

Time of last output.

Connects...<-->..

Traffic-specific connection information. See the tables below for more information.

D-bit permitted

Indicates that the X.25 D-bit (Delivery Confirmation) may be used on this circuit (displayed as needed).

Fast select VC

Indicates that the Fast Select facility was present on the incoming call (displayed as needed).

Reverse charged

Indicates reverse charged virtual circuit (displayed as needed).

Window size

Window sizes for the virtual circuit.

Packet size

Maximum packet sizes for the virtual circuit.

PS

Current send sequence number.

PR

Current receive sequence number.

ACK

Last acknowledged incoming packet.

Remote PR

Last receive sequence number received from the other end of the circuit.

RCNT

Count of unacknowledged input packets.

RNR

State of the Receiver Not Ready flag; this field is true if the network sends a Receiver-not-Ready packet.

Window is closed

This line appears if the router cannot transmit any more packets until the X.25 Layer 3 peer has acknowledged some outstanding packets.

P/D state timeouts

Number of times a supervisory packet (Reset or Clear) has been retransmitted.

Timer

A nonzero time value indicates that a control packet has not been acknowledged yet or that the virtual circuit is being timed for inactivity.

Reassembly

Number of bytes received and held for reassembly. Packets with the M-bit set are reassembled into datagrams for encapsulation virtual circuits; switched X.25 traffic is not reassembled (and is displayed only when values are not zero).

Held Fragments/Packets

Number of X.25 data fragments to transmit to complete an outgoing datagram, and the number of datagram packets waiting for transmission (displayed only when values are not zero).

data bytes m /n packets p /q

Total number of data bytes sent (m), data bytes received (n), data packets sent (p), and data packets received (q) since the circuit was established.

Resets t /r

Total number of reset packets transmitted/received since the circuit was established.

RNRs t/r

Total number of Receiver Not Ready packets transmitted/received since the circuit was established.

REJs t/r

Total number of Reject packets transmitted/received since the circuit was established.

INTs t/r

Total number of Interrupt packets transmitted/received since the circuit was established.

5 The ITU-T carries out the functions of the former Consultative Committee for International Telegraph and Telephone (CCITT).

The following table describes the fields specific to VCs configured with record boundary preservation.

Table 39. show x25 vc Field Descriptions for VCs That Use Record Boundary Preservation

Field

Description

recordsize

Maximum record size for the session.

connected

Connection status.

local address; port

IP address and port number of the local end of the TCP session.

remote address; port

IP address and port number of the remote end of the TCP session.

input queue

Number of inbound X.25 data packets not yet processed. This field appears in the display only when the value is not zero.

record buffer

Number of bytes of X.25 data in the current partial record (not including data packets in the input queue). This field appears in the display only when the value is not zero.

deferred ack

Number of X.25 data packets that have been received and processed but not yet acknowledged. This field appears in the display only when the value is not zero.

The following is sample output of the show x25 vc command used on an encapsulated traffic circuit:


Router# show x25 vc 1024
SVC 1024, State: D1, Interface: Serial0
 Started 0:00:31, last input 0:00:31, output 0:00:31
 Connects 170090 <-->
    compressedtcp 172.20.170.90
    ip 172.20.170.90
 Call PID multi, Data PID ietf
 Reverse charged
 Window size input: 2, output: 2
 Packet size input: 128, output: 128
 PS: 5 PR: 5 ACK: 4 Remote PR: 5 RCNT: 1 RNR: FALSE
 Window is closed
 P/D state timeouts: 0 Timer (secs): 0
  data bytes 505/505 packets 5/5 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

The following table describes the connection fields specific to encapsulation traffic.

Table 40. show x25 vc Encapsulation Traffic Field Descriptions

Field

Description

170090

The X.121 address of the remote host.

ip 172.20.170.90

The higher-level protocol and address values that are mapped to the virtual circuit.

Call PID

Identifies the method used for protocol identification (PID) in the Call User Data (CUD) field. Because PVCs are not set up using a Call packet, this field is not displayed for encapsulation PVCs. The available methods are as follows:

  • cisco--Cisco’s traditional method was used to set up a single protocol virtual circuit.

  • ietf--The IETF’s standard RFC 1356 method was used to set up a single protocol virtual circuit.

  • snap--The IETF’s Subnetwork Access Protocol (SNAP) method for IP encapsulation was used.

  • multi--the IETF’s multiprotocol encapsulation method was used.

Data PID

Identifies the method used for PID when sending datagrams. The available methods are as follows:

  • none--The virtual circuit is a single-protocol virtual circuit; no PID is used.

  • ietf--The IETF’s standard RFC 1356 method for identifying the protocol is used.

  • snap--The IETF’s SNAP method for identifying IP datagrams is used.

The following is sample output of the show x25 vc command used on a virtual circuit carrying locally switched X.25 traffic:


Router# show x25 vc
PVC 1, State: D1, Interface: Serial2
  Started 0:01:26, last input never, output never
  PVC <--> Serial1 PVC 1, connected
  Window size input: 2, output: 2
  Packet size input: 128, output: 128
  PS: 0 PR: 0 ACK: 0 Remote PR: 0 RCNT: 0 RNR: FALSE
  P/D state timeouts: 0 Timer (secs): 0 
  data bytes 0/0 packets 0/0 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0
SVC 5, State: D1, Interface: Serial2
  Started 0:00:16, last input 0:00:15, output 0:00:15
  Connects 170093 <--> 170090 from Serial1 VC 5
  Window size input: 2, output: 2
  Packet size input: 128, output: 128
  PS: 5 PR: 5 ACK: 4 Remote PR: 5 RCNT: 1 RNR: FALSE
  P/D state timeouts: 0 Timer (secs): 0 
  data bytes 505/505 packets 5/5 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

The following table describes the connection fields for virtual circuits carrying locally switched X.25 traffic.

Table 41. show x25 vc Local Traffic Field Descriptions

Field

Description

PVC <-->

Indicates a switched connection between two PVCs.

Serial1 PVC 1

Identifies the other half of a local PVC connection.

connected

Identifies connection status for a switched connection between two PVCs. See the final table below for PVC status messages.

170093

Identifies the Calling (source) Address of the connection. If a Calling Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed. If the source host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

170090

Identifies the Called (destination) Address of the connection. If a Called Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed. If the destination host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

from Serial1

Indicates the direction of the call and the connecting interface.

VC 5

Identifies the circuit type and LCN for the connecting interface. VC indicates an SVC, and PVC indicates a PVC. If the connecting host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

The following is sample output of the show x25 vc command used on a virtual circuit carrying locally switched PVC-to-SVC X.25 traffic:


Router# show x25 vc
PVC 5,  State: D1,  Interface: Serial0
  Started 4d21h, last input 00:00:14, output 00:00:14
  Connects 101600 <--> 201700 from Serial2 VC 700
  D-bit permitted
  Window size input: 2, output: 2
  Packet size input: 128, output: 128
  PS: 5  PR: 5  ACK: 4  Remote PR: 5  RCNT: 1  RNR: no
  P/D state timeouts: 0  timer (secs): 0
  data bytes 1000/1000 packets 10/10 Resets 1/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0
SVC 700,  State: D1,  Interface: Serial2
  Started 00:00:16, last input 00:00:16, output 00:00:16
  Connects 101600 <--> 201700 from Serial0 PVC 5
  Window size input: 2, output: 2
  Packet size input: 128, output: 128
  PS: 5  PR: 5  ACK: 5  Remote PR: 4  RCNT: 0  RNR: no
  P/D state timeouts: 0  timer (secs): 103
  data bytes 500/500 packets 5/5 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

The following table describes the connection fields for virtual circuits carrying locally switched X.25 traffic between PVCs and SVCs.

Table 42. show x25 vc Locally Switched PVC-to-SVC Traffic Field Descriptions

Field

Description

101600

Identifies the Calling (source) Address of the connection. If a Calling Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed. If the source host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

201700

Identifies the Called (destination) Address of the connection. If a Called Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed. If the destination host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

from Serial2

Indicates the direction of the call and the connecting interface.

VC 700

Identifies the circuit type and LCN for the connecting interface. VC indicates an SVC and PVC indicates a PVC. If the remote host is a CMNS host, its MAC address is also displayed.

The following is sample output from the show x25 vc command used on a virtual circuit carrying remotely switched X.25 traffic:


Router# show x25 vc
PVC 2, State: D1, Interface: Serial2
 Started 0:01:25, last input never, output never
 PVC <--> [172.20.165.92] Serial2/0 PVC 1 connected
 XOT between 172.20.165.95, 1998 and 172.20.165.92, 27801
 Window size input: 2, output: 2
 Packet size input: 128, output: 128
 PS: 0 PR: 0 ACK: 0 Remote PR: 0 RCNT: 0 RNR: FALSE
 P/D state timeouts: 0 Timer (secs): 0 Reassembly (bytes): 0
 Held Fragments/Packets: 0/0
 data bytes 0/0 packets 0/0 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0
SVC 6, State: D1, Interface: Serial2
 Started 0:00:04, last input 0:00:04, output 0:00:04
 Connects 170093 <--> 170090 from
 XOT between 172.20.165.91, 1998 and 172.20.165.92, 27896
 Window size input: 2, output: 2
 Packet size input: 128, output: 128
 PS: 5 PR: 5 ACK: 4 Remote PR: 5 RCNT: 1 RNR: FALSE
 P/D state timeouts: 0 Timer (secs): 0 Reassembly (bytes): 0
 Held Fragments/Packets: 0/0
 data bytes 505/505 packets 5/5 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0

The following table describes the connection fields for virtual circuits carrying remotely switched X.25 traffic.

Table 43. show x25 vc Remote X.25 Traffic Field Descriptions

Field

Description

PVC

Flags PVC information.

[172.20.165.92]

Indicates the IP address of the router remotely connecting the PVC.

Serial 2/0 PVC 1

Identifies the remote interface and PVC number.

connected

Identifies connection status for a switched connection between two PVCs. See the table below for PVC status messages.

170093

Identifies the Calling (source) Address of the connection. If a Calling Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed.

170090

Identifies the Called (destination) Address of the connection. If a Called Address Extension was encoded in the call facilities, it is also displayed.

from

Indicates the direction of the call.

XOT between...

Identifies the IP addresses and port numbers of the X.25-over-TCP (XOT) connection.

The following table lists the PVC states that can be reported. These states are also reported by the debug x25 command in PVC-SETUP packets (for remote PVCs only). Some states apply only to remotely switched PVCs.

Table 44. X.25 PVC Status Messages

Status Message

Description

awaiting PVC-SETUP reply

A remote PVC has initiated an XOT TCP connection and is waiting for a reply to the setup message.

can’t support flow control values

The window sizes or packet sizes of the PVC cannot be supported by one of its two interfaces.

connected

The PVC is up.

dest. disconnected

The other end has disconnected the PVC.

dest interface is not up

The target interface’s X.25 service is down.

dest PVC config mismatch

The targeted PVC is already connected.

mismatched flow control values

The configured flow control values do not match.

no such dest. interface

The remote destination interface was reported to be in error by the remote router.

no such dest. PVC

The targeted PVC does not exist.

non-X.25 dest. interface

The target interface is not configured for X.25.

PVC/TCP connect timed out

A remote PVC XOT TCP connection attempt timed out.

PVC/TCP connection refused

A remote PVC XOT TCP connection was tried and refused.

PVC/TCP routing error

A remote PVC XOT TCP connection routing error was reported.

trying to connect via TCP

A remote PVC XOT TCP connection is established and is in the process of connecting.

waiting to connect

The PVC is waiting to be processed for connecting.

show x25 xot

To display information for all X.25 over TCP (XOT) virtual circuits that match a given criterion, use the show x25 xot command in privileged EXEC mode.

show x25 xot [local ip-address [port port]] [remote ip-address [port port] | access-group [access-group-number] ]

Syntax Description

local ip-address port port

(Optional) Local IP address and optional port number.

remote ip-address port port

(Optional) Remote IP address and optional port number.

access-group

(Optional) Displays configuration information about XOT access groups.

access-group-number

(Optional) Displays configuration information about a specific XOT access group.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

11.2

This command was introduced.

12.2(8)T

Access group options were added.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following show x25 xot sample output displays information about all XOT virtual circuits:


Router# show x25 xot
SVC 11,  State: D1,  Interface: [10.2.2.2,1998/10.2.2.1,11002]
  Started 00:00:08, last input 00:00:08, output 00:00:08
  Line: 0   con 0    Location:  Host: 5678
  111 connected to 5678 PAD <--> XOT 2.2.2.2,1998
  Window size input: 2, output: 2
  Packet size input: 128, output: 128
  PS: 2  PR: 3  ACK: 3  Remote PR: 2  RCNT: 0  RNR: no
  P/D state timeouts: 0  timer (secs): 0
  data bytes 54/18 packets 2/3 Resets 0/0 RNRs 0/0 REJs 0/0 INTs 0/0\

The following example shows sample output for the show x25 xot command with the access-group keyword:


Router# show x25 xot access-group
 xot access-group 1 using built-in default configuration
 xot access-group 10 using x.25 profile ocean
 xot access-group 55 using x.25 profile river

show x28 hunt-group

To display the members and status of each member in an X.28 hunt group, use the show x28 hunt-group command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show x28 hunt-group [group-num]

Syntax Description

group-num

(Optional) Identification number of a particular hunt group.

Command Default

The members of all X.28 hunt groups in the router are displayed.

Command Modes


User EXEC
Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

12.3(11)YN

This command was introduced.

12.4(4)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(4)T.

Examples

The following example displays the configuration of four hunt (“rotary”) groups and the current status of their member lines:


Router# show x28 hunt-group

	ID 	Type 		HG-Address 	TTy      Address 	Uses   status
	=============================================================================
	1 	RRA			23456 			97   		34567		2       INUSE 
	 							98   		12345 		0      NXTUSE 
								100 		- 		0 		INUSEO 
								102  		456789 		0        IDLE 
	2 	 QBR,FIF 			-			99 		 - 		0       UNAVL 
	3 	QUE,FIF 			- 			101 		- 		0      NXTUSE 
	4 	FIF			56789 			103		67890		0       UNAVL 
	 							104  		789012 		0       UNAVL 
Table 45. show x28 hunt-group Field Descriptions

Field

Description

ID

The identification number of the hunt group.

Type

The line-selection mechanism used within the group:

  • FIF (First Idle First): Lines are searched in increasing order of their line (absolute) number, and the first idle line found is given the incoming call.

  • RRA (Round-Robin): The incoming call is given to the line whose line number is the next highest from the line that received the last call.

  • QUE (Queued): If all lines in the group are busy when a call request arrives, that call is queued and given to the first line that frees up. (Not implementable with Multi-PAD X.25 addressing.)

  • QBR (Queued By Role): Same as “Queued,” except that calls belonging to priority users are placed at the head of the queue. (Not implementable with Multi-PAD X.25 addressing.)

HG-Address

X.28 address assigned to the hunt group.

TTy

Absolute number of the line.

Address

X.121 address assigned to that line.

Uses

How many calls have been placed on that line.

status

Current status of the line:

  • IDLE : available

  • NXTUSE : idle and next to be used

  • INUSE : busy in a PAD call

  • INUSEO : busy in a non-PAD call

  • UNAVL : unavailable (either because of inactive modem control signals or because PAD transport is unavailable)

show x29 access-lists

To display X.29 access lists, use the show x29 access-lists command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show x29 access-lists [access-list-number]

Syntax Description

access-list-number

(Optional) Standard x29 access list number. The range is from 0 to 500.

Command Default

If no argument is specified, information for all X.29 access lists is displayed.

Command Modes


User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.0.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2(33)SXH

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.

Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1

This command was implemented on the Cisco ASR 1000 series routers.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show x29 access-lists command:


Router# show x29 access-lists
 
X29 access list 10
    permit 192.0.2.0
X29 access list 20
    deny 192.0.2.255
X29 access list 50
    permit 192.0.2.10

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 46. show x29 access-lists Field Descriptions

Field

Description

X29 access list

Displays the access list number which is configured to be allowed or denied access.

permit

Displays the source IP address of the incoming packet which is permitted to have access to the protocol translator.

deny

Displays the source IP address of the incoming packet which is configured to deny access and clear call requests immediately.

show xconnect

To display information about xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires, use the show xconnect command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show xconnect { {all | interface type number} [detail] | peer ip-address {all | vcid vcid-value} [detail] | pwmib [peer ip-address vcid-value]}

Cisco IOS SR and S Trains

show xconnect { {all | interface type number | memory | rib} [detail] [checkpoint] | peer ip-address {all | vcid vcid-value} [detail] | pwmib [peer ip-address vcid-value]}monitor

Cisco uBR10012 Router and Cisco uBR7200 Series Universal Broadband Routers

show xconnect {all | peer ip-address {all | vcid vcid-value} | pwmib [peer ip-address vcid-value]} [detail]

Syntax Description

all

Displays information about all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires.

interface

Displays information about xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires on the specified interface.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function. Valid values for the type argument are as follows:

  • atm number —Displays xconnect information for a specific ATM interface or subinterface.

  • atm number vp vpi-value —Displays virtual path (VP) xconnect information for a specific ATM virtual path identifier (VPI). The show xconnect atm number vp vpi-value command will not display information about virtual circuit (VC) xconnects using the specified VPI.

  • atm number vc vpi-value/vci-value —Displays VC xconnect information for a specific ATM VPI and virtual circuit identifier (VCI) combination.

  • ethernet number —Displays port-mode xconnect information for a specific Ethernet interface or subinterface.

  • fastethernet number —Displays port-mode xconnect information for a specific Fast Ethernet interface or subinterface.

  • serial number —Displays xconnect information for a specific serial interface.

  • serial number dlci-number —Displays xconnect information for a specific Frame Relay data-link connection identifier (DLCI).

number

Interface or subinterface number. For more information about the numbering syntax for your networking device, use the question mark (?) online help function.

detail

(Optional) Displays detailed information about the specified xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires.

peer

Displays information about xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires associated with the specified peer.

ip-address

The IP address of the peer.

all

Displays all xconnect information associated with the specified peer IP address.

vcid

Displays xconnect information associated with the specified peer IP address and the specified VC ID.

vcid-value

The VC ID value.

pwmib

Displays information about the pseudowire MIB.

memory

Displays information about the xconnect memory usage.

rib

Displays information about the pseudowire Routing Information Base (RIB).

checkpoint

(Optional) Displays the autodiscovered pseudowire information that is checkpointed to the standby Route Processor (RP).

monitor

Displays information about xconnect monitor usage for bidirectional forwarding detection (BFD).

Command Modes


User EXEC (>)


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(31)S

This command was introduced.

12.2(28)SB

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(28)SB.

12.4(11)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(11)T.

12.2(33)SRB

This command was modified. The rib keyword was added.

12.2(33)SXI

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXI.

Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1.

12.4(24)T

This command was modified in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.4(24)T. The pwmib keyword was added.

12.2(33)SRC

This command was modified in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC. The memory keyword was added.

12.2(33)SCC

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SCC.

15.1(1)S

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)S. The output of the show xconnect rib command and the show xconnect rib detail command was modified to support dynamic pseudowire switching on Autonomous System Boundary Routers (ASRBs). The checkpoint keyword was added.

12.2(33)SCF

This command was modified. The output was changed to display backup pseudowire information.

15.1(3)S

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(3)S. Themonitor keyword was added.

Usage Guidelines

You can use the show xconnect command to display, sort, and filter basic information about all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires.

You can use the show xconnect command output to help determine the appropriate steps required to troubleshoot an xconnect configuration problem. More specific information about a particular type of xconnect can be displayed using the commands listed in the “Related Commands” table.

Examples

The following example shows the show xconnect all command output in the brief (default) display format:


Router# show xconnect all

Legend: XC ST=Xconnect State, S1=Segment1 State, S2=Segment2 State
UP=Up, DN=Down, AD=Admin Down, IA=Inactive, SB=Standby, RV=Recovering, NH=No Hardware 
XC ST     Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
UP     ac   Et0/0(Ethernet)              UP mpls 10.55.55.2:1000              UP
UP     ac   Se7/0(PPP)                   UP mpls 10.55.55.2:2175              UP
UP pri ac   Se6/0:230(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.2:2230              UP
IA sec ac   Se6/0:230(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.3:2231              DN
UP     ac   Se4/0(HDLC)                  UP mpls 10.55.55.2:4000              UP
UP     ac   Se6/0:500(FR DLCI)           UP l2tp 10.55.55.2:5000              UP
UP     ac   Et1/0.1:200(Eth VLAN)        UP mpls 10.55.55.2:5200              UP
UP pri ac   Se6/0:225(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.2:5225              UP
IA sec ac   Se6/0:225(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.3:5226              DN
IA pri ac   Et1/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP ac   Et2/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP
UP sec ac   Et1/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP mpls 10.55.55.3:1101              UP
UP     ac   Se6/0:150(FR DLCI)           UP ac   Se8/0:150(FR DLCI)           UP

The following example shows the show xconnect all command output in the detailed display format:


Router# show xconnect all detail

Legend: XC ST=Xconnect State, S1=Segment1 State, S2=Segment2 State
UP=Up, DN=Down, AD=Admin Down, IA=Inactive, SB=Standby, RV=Recovering, NH=No HardwareXC 
ST     Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
UP     ac   Et0/0(Ethernet)              UP mpls 10.55.55.2:1000              UP
            Interworking: ip                     Local VC label 16 
                                                 Remote VC label 16 
                                                 pw-class: mpls-ip 
UP     ac   Se7/0(PPP)                   UP mpls 10.55.55.2:2175              UP
            Interworking: ip                     Local VC label 22 
                                                 Remote VC label 17 
                                                 pw-class: mpls-ip 
UP pri ac   Se6/0:230(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.2:2230              UP
            Interworking: ip                     Local VC label 21 
                                                 Remote VC label 18 
pw-class: mpls-ip 
IA sec ac   Se6/0:230(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.3:2231              DN
            Interworking: ip                     Local VC label unassigned 
                                                 Remote VC label 19 
                                                 pw-class: mpls-ip 
SB ac   Se4/0:100(FR DLCI) 										UP mpls 10.55.55.2:4000              SB
            Interworking: none                   Local VC label 18 
                                                 Remote VC label 19 
                                                 pw-class: mpls 
UP     ac   Se6/0:500(FR DLCI)           UP l2tp 10.55.55.2:5000              UP
            Interworking: none                   Session ID: 34183 
                                                 Tunnel ID: 62083 
                                                 Peer name: pe-iou2 
                                                 Protocol State: UP 
                                                 Remote Circuit State: UP 
                                                 pw-class: l2tp 
UP     ac   Et1/0.1:200(Eth VLAN)        UP mpls 10.55.55.2:5200              UP
            Interworking: ip                     Local VC label 17 
                                                 Remote VC label 20 
                                                 pw-class: mpls-ip 
UP pri ac   Se6/0:225(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.2:5225              UP
            Interworking: none                   Local VC label 19 
                                                 Remote VC label 21 
                                                 pw-class: mpls 
IA sec ac   Se6/0:225(FR DLCI)           UP mpls 10.55.55.3:5226              DN
            Interworking: none                   Local VC label unassigned 
                                                 Remote VC label 22 
                                                 pw-class: mpls 
IA pri ac   Et1/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP ac   Et2/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP
            Interworking: none                   Interworking: none 
UP sec ac   Et1/0.2:100(Eth VLAN)        UP mpls 10.55.55.3:1101              UP
            Interworking: none                   Local VC label 23 
                                                 Remote VC label 17 
                                                 pw-class: mpls 
UP     ac   Se6/0:150(FR DLCI)           UP ac   Se8/0:150(FR DLCI)           UP
            Interworking: none                   Interworking: none 

Examples

The following is sample output from the show xconnect all command in the brief (default) display format for all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires on a Cisco uBR10012 router:


Router# show xconnect all

Legend:    XC ST=Xconnect State  S1=Segment1 State  S2=Segment2 State
  UP=Up       DN=Down            AD=Admin Down      IA=Inactive
  SB=Standby  RV=Recovering      NH=No Hardware
XC ST  Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
UP     ac   Bu254:2001(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2001               UP
UP     ac   Bu254:2002(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2002               UP
UP     ac   Bu254:2004(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2004               UP
DN     ac   Bu254:22(DOCSIS)             UP mpls 101.1.0.2:22                 DN

Examples

The following is sample output from the show xconnect command in the brief (default) display format for all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires on a Cisco uBR10012 router in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SCF:


Router# show xconnect all

Legend:    XC ST=Xconnect State  S1=Segment1 State  S2=Segment2 State
  UP=Up       DN=Down            AD=Admin Down      IA=Inactive
  SB=Standby  RV=Recovering      NH=No Hardware
XC ST  Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
DN     ac   Bu254:55(DOCSIS)             DN mpls 10.2.3.4:55                  DN
UP     ac   Bu254:1000(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.2.3.4:1000                UP
UP     ac   Bu254:400(DOCSIS)            UP mpls 10.76.2.1:400                UP
DN     ac   Bu254:600(DOCSIS)            DN mpls 10.76.2.1:600                DN
UP     ac   Bu254:1800(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.2.1:1800               UP
DN     ac   Bu254:45454(DOCSIS)          DN mpls 10.76.2.1:45454              DN

Examples

The following is sample output from the show xconnect command in the detailed display format for all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires on a Cisco uBR10012 router:


Router# show xconnect all detail

Legend:    XC ST=Xconnect State  S1=Segment1 State  S2=Segment2 State
  UP=Up       DN=Down            AD=Admin Down      IA=Inactive
  SB=Standby  RV=Recovering      NH=No Hardware
XC ST  Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
UP     ac   Bu254:2001(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2001               UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 40
                                                 Remote VC label 110
                                                 pw-class:
UP     ac   Bu254:2002(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2002               UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 41
                                                 Remote VC label 88
                                                 pw-class:
UP     ac   Bu254:2004(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.1.1:2004               UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 42
                                                 Remote VC label 111
                                                 pw-class:
DN     ac   Bu254:22(DOCSIS)             UP mpls 101.1.0.2:22                 DN
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 39
                                                 Remote VC label unassigned
                                                 pw-class:

Examples

The following is sample output from the show xconnect command in the detailed display format for all xconnect attachment circuits and pseudowires on a Cisco uBR10012 router in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SCF:


Router# show xconnect all detail

Legend:    XC ST=Xconnect State  S1=Segment1 State  S2=Segment2 State
  UP=Up       DN=Down            AD=Admin Down      IA=Inactive
  SB=Standby  RV=Recovering      NH=No Hardware
XC ST  Segment 1                         S1 Segment 2                         S2
------+---------------------------------+--+---------------------------------+--
DN     ac   Bu254:55(DOCSIS)             DN mpls 10.2.3.4:55                  DN
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label unassigned
                                                 Remote VC label unassigned
                                                 pw-class:
UP     ac   Bu254:1000(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.2.3.4:1000                UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 33
                                                 Remote VC label 36
                                                 pw-class:
UP     ac   Bu254:400(DOCSIS)            UP mpls 10.76.2.1:400                UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 35
                                                 Remote VC label 194
                                                 pw-class:
DN     ac   Bu254:600(DOCSIS)            DN mpls 10.76.2.1:600                DN
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label unassigned
                                                 Remote VC label 120
                                                 pw-class:
UP     ac   Bu254:1800(DOCSIS)           UP mpls 10.76.2.1:1800               UP
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label 24
                                                 Remote VC label 132
                                                 pw-class:
DN     ac   Bu254:45454(DOCSIS)          DN mpls 10.76.2.1:45454              DN
            Interworking: ethernet               Local VC label unassigned
                                                 Remote VC label 54
                                                 pw-class:

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the displays.

Table 47. show xconnect all Field Descriptions

Field

Description

XC ST

State of the xconnect attachment circuit or pseudowire. The valid states are:

  • DN—The xconnect attachment circuit or pseudowire is down. Either segment 1, segment 2, or both segments are down.

  • IA—The xconnect attachment circuit or pseudowire is inactive. This state is valid only when pseudowire redundancy is configured.

  • NH—One or both segments of this xconnect no longer have the required hardware resources available to the system.

  • UP—The xconnect attachment circuit or pseudowire is up. Both segment 1 and segment 2 must be up for the xconnect to be up.

Segment1

or

Segment2

Information about the type of xconnect, the interface type, and the IP address the segment is using. The types of xconnects are as follows:

  • ac—Attachment circuit

  • l2tp—Layer 2 Tunnel Protocol

  • mpls—Multiprotocol Label Switching

  • pri ac—Primary attachment circuit

  • sec ac—Secondary attachment circuit

S1

or

S2

State of the segment. The valid states are:

  • AD—The segment is administratively down.

  • DN—The segment is down.

  • HS—The segment is in hot standby mode.

  • RV—The segment is recovering from a graceful restart.

  • SB—The segment is in a standby state.

  • UP—The segment is up.

The additional fields displayed in the detailed output are self-explanatory.

Examples

For the VPLS Autodiscovery feature, issuing the show xconnect rib command provides RIB details, as shown in the following example:


Router# show xconnect rib

Local Router ID: 10.0.0.0
+- Origin of entry                            (I=iBGP/e=eBGP)
| +- Imported without a matching route target (Yes/No)?
| | +- Provisioned                            (Yes/No)?
| | | +- Stale entry                          (Yes/No)?
| | | |
v v v v
O I P S        VPLS-ID         Target ID       Next-Hop       Route-Target
-+-+-+-+----------------------+---------------+--------------+-------------
I Y N N        66:66           10.0.0.1       10.1.1.2        66:66
I Y N N        66:66           10.1.1.2         10.1.1.3        66:66
I N Y N        1:1             10.1.1.1         10.1.1.1        2:2
I N Y N        1:1             10.1.1.1         10.1.1.3        2:2
I N Y N 

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 48. show xconnect rib Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Local Router ID

A unique router identifier. Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) Autodiscovery automatically generates a router ID using the MPLS global router ID.

Origin of entry

Origin of the entry. The origin can be “I” for internal Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) or “e” for external BGP.

Imported without a matching route target

Specifies whether the route was imported prior to configuring a route target.

Provisioned

Specifies whether the pseudowire has been provisioned using a learned route.

VPLS/WPWS-ID

Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) domain. VPLS Autodiscovery automatically generates a VPLS ID using the BGP autonomous system number and the configured VFI VPN ID.

Target ID

Target ID. The IP address of the destination router.

Next-Hop

IP address of the next hop router.

Route-Target

Route target (RT). VPLS Autodiscovery automatically generates a route target using the lower 6 bytes of the route distinguisher (RD) and VPN ID.

For VPLS Autodiscovery, issuing the show xconnect rib detail command provides more information about the routing information base, as shown in the following example:



Router# show xconnect rib detail

Local Router ID: 10.9.9.9
VPLS-ID 10:123, TID 10.7.7.7
  Next-Hop: 10.7.7.7
  Hello-Source: 10.9.9.9
  Route-Target: 10:123
  Incoming RD: 10:10
  Forwarder: vfi VPLS1
  Origin: BGP
  Provisioned: Yes
VPLS-ID 10:123, TID 10.7.7.8
  Next-Hop: 10.7.7.8
  Hello-Source: 10.9.9.9
  Route-Target: 10:123
  Incoming RD: 10:11
  Forwarder: vfi VPLS1
  Origin: BGP
  Provisioned: No
VPLS-ID 10.100.100.100:1234, TID 0.0.0.2
  Next-Hop: 10.2.2.2, 10.3.3.3, 10.4.4.4
  Hello-Source: 10.9.9.9
  Route-Target: 10.111.111.111:12345, 10.8.8.8:345
  Incoming RD: 10:12
  Forwarder: vfi VPLS2
  Origin: BGP
  Provisioned: Yes
VPLS-ID 10.100.100.100:1234, TID 10.13.1.1
  Next-Hop: 10.1.1.1
  Hello-Source: 10.9.9.9
  Route-Target: 10.111.111.111:12345
  Incoming RD: 10:13
  Forwarder: vfi VPLS2
  Origin: BGP
  Provisioned: Yes

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 49. show xconnect rib detail Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Hello-Source

Source IP address used when Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) hello messages are sent to the LDP peer for the autodiscovered pseudowire.

Incoming RD

Route distinguisher for the autodiscovered pseudowire.

Forwarder

VFI to which the autodiscovered pseudowire is attached.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show xconnect rib command when used in a Layer 2 Virtual Private Network (L2VPN) VPLS Inter-AS Option B configuration:


Router# show xconnect rib

Local Router ID: 10.9.9.9
+- Origin of entry  (I=iBGP/e=eBGP)
| +- Provisioned    (Yes/No)?
| | +- Stale entry  (Yes/No)?
| | |
v v v
O P S        VPLS-ID         Target ID       Next-Hop        Route-Target
-+-+-+------+---------------+---------------+---------------+-------------
I Y N        1:1             10.11.11.11     10.11.11.11     1:1
I Y N        1:1             10.12.12.12     10.12.12.12     1:1

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 50. show xconnect rib Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Local Router ID

A unique router identifier. Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) Autodiscovery automatically generates a router ID using the MPLS global router ID.

Origin of entry

Origin of the entry. The origin can be “I” for internal BGP or “e” for external BGP.

Provisioned

Specifies whether the pseudowire has been provisioned using a learned route; Yes or No.

Stale entry

Specifies whether it is a stale entry; Yes or No.

VPLS-ID

VPLS domain. VPLS Autodiscovery automatically generates a VPLS ID using the BGP autonomous system number and the configured VFI VPN ID.

Target ID

IP address of the destination router.

Next-Hop

IP address of the next hop router.

Route-Target

VPLS Autodiscovery automatically generates a route target using the lower 6 bytes of the route distinguisher (RD) and VPN ID.

The following is sample output from the show xconnect rib detail command when used in an ASBR configuration. On an ASBR, the show xconnect rib detail command displays the Layer 2 VPN BGP network layer reachability information (NLRI) received from the BGP peers. The display also shows the signaling messages received from the targeted LDP sessions for a given target attachment individual identifier (TAII).


Router# show xconnect rib detail

Local Router ID: 10.1.1.3
VPLS-ID: 1:1, Target ID: 10.1.1.1
  Next-Hop: 10.1.1.1
  Hello-Source: 10.1.1.3
  Route-Target: 2:2
  Incoming RD: 10.0.0.0:1
  Forwarder:
  Origin: BGP
  Provisioned: Yes
  SAII: 10.0.0.1, LDP Peer Id: 10.255.255.255, VC Id: 1001 ***
  SAII: 10.1.0.1, LDP Peer Id: 10.255.255.255, VC Id: 1002 ***

After the passive TPE router receives the BGP information (and before the passive TPE router receives the LDP label), the peer information will be displayed in the output of the show xconnect rib command. The peer information will not be displayed in the show mpls l2transport vc command because the VFI AToM xconnect has not yet been provisioned.

Therefore, for passive TPEs, the entry “Passive : Yes” is added to the output from the show xconnect rib detail command. In addition, the entry “Provisioned: Yes” is displayed after the neighbor xconnect is successfully created (without any retry attempts).

In the sample output, the two lines beginning with “SAII” show that this ASBR is stitching two provider PE routers (10.0.0.1 and 10.1.0.1) to the TAII 10.1.1.1.

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 51. show xconnect rib detail (for the ASBR) Field Descriptions

Field

Description

VPLS-ID

VPLS identifier.

Target ID

IP address of the destination router.

Next-Hop

IP address of the next hop router.

Hello-Source

The source IP address used when LDP hello messages are sent to the LDP peer for the autodiscovered pseudowire.

Route-Target

VPLS Autodiscovery automatically generates a route target using the lower 6 bytes of the route distinguisher (RD) and VPN ID.

Incoming RD

Specifies the route distinguisher for the autodiscovered pseudowire.

Forwarder

The VFI to which the autodiscovered pseudowire is attached.

Origin

Origin of the entry.

Provisioned

Indicates whether the neighbor xconnect was successfully created (without any retry attempts).

SAII

Specifies the source attachment individual identifier.

The following is sample output from the show xconnect rib checkpoint command. Autodiscovered pseudowire information is checkpointed to the standby Route Processor (RP). The show xconnect rib checkpoint command displays that pseudowire information.


Router# show xconnect rib checkpoint

Xconnect RIB Active RP:
Checkpointing   : Allowed
Checkpointing epoch: 1
ISSU Client id: 2102, Session id: 108, Compatible with peer
Add entries send ok     :         14
Add entries send fail   :          0
Delete entries send ok  :          2
Delete entries send fail:          0
+- Checkpointed to standby                      (Yes/No)?
| +- Origin of entry                            (I=iBGP/e=eBGP)
| | +- Imported without a matching route target (Yes/No)?
| | |
v v v
C O I       VPLS-ID         Target ID       Next-Hop       Route-Target
-+-+-+---------------------+---------------+--------------+----------------
N I Y 66:66                 10.1.1.1         10.1.1.3        66:66
N I Y 66:66                 10.1.1.2         10.1.1.3        66:66
Y I N 1:1                   10.1.1.1         10.1.1.1        2:2
Y I N 1:1                   10.1.1.1         10.1.1.3        2:2
Y I N 1:1                   10.1.1.2         10.1.1.3        2:2

The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.

Table 52. show xconnect rib checkpoint Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Checkpointing

Indicates whether checkpointing is allowed.

Checkpointing epoch

Indicates the checkpointing epoch number.

Checkpointed to standby

Indicates whether the autodiscovered pseudowire information is checkpointed to the standby RP.

Origin of entry

Origin of the entry. The origin can be “I” for internal BGP or “e” for external BGP.

Imported without a matching route target

Specifies whether the route was imported prior to configuring a route target.

VPLS-ID

The VPLS identifier.

Target ID

IP address of the destination router.

Next-Hop

IP address of the next hop router.

The following is sample output from the show xconnect monitor command.

Router# show xconnect monitor

Load for five secs: 0%/0%; one minute: 0%; five minutes: 0% Time source is hardware calendar, *21:00:39.098 GMT Fri May 6 2011

Peer IP          Local IP                         State VC Refs
---------------- -------------------------------- ----- -------
10.1.1.2          10.1.1.1                         Up    1
10.1.1.3          10.1.1.1                         Up    1

Table 53. show xconnect monitor Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Peer IP

IP address of the peer. The peer IP address and the Local IP address are the loopback addresses to which a multihop session is associated.

Local IP

Local IP address. The peer IP address and the Local IP address are the loopback addresses to which a multihop session is associated.

State

State of the session.

VC Refs

Number of virtual circuits (VCs) that are tied to the multihop session represented by the peer IP address and the local IP address.


Note

The following is the expected output for the show xconnect monitor command in different scenarios:
  • When you remove a Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) map that associates timers and authentication with multihop templates using the no bfd map command, the session state is Down.
  • When you unbind a single hop BFD template from an interface using the no bfd template command, the session state is Down.
  • When you shut down the AC circuit, the session state is Up.
  • When you disable pseudowire fast-failure detection using the no monitor peer bfd command, the VC entry associated with the pseudowire class in the show xconnect monitor command output is removed. If multiple VCs are present for a session, the VC Refs field of the command output shows the decrement in the number of VCs. The session state is Down for that VC.

shutdown (FR-ATM)

To shut down a Frame Relay-ATM Network Interworking (FRF.5) connection or a Frame Relay-ATM Service Interworking (FRF.8) connection, use the shutdown command in FRF.5 or FRF.8 connect configuration mode. To disable disconnection, use the no form of this command.

shutdown

no shutdown

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes


FRF.5 connect configuration
FRF.8 connect configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

An FRF.5 or FRF.8 connection must be manually shut down once the interworking connection is created by use of the shutdown command.

Examples

Examples

The following example shows how to shut down an FRF.5 connection:


Router(config)# connect network-2 interface serial0/1 16 atm3/0 0/32 network-interworking
. 
.
.
Router(config-frf5)# shutdown

Examples

The following example shows how to shut down an FRF.8 connection:


Router(config)# connect serial0 100 atm3/0 1/35 service-interworking
. 
.
.
Router(config-frf8)# shutdown

skeptical interval (OTV)

To configure a Cisco nonstop forwarding (NSF) helper functionality with an adjacency, use the skeptical interval command in OTV IS-IS instance configuration mode. To return to the default NSF helper setting, use the no form of this command.

skeptical interval minutes

no skeptical interval

Syntax Description

minutes

Interval (in minutes) during which the hold time for an adjacency with a recently restarted router is not refreshed based on the hold time in the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) Hello (IIH) protocol data unit (PDU) with Request Restart (RR) set. Because the hold time is not updated during this interval, adjacency need not be kept up for a router that continuously restarts.

The range is from 0 to 1440.

Command Default

The default skeptical interval is 5 minutes.

Command Modes

OTV IS-IS instance configuration (config-otv-isis)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.5S

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

NSF is not supported with the neighbor when you configure the skeptical interval command with a value other than 0. If you configure the skeptical interval 0 command, NSF is always supported with the neighbor.

Examples

The following example configures the skeptical interval to 30 minutes:

Router# configure terminal
Router(config)# otv isis overlay 1
Router(config-otv-isis)# skeptical interval 30
Router(config-otv-isis)# end

smds address

To specify the Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) individual address for a particular interface, use the smds address command in interface configuration mode. To remove the address from the configuration file, use the no form of this command.

smds address smds-address

no smds address smds-address

Syntax Description

smds-address

Individual address provided by the SMDS service provider. It is protocol independent.

Command Default

No address is specified.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

All addresses for SMDS service are assigned by the service provider, and can be assigned to individuals and groups.

Addresses are entered in the Cisco SMDS configuration software using an E prefix for multicast addresses and a C prefix for unicast addresses. Cisco IOS software expects the addresses to be entered in E.164 format, which is 64 bits. The first 4 bits are the address type, and the remaining 60 bits are the address. If the first 4 bits are 1100 (0xC), the address is a unicast SMDS address, which is the address of an individual SMDS host. If the first 4 bits are 1110 (0xE), the address is a multicast SMDS address, which is used to broadcast a packet to multiple end points. The 60 bits of the address are in binary-coded decimal (BCD) format. Each 4 bits of the address field presents a single telephone number digit, allowing for up to 15 digits. At a minimum, you must specify at least 11 digits (44 bits). Unused bits at the end of this field are filled with ones.


Note

If bridging is enabled on any interface, the SMDS address is erased and must be reentered.


Examples

The following example specifies an individual address in Ethernet-style notation:


interface serial 0
 smds address c141.5797.1313.FFFF

smds dxi

To enable the Data Exchange Interface (DXI) version 3.2 support, use the smds dxi command in interface configuration mode. To disable the DXI 3.2 support, use the no form of this command.

smds dxi

no smds dxi

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Enabled

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

Adding this command to the configuration enables the DXI version 3.2 mechanism and encapsulates SMDS packets in a DXI frame before they are transmitted. DXI 3.2 adds an additional 4 bytes to the SMDS packet header to communicate with the SMDS data service unit (SDSU). These bytes specify the frame type. The interface expects all packets to arrive with DXI encapsulation.

The DXI 3.2 support also includes the heartbeat process as specified in the SIG-TS-001/1991 standard, revision 3.2. The heartbeat (active process) is enabled when both DXI and keepalives are enabled on the interface. The echo (passive process) is enabled when DXI is enabled on the interface. The heartbeat mechanism automatically generates a heartbeat poll frame every 10 seconds. This default value can be changed with the keepalive (LMI) command.

Fast switching of DXI frames is supported, but Interim Local Management Interface (ILMI) is not.


Note

If you are running serial lines back-to-back, disable keepalive on SMDS interfaces. Otherwise, DXI declares the link down.



Note

Switching in or out of DXI mode causes the IP cache to be cleared. This clearing process is necessary to remove all cached IP entries for the serial line being used. Stale entries must be removed to allow the new MAC header with or without DXI framing to be installed in the cache. This clearing process is not frequently done and is not considered to be a major performance penalty.


Examples

The following example enables DXI 3.2 on interface HSSI 0:


interface hssi 0
 encapsulation smds
 smds dxi
 smds address C120.1111.2222.FFFF
 ip address 172.20.1.30 255.255.255.0
 smds multicast ip E180.0999.9999
 smds enable-arp

smds enable-arp

To enable dynamic Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), use the smds enable-arp interface configuration command. The multicast address for ARP must be set before this command is issued. To disable the interface once ARP has been enabled, use the no form of this command.

smds enable-arp

no smds enable-arp

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Disabled

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Examples

The following example enables the dynamic ARP routing table:


interface serial 0
 ip address 172.20.1.30 255.255.255.0
 smds multicast IP E180.0999.9999.2222
 smds enable-arp

smds glean

To enable dynamic address mapping for Internet Packet Exchange (IPX) over Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS), use the smds glean interface configuration command. To disable dynamic address mapping for IPX over SMDS, use the no form of this command.

smds glean protocol [timeout-value] [broadcast]

no smds glean protocol

Syntax Description

protocol

Protocol type. Only IPX is supported.

timeout-value

(Optional) Time to live (TTL) value. Value can be from 1 to 65535 minutes. The default is 5 minutes. This value indicates how long a gleaned dynamic map is stored in the SMDS map table.

broadcast

(Optional) Marks the gleaned protocol address as a candidate for broadcast packets. All broadcast requests are sent to the unicast SMDS address.

Command Default

Disabled

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

11.1

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

The smds glean command uses incoming packets to dynamically map SMDS addresses to higher-level protocol addresses. Therefore the need for static map configuration for the IPX protocol is optional rather than mandatory. However, any static map configuration overrides the dynamic maps.

If a map is gleaned and it already exists as a dynamic map, the timer for the dynamic map is reset to the default value or the user-specified value.

Examples

The following example enables dynamic address mapping for IPX on interface serial 0 and sets the time to live (TTL) to 14 minutes:


interface serial 0
 encapsulation smds
 smds address c141.5797.1313.FFFF
 smds multicast ipx e1800.0999.9999.FFFF
 smds glean ipx 14

smds multicast

To assign a multicast Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) E.164 address to a higher-level protocol, use the smds multicast command in interface configuration mode. To remove an assigned multicast address, use the no form of this command.

smds multicast protocol smds-address

no smds multicast protocol smds-address

Syntax Description

protocol

Protocol type. See the table below for a list of supported protocols and their keywords.

smds-address

SMDS address. Because SMDS does not incorporate broadcast addressing, a group address for a particular protocol must be defined to serve the broadcast function.

Command Default

No mapping is defined.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(13)T

The vines and xns arguments were removed because Banyan VINES and Xerox Network Systems are no longer available in the Cisco IOS software.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

When configuring DECnet, you must enter all four DEC keywords (decnet , decnet_router-L1 , decnet_router-L2 , and decnet_node ) in the configuration.

The table below lists the high-level protocols supported by the smds multicast command.

Table 54. smds multicast Supported Protocols

Keyword

Protocol

aarp

AppleTalk Address Resolution Protocol

appletalk

AppleTalk

arp

Address Resolution Protocol

bridge

Transparent bridging

clns

International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Connectionless Network Service ( CLNS)

clns_es

Multicast address for all CLNS end systems

clns_is

Multicast address for all CLNS intermediate systems

decnet

DECnet

decnet_node

DECnet multicast address for all end systems

decnet_router-L1

DECnet multicast address for all Level 1 (intra-area) routers

decnet_router-L2

DECnet multicast address for all Level 2 (interarea) routers

ip

Internet Protocol (IP)

ipx

Novell IPX

For IP, the IP NETwork and MASK fields are no longer required. The Cisco IOS software accepts these arguments, but ignores the values. These were required commands for the previous multiple logical IP subnetworks configuration. The software continues to accept the arguments to allow for backward compatibility, but ignores the contents.

Examples

The following example maps the IP broadcast address to the SMDS group address E180.0999.9999:


interface serial 0
 smds multicast IP E180.0999.9999.FFFF

smds multicast arp

To map the Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) address to a multicast address, use the smds multicast arp interface configuration command. To disable this feature, use the no form of this command.

smds multicast arp smds-address [ip-address mask]

no smds multicast arp smds-address [ip-address mask]

Syntax Description

smds-address

SMDS address in E.164 format.

ip-address

(Optional) IP address.

mask

(Optional) Subnet mask for the IP address.

Command Default

No mapping is defined.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

This command is used only when an Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) server is present on a network. When broadcast ARPs are sent, SMDS first attempts to send the packet to all multicast ARP SMDS addresses. If none exist in the configuration, broadcast ARPs are sent to all multicast IP SMDS multicast addresses. If the optional ARP multicast address is missing, each entered IP multicast command is used for broadcasting.

Examples

The following example configures broadcast ARP messages:


interface serial 0
 smds multicast arp E180.0999.9999.2222

smds multicast bridge

To enable spanning-tree updates, use the smds multicast bridge interface configuration command. To disable this function, use the no form of this command.

smds multicast bridge smds-address

no smds multicast bridge smds-address

Syntax Description

smds-address

SMDS multicast address in E.164 format.

Command Default

No multicast SMDS address is defined. Spanning tree updates are disabled for transparent bridging across SMDS networks.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

To allow transparent bridging of packets across serial and High-Speed Serial Interface (HSSI ) interfaces in an SMDS network, the SMDS interface must be added to an active bridge group. Also, standard bridging commands are necessary to enable bridging on an SMDS interface.

When the smds multicast bridge command is added to the configuration, broadcast packets are encapsulated with the specified SMDS multicast address configured for bridging. Two broadcast Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) packets are sent to the multicast address. One is sent with a standard (SMDS) ARP encapsulation, while the other is sent with the ARP packet encapsulated in an 802.3 MAC header. The native ARP is sent as a regular ARP broadcast.

Cisco’s implementation of IEEE 802.6i transparent bridging for SMDS supports 802.3, 802.5, and FDDI frame formats. The router can accept frames with or without frame check sequence (FCS). Fast-switched transparent bridging is the default and is not configurable. If a packet cannot be fast switched, it is process switched.

In Cisco IOS Release 10.2 software (or earlier), bridging over multiple logical IP subnetworks is not supported. Bridging of IP packets in a multiple logical IP subnetworks environment is unpredictable.

Examples

In the following example, all broadcast bridge packets are sent to the configured SMDS multicast address:


interface hssi 0
 encapsulation smds
 smds address C120.1111.2222.FFFF
 ip address 172.16.0.0 255.255.255.0
 smds multicast bridge E180.0999.9999.FFFF
 bridge-group 5

smds multicast ip

To map a Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) group address to a secondary IP address, use the smds multicast ip interface configuration command. To remove the address map, use the no form of this command.

smds multicast ip smds-address [ip-address mask]

no smds multicast ip smds-address [ip-address mask]

Syntax Description

smds-address

SMDS address in E.164 format.

ip-address

(Optional) IP address.

mask

(Optional) Subnet mask for the IP address.

Command Default

The IP address and mask default to the primary address of the interface if they are left out of the configuration.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

This command allows a single SMDS interface to be treated as multiple logical IP subnetworks. If taking advantage of the multiple logical IP subnetworks support in SMDS, you can use more than one multicast address on the SMDS interface (by entering multiple commands). However, each smds multicast ip command entry must be associated with a different IP address on the SMDS interface.

Broadcasts can be sent on the SMDS interface by means of the multicast address. By sending broadcasts in this manner, the router is not required to replicate broadcasts messages to every remote host.

In addition, the higher-level protocols such as Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) and Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) can use the multicast capability by sending one update packet or routing packet to the multicast address.

If the optional IP address and mask arguments are not present, the SMDS address and multicast address are associated with the primary IP address of the interface. This association allows the command to be backward compatible with earlier versions of the software.

If an Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) multicast address is missing, each entered IP multicast command is used for broadcasting. The ARP multicast command has the same format as the IP multicast command and is typically used only when an ARP server is present in the network.


Note

All routers at the other end of the SMDS cloud must have the multiple logical IP subnetworks capability enabled. If you allocate a different SMDS subinterface for each logical IP subnetwork on the SMDS interface, you do not have to configure secondary IP addresses.


Examples

The following example configures an interface with two subinterfaces to support two different IP subnets with different multicast addresses to each network:


interface serial 2/0
 encapsulation smds
 smds address C120.1111.2222.4444
interface serial 2/0.1 multipoint
 smds addr c111.3333.3333.3333
 ip address 2.2.2.1 255.0.0.0
 smds multicast ip e222.2222.2222.2222
 smds enable-arp
interface serial 2/0.2 multipoint
 smds addr c111.2222.3333.3333.3333
 ip address 2.3.3.3 255.0.0.0
 smds multicast ip E180.0999.9999.FFFF
 smds enable-arp

smds static-map

To configure a static map between an individual Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS) address and a higher-level protocol address, use the smds static-map command in interface configuration mode. To remove the map, use the no form of this command with the appropriate arguments.

smds static-map protocol protocol-address smds-address [broadcast]

no smds static-map protocol protocol-address smds-address [broadcast]

Syntax Description

protocol

Higher-level protocol. It can be one of the following values: appletalk , clns , decnet , ip , or ipx .

protocol-address

Address of the higher-level protocol.

smds-address

SMDS address, to complete the mapping.

broadcast

(Optional) Marks the specified protocol address as a candidate for broadcast packets. All broadcast requests are sent to the unicast SMDS address.

Command Default

No mapping is defined.

Command Modes


Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

10.0

This command was introduced.

12.2(13)T

The vines and xns arguments were removed because Banyan VINES and Xerox Network Systems are no longer available in the Cisco IOS software.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

The smds static-map command provides pseudobroadcasting by allowing the use of broadcasts on those hosts that cannot support SMDS multicast addresses.

Examples

The following example illustrates how to enable pseudobroadcasting. The router at address C120.4444.9999 will receive a copy of the broadcast request because the broadcast keyword is specified with the smds static-map command. The host at address 172.16.1.15 is incapable of receiving multicast packets. The multicasting is simulated with this feature.


interface hssi 0
 encapsulation smds
 smds address C120.1111.2222.FFFF
 ip address 172.16.1.30 255.255.255.0
 smds static-map ip 172.16.1.15 C120.4444.9999.FFFF broadcast
 smds enable-arp

The following example illustrates how to enable multicasting. In addition to IP and ARP requests to E100.0999.9999, the router at address C120.4444.9999 will also receive a copy of the multicast request. The host at address 172.16.1.15 is incapable of receiving broadcast packets.


interface hssi 0
 encapsulation smds
 smds address C120.1111.2222.FFFF
 ip address 172.16.1.30 255.255.255.0
 smds multicast ip E100.0999.999.FFFF
 smds static-map ip 172.16.1.15 C120.4444.9999.FFFF
 smds enable-arp

snmp-server enable traps waas

To enable Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) traps for WAAS Express, use the snmp-server enable traps waas command in global configuration mode. To disable the SNMP traps for WAAS Express, use the no form of this command.

snmp-server enable traps waas [cpu-throttle-on] [cpu-throttle-off] [license-deleted] [license-expired] [license-revoked] [peer-overload] [tfo-conn-overload]

no snmp-server enable traps waas [cpu-throttle-on] [cpu-throttle-off] [license-deleted] [license-expired] [license-revoked] [peer-overload] [tfo-conn-overload]

Syntax Description

cpu-throttle-on

(Optional) Enables traps for WAAS Express CPU throttling on.

cpu-throttle-off

(Optional) Enables traps for WAAS Express CPU throttling off.

license-deleted

(Optional) Enables traps for deletion of WAAS Express licenses.

license-expired

(Optional) Enables traps for WAAS Express license expiry.

license-revoked

(Optional) Enables traps for revoked WAAS Express licenses.

peer-overload

(Optional) Enables traps for WAAS Express peer overload.

tfo-conn-overload

(Optional) Enables traps for WAAS Express Transport Flow Optimization (TFO) overload.

Command Default

SNMP traps for WAAS Express are disabled.

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable traps to delete WAAS Express licenses and TFO overload:

Device# enable
Device# configure terminal
Device(config)# snmp-server enable traps waas license-deleted tfo-conn-overload

source-interface loopback

To assign a previously created loopback interface to an NVE interface, use the source- interface loopback command in NVE interface configuration mode. To remove the loopback interface from the NVE interface, use the no form of this command.

source-interface loopback number

Syntax Description

number

The loopback interface assigned to the NVE interface.

Command Modes

NVE interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.11S

This command was introduced on the Cisco CSR 1000V.

Examples

The following example maps a loopback interface to an NVE interface:

Router(config)# interface nve 1
Router(config-if)# source-interface loopback 0

spf-interval (OTV)

To configure the minimum interval between shortest path first (SPF) computations, use the spf-interval command in OTV IS-IS instance configuration mode. To remove the configuration for the SPF interval, use the no form of this command.

spf-interval spf-max-wait [spf-initial-wait spf-second-wait ]

no spf-interval

Syntax Description

spf-max-wait

Interval in seconds. The range is from 1 to 120.

spf-initial-wait

(Optional) Initial wait interval in milliseconds. The range is from 1 to 120000.

spf-second-wait

(Optional) Interval in milliseconds between the first and second SPF computations. The range is from 1 to 120000.

Command Default

Layer 2 is configured, by default, with SPF intervals of 5 seconds, 50 milliseconds, and 200 milliseconds for the spf-max-wait , spf-initial-wait , and spf-second-wait arguments, respectively.

Command Modes

OTV IS-IS instance configuration (config-otv-isis)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.5S

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the SPF interval:

Router# configure terminal
Router(config)# otv isis overlay 1
Router(config-otv-isis)# spf-interval 2 3 4
Router(config-otv-isis)# end

status admin-down disconnect

To configure Layer 2 tunneling (L2TUN) sessions to disconnect upon attachment circuit (AC) shutdown, use the status admin-down disconnect command in pseudowire class configuration mode. To disable disconnection of L2TUN sessions upon AC shutdown, use the no form of this command.

status admin-down disconnect

no status admin-down disconnect

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Layer 2 tunneling sessions do not disconnect upon attachment circuit (AC) shutdown.

Command Modes


Pseudowire class configuration (config-pw)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(33)SRC

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the show l2tp session command to determine whether the sessions are disconnected.

Examples

The following example shows how to enter pseudowire class configuration mode to configure a pseudowire configuration template named ether-pw and configure L2TUN sessions to disconnect on AC shutdown.


Router> enable
Password:
Router# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Router(config)# pseudowire-class ether-pw
 Router(config-pw)# status admin-down disconnect
 Router(config-pw)# end

suppress-server-encoding enable

To suppress server side encoding, use the suppress-server-encoding enable command in WAAS HTTP configuration mode. To enable server side encoding, use the no form of this command.

suppress-server-encoding enable

no suppress-server-encoding enable

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Server encoding is not suppressed.

Command Modes

WAAS HTTP configuration (config-waas-http)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A client uses the Accept-Encoding header in the HTTP request it sends to indicate the types of compressions it supports. The values usually sent by the client include identity, gzip, deflate and compress. When server side encoding is suppressed, the client side WAAS Express removes the values of this header, and the server does not compress the data it sends. WAAS Express uses the suppression of server side encoding mechanism to provide better compression on HTTP response from the server and also frees the server from the additional computation required to compress responses.

Before you can enable the suppress-server-encoding enable command, use the following commands:

  • Use the parameter-map type waas command in global configuration mode to enter parameter map configuration mode.

  • Use the accelerator http-express command in parameter map configuration mode to enter WAAS HTTP configuration mode.

Examples

The following example shows how to suppress server side encoding:

Device(config)# parameter-map type waas waas_global
Device(config-profile)# accelerator http-express
Device(config-waas-http)# enable
Device(config-waas-http)# suppress-server-encoding enable

tfo auto-discovery blacklist

To configure a blocked list with autodiscovery for WAAS Express, use the tfo auto-discovery blacklist command in parameter-map configuration mode. To remove the configuration, use the no form of this command.

tfo auto-discovery blacklist {enable | hold-time minutes}

no tfo auto-discovery blacklist {enable | hold-time minutes}

Syntax Description

enable

Enables a blocked list.

hold-time minutes

Configures a blocked list hold time, in minutes. The range is 1 to 10080.

Command Default

Blocked list with autodiscovery is not enabled.

Command Modes


Parameter-map configuration (config-profile)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A server is block listed by WAAS Express if the server is not able to receive TCP packets with options because of the TCP packets with options being blocked by network devices such as firewalls. WAAS Express learns not to send TCP packets with options to these blocked listed servers.

Use this command to enable, configure, and integrate a blocked list with autodiscovery and specify the hold time for a blocked list in WAAS Express. Blocked lists enable you to get the benefit of WAAS Express if there are devices in your network that discard TCP packets with options.

Autodiscovery allows a WAAS Express device to automatically discover and connect to a new file server when a Common Internet File System (CIFS) request is received. The autodiscovery of peer WAAS Express devices is achieved using TCP options. These TCP options are recognized and understood only by WAAS Express devices and are ignored by non-WAAS Express devices.

Examples

The following example configures autodiscovery by enabling the blocked list and setting the hold time for 100 minutes:


Router(config)# parameter-map type waas waas_global
Router(config-profile)# tfo auto-discovery blacklist enable
Router(config-profile)# tfo auto-discovery blacklist hold-time 100

tfo optimize

To configure the compression for WAAS Express, use the tfo optimize command in parameter-map configuration mode. To remove the compression, use the no form of this command.

tfo optimize {full | dre {yes | no compression {lz | none}}}

no tfo optimize [full | dre {yes | no compression {lz | none}}]

Syntax Description

full

Turns on Data Redundancy Elimination (DRE) and compression.

dre

Enables DRE.

yes

Turns on DRE.

no

Turns off DRE.

compression

Turns on compression.

lz

Turns on Lempel-Ziv (LZ) compression.

none

Turns off LZ compression.

Command Default

Compression is not configured.

Command Modes


Parameter-map configuration (config-profile)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to specify a compression technology to reduce the size of data. WAAS Express uses the following compression technologies to help you transmit data over your WAN:

  • DRE

  • LZ

These compression technologies reduce the size of transmitted data by removing redundant information before sending the shortened data stream over the WAN. By reducing the amount of transferred data, WAAS compression can reduce network utilization and application response times.

LZ compression operates on smaller data streams and keeps limited compression history. DRE operates on significantly larger streams (typically tens to hundreds of bytes or more) and maintains a much larger compression history. Large chunks of redundant data is common in file system operations when files are incrementally changed from one version to another or when certain elements are common to many files, such as file headers and logos.

Examples

The following example turns off the DRE compression and turns on the LZ compression:


Router(config)# parameter-map type waas waas_global
Router(config-profile)# tfo optimize dre no compression lz

threshold de

To configure the threshold at which discard eligible (DE)-marked packets will be discarded from switched permanent virtual circuits (PVCs) on the output interface, use the threshold de command in Frame Relay congestion management configuration mode. To remove the threshold configuration, use the no form of this command.

threshold de percentage

no threshold de percentage

Syntax Description

percentage

Threshold at which DE-marked packets will be discarded, specified as a percentage of maximum queue size.

Command Default

100%

Command Modes


Frame Relay congestion management configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

You must enable Frame Relay congestion management on the interface before congestion management parameters will be effective. To enable Frame Relay congestion management and to enter Frame Relay congestion management configuration mode, use the frame-relay congestion-management interface command.

You must enable Frame Relay switching, using the frame-relay switching global command, before the threshold de command will be effective on switched PVCs.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a DE threshold of 40% on serial interface 1.


interface serial1
 encapsulation frame-relay
 frame-relay congestion-management
  threshold de 40

threshold ecn

To configure the threshold at which explicit congestion notification (ECN) bits will be set on packets in switched permanent virtual circuits (PVCs) on the output interface, use the threshold ecn command in Frame Relay congestion management configuration mode. To remove the threshold configuration, use the no form of this command.

For Frame Relay Switching

threshold ecn {bc | be} percentage

no threshold ecn {bc | be} percentage

For Frame Relay over MPLS

threshold ecn percentage

no threshold ecn percentage

Syntax Description

bc

Specifies threshold for committed traffic. This keyword is not available for Frame Relay over MPLS.

be

Specifies threshold for excess traffic. This keyword is not available for Frame Relay over MPLS.

percentage

Threshold at which ECN bits will be set on packets, specified as a percentage of maximum queue size. Default is 100 percent.

Command Default

An ECN threshold is not configured.

Command Modes


Frame Relay congestion management configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

12.0(26)S

This command was modified for Frame Relay over MPLS.

12.2(27)SXA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(27)SXA.

12.2(28)SB

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(28)SB.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

Usage Guidelines

You must enable Frame Relay congestion management on the interface before congestion management parameters will be effective. To enable Frame Relay congestion management and to enter Frame Relay congestion management configuration mode, use the frame-relay congestion-management interface command.

Frame Relay Switching Guidelines

  • You must enable Frame Relay switching, using the frame-relay switching global command, before the threshold ecn command will be effective on switched PVCs.

  • You can configure separate queue thresholds for committed and excess traffic.

  • Configure the BECN threshold so that it is greater than or equal to zero and less than or equal to the BECN threshold. Configure the BECN threshold so that it is less than or equal to 100.

Examples

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a Be threshold of 0 and a Bc threshold of 20 percent on serial interface 1.


interface serial1
encapsulation frame-relay
frame-relay congestion-management
threshold ecn be 0
threshold ecn bc 20

Examples

The following example shows a configuration of interface serial2/1 for a threshold of 50 percent.


interface Serial2/1
bandwidth 50000
service-policy output output-policy
frame-relay congestion-management
threshold ecn 50

timeout setup

To configure the amount of time allowed to set up a control channel with a remote provider edge (PE) router at the other end of a Layer 2 pseudowire, use the timeout setup command in L2TP class configuration mode. To disable the configured value, use the no form of this command.

timeout setup seconds

no timeout setup seconds

Syntax Description

seconds

The number of seconds allowed to set up a Layer 2 control channel. The valid values range from 60 to 6000. The default value is 300 seconds.

Command Default

The default number of seconds allowed to set up a control channel is 300.

Command Modes


L2TP class configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(23)S

This command was introduced.

12.3(2)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.3(2)T.

12.2(25)S

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(25)S.

12.2(27)SBC

Support for this command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(27)SBC.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to configure the amount of time that can be spent attempting to establish a control channel.

Examples

The following example sets a timeout period of 200 seconds to establish a control channel with a remote peer in Layer 2 pseudowires that have been configured with the L2TP class named “l2tp-class1”:


Router(config)
# l2tp-class l2tp-class1
Router(config-l2tp-class)
# timeout setup 200

vc-group

To assign multiple Frame Relay data-link connection identifiers (DLCIs) to a virtual circuit (VC) group for Frame Relay-to-ATM Network Interworking (FRF.5), use the vc-group command in global configuration mode. To disable the VC group assignments, use the no form of this command.

vc-group group-name

no vc-group group-name

Syntax Description

group-name

A VC group name entered as an 11-character maximum string.

The following syntax description applies to the VC-group entries:

fr-interface-name

Frame Relay interface; for example, serial0/0.

fr-dlci

Frame Relay DLCI number, in the range 16 to 1007.

fr-sscs-dlci

(Optional) Frame Relay SSCS DLCI number, in the range of 16 to 991. Default is 1022.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)
VC-group configuration (config-vc-group)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

12.2(33)SRA

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.

12.2SX

This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.

Usage Guidelines

This command specifies the Frame Relay DLCIs in the VC group and maps them to the Frame Relay-SSCS DLCIs. If the optional FR-SSCS DLCI value is not specified, its value is the same as the Frame Relay DLCI.

The vc-group command requires that you enter the following arguments in VC-group configuration mode to provide a map between Frame Relay DLCIs and Frame Relay-SSCS DLCIs:

fr-interface-name fr-dlci [fr-sscs-dlci ]

Examples

The following example shows how to configure an FRF.5 many-to-one connection. The vc-group command maps Frame Relay DLCI 16, 17, 18, and 19 to a VC group named “friends”:


Router(config)# vc-group friends
Router(config-vc-group)# serial0 16 1
6
Router(config-vc-group)# serial0 17 17
Router(config-vc-group)# serial0 18 18
Router(config-vc-group)# serial0 19 19

vpls-id

To assign an identifier to the Virtual Private LAN Services (VPLS) domain, use the vpls-id command in L2 VFI configuration or VFI autodiscovery configuration mode. To revert to the default VPLS ID, use the no form of this command.

vpls-id {autonomous-system-number:nn | ip-address:nn}

no vpls-id {autonomous-system-number:nn | ip-address:nn}

Syntax Description

autonomous-system-number:nn

Specifies a 16-bit autonomous system number (ASN) and 32-bit arbitrary number. The ASN need not match the local ASN.

ip-address:nn

Specifies a 32-bit IP address and a 16-bit arbitrary number. Only IPv4 addresses are supported.

Command Default

The VPLS ID is generated automatically by VPLS autodiscovery.

Command Modes

L2 VFI configuration (config-vfi)

VFI autodiscovery configuration (config-vfi-autodiscovery)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(33)SRB

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.4S

This command was integrated into a release prior to Cisco IOS XE Release 3.6S.

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.7S

This command was modified as part of the Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)-based Layer 2 VPN (L2VPN) command modifications for cross-OS support. This command was made available in VFI autodiscovery configuration mode.

Usage Guidelines

VPLS autodiscovery automatically generates a VPLS ID using the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) ASN and the configured virtual forwarding instance (VFI) VPN ID. You can use the vpls-id command to change the automatically generated VPLS ID.

The Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) uses the VPLS ID when signaling VPLS autodiscovered neighbors. The VPLS ID identifies the VPLS domain.

Only one VPLS ID can be configured per VFI. The same VPLS ID cannot be configured in multiple VFIs on the same provider edge (PE) router.

The manually configured VPLS ID replaces the internally generated VPLS ID. The manually configured VPLS ID also changes the automatically generated route target (RT).

The vpls-id command defines the attachment group identifier (AGI) for the VPLS domain. Therefore, all PE routers in the same VPLS domain must use the same VPLS ID.

For interautonomous system configurations, you must manually configure the VPLS ID instead of using the automatically generated VPLS ID, because all PE routers do not share the same autonomous system number.

Examples

The following example shows how to set a VPLS ID to the autonomous system and network number 5:300:

Device(config)# l2 vfi SP2 autodiscovery
Device(config-vfi)# vpn id 200
Device(config-vfi)# vpls-id 5:300

The following example shows how to set the VPLS ID to IP address and network number 10.4.4.4:70

Device(config)# l2vpn vfi context vfi1
Device(config-vfi)# vpn id 200
Device(config-vfi)# autodiscovery bgp signaling ldp
Device(config-vfi-autodiscovery)# rd 2:3
Device(config-vfi-autodiscovery)# vpls-id 10.4.4.4:70

waas cm-register url

To register a device with the WAAS Central Manager, use the waas cm-register url command in privileged EXEC mode.

waas cm-register url url port-number

Syntax Description

url url

URL of the device to be registered.

port-number

The port number.

Command Default

No devices are registered with the WAAS Central Manager.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to register a device with the WAAS Central Manager. Before enabling this command, the WCM certificate must be installed on the router.


Note

The registration may fail if the port number is not specified.


The values for the url argument can be one of the following:

  • archive

  • cns

  • flash

  • ftp

  • http

  • https

  • null

  • nvram

  • rcp

  • scp

  • system

  • tar

  • tftp

  • tmpsys

  • xmodem

  • ymodem

Examples

The following example shows how to register a device with the WAAS Central Manager:


Router> enable
Router# waas cm-register url https://192.0.2.1:8443/wcm/register

waas config

To restore or remove WAAS Express default configurations, use the waas config command in privileged EXEC mode.

waas config {restore-default | remove-all}

Syntax Description

restore-default

Restores the default configuration.

remove-all

Removes all configurations.

Command Default

WAAS Express default configurations are not modified.

Command Modes


Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to either restore the default configurations or remove the configurations. This command works only if WAAS Express is not enabled on any interface.

Examples

The following example shows how to restore the WAAS Express default configuration:


Router> enable
Router# waas config restore-default

waas enable

To enable Wide-Area Application Services (WAAS) Express on a WAN interface, use the waas enable command in interface configuration mode. To disable WAAS Express on a WAN interface, use the no form of this command.

waas enable

no waas enable [forced | remove-config]

Syntax Description

forced

(Optional) Stops all WAAS Express optimization flows.

remove-config

(Optional) Removes all WAAS Express-related configurations.

Command Default

WAAS Express is disabled.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.1(2)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The waas enable command must be explicitly applied on each WAN interface. You can enable WAAS Express by using either the default class and policy maps created automatically or the class and policy maps that you define.


Note

WAAS Express does not support the selection of a user-defined policy map to associate with the waas enable command. The default waas_global policy is used on the WAAS Express-enabled interface. You can modify the default waas_global policy. The default WAAS Express policy is extracted from the default WAAS policy.


Examples

The following example shows how to enable WAAS Express on an Ethernet interface:

Device> enable
Device# configure terminal
Device(config)# interface ethernet 0/0
Device(config-if)# waas enable
Device(config-if)# exit

waas-ssl-trustpoint

To associate a trustpoint with Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)-Express accelerator, use the waas-ssl-trustpoint command in WAAS SSL configuration mode. To associate SSL-Express accelerator with a self-enrolled trustpoint, use the no form of this command.

waas-ssl-trustpoint label

no waas-ssl-trustpoint

Syntax Description

label

Label of the trustpoint.

Command Default

SSL-Express accelerator is associated with a self-enrolled trustpoint.

Command Modes

WAAS SSL configuration (config-waas-ssl)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(3)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The trustpoint associated with SSL-Express accelerator should already exist. You can create a trustpoint by using the crypto pki trustpoint command. An identity certificate should be enrolled under this trustpoint for WAAS Express to accept this configuration. This identity certificate is then used for the peering session established by the SSL-Express accelerator between WAAS Express devices.

SSL-Express accelerator, if enabled, generates a self-enrolled trustpoint and configures the trustpoint name using the waas-ssl-trustpoint command in the following situations:

  • SSL-Express accelerator is enabled without any trustpoint configured and no self-signed certificate exists on the device.

  • The trustpoint configured using the waas-ssl-trustpoint command is deleted.

  • You use the no form of this command.


Note

Using a trustpoint with certificate revocation check and configuring the peer-cert-verify enable command can result in an increase in the latency.


Before you can enable the waas-ssl-trustpoint command, use the following commands:

  • Use the parameter-map type waas command in global configuration mode to enter parameter map configuration mode.

  • Use the accelerator ssl-express command in parameter map configuration mode to enter WAAS SSL configuration mode.

Examples

The following example shows how to associate a trustpoint with SSL-Express accelerator:

Device(config)# parameter-map type waas waas_global
Device(config-profile)# accelerator ssl-express
Device(config-waas-ssl)# enable
Device(config-waas-ssl)# waas-ssl-trustpoint ssl-tp