3HH11983AAAATQZZA13 V1 R6.4 IHUB Interface Guide
3HH11983AAAATQZZA13 V1 R6.4 IHUB Interface Guide
3HH11983AAAATQZZA13 V1 R6.4 IHUB Interface Guide
3HH-11983-AAAA-TQZZA
Issue: 13
December 2020
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Table of contents
1 Preface...........................................................................................11
1.1 Scope ........................................................................................................11
1.2 Audience....................................................................................................11
1.3 Required knowledge..................................................................................11
1.4 Product naming .........................................................................................11
1.5 Documents ................................................................................................11
1.6 Acronyms and initialisms ...........................................................................12
1.7 Safety information......................................................................................12
1.8 Special information ....................................................................................12
1.9 Release notes............................................................................................12
2 Port Features.................................................................................13
2.1 Configuration Overview .............................................................................13
2.2 Ports ..........................................................................................................13
2.2.1 Port Type ...................................................................................................13
2.2.1.1 Access Ports..............................................................................................14
2.2.1.2 Network Ports ............................................................................................14
2.2.2 Hybrid Ports...............................................................................................14
2.2.3 Port Category ............................................................................................14
2.2.4 Port Rate limiting .......................................................................................14
2.2.5 Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP).......................................................15
2.2.5.1 LLDP Protocol Features ............................................................................18
2.3 LAG ...........................................................................................................19
2.3.1 LAG Features ............................................................................................19
2.3.1.1 Configuring LAGs ......................................................................................21
2.3.1.2 LAG Hashing .............................................................................................22
2.3.1.3 Port Link Damping .....................................................................................23
2.3.2 Active / Standby Subgroup in Link Aggregation ........................................23
3 Configuring Physical Ports with CLI...........................................27
3.1 Pre-provisioning Guidelines.......................................................................27
3.2 Common Configuration Tasks ...................................................................27
3.2.1 Configuring Ethernet Port Parameters ......................................................28
3.2.1.1 Ethernet Access Ports ...............................................................................28
3.2.1.2 Ethernet Network Port ...............................................................................29
3.2.1.3 Ethernet Hybrid Port ..................................................................................29
3.2.2 Configuring LAG Parameters ....................................................................30
4 Port and LAG CLI Command Reference.....................................31
4.1 CLI Command Syntax Symbols.................................................................31
4.2 Command Hierarchies...............................................................................32
4.2.1 Port and LAG Configuration Commands ...................................................32
4.2.2 Port Configuration Command ....................................................................33
4.2.3 Ethernet Command ...................................................................................33
4.2.4 LAG Command..........................................................................................35
4.2.5 Show Commands ......................................................................................36
4.2.6 Monitor Commands ...................................................................................36
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List of figures
2 Port Features.................................................................................13
Figure 1 LLDP Internal Architecture ........................................................................16
Figure 2 MPLS Network Example............................................................................17
Figure 3 LAG Configuration .....................................................................................22
Figure 4 Active/standby subgroups .........................................................................24
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List of tables
2 Port Features.................................................................................13
Table 1 Hashing schemes ......................................................................................23
4 Port and LAG CLI Command Reference.....................................31
Table 2 Command Syntax Symbols .......................................................................32
Table 3 description command ................................................................................37
Table 4 shutdown Command..................................................................................38
Table 5 port Command...........................................................................................38
Table 6 local_nt_ports_only Command ..................................................................39
Table 7 ethernet Command....................................................................................40
Table 8 autonegotiate Command ...........................................................................40
Table 9 category Command ...................................................................................41
Table 10 dot1q-etype Command ..............................................................................42
Table 11 duplex Command ......................................................................................43
Table 12 use-vlan-dot1q-etype Command ...............................................................43
Table 13 egress-rate Command...............................................................................44
Table 14 encap-type Command ...............................................................................44
Table 15 hold-time Command ..................................................................................45
Table 16 loopback Command...................................................................................45
Table 17 mode Command ........................................................................................46
Table 18 speed Command .......................................................................................47
Table 19 lldp Command ...........................................................................................48
Table 20 dest-mac Command ..................................................................................48
Table 21 admin-status Command ............................................................................49
Table 22 tx-mgmt-address Command ......................................................................49
Table 23 tx-tlvs Command........................................................................................50
Table 24 tca-interval Command ...............................................................................50
Table 25 tca-threshold Command ............................................................................51
Table 26 inputbw Command.....................................................................................51
Table 27 outputbw Command ..................................................................................51
Table 28 rxcrcalignerrors Command ........................................................................52
Table 29 txcrcalignerrors Command ........................................................................52
Table 30 txcollisions Command................................................................................53
Table 31 suppress-link-state-alarm Command.........................................................53
Table 32 remark Command......................................................................................53
Table 33 rs-fec-mode Command..............................................................................54
Table 34 lag Command ............................................................................................54
Table 35 dynamic-cost Command............................................................................55
Table 36 encap-type Command ...............................................................................56
Table 37 hold-time Command ..................................................................................57
Table 38 lacp Command ..........................................................................................57
Table 39 lacp-xmit-interval Command......................................................................58
Table 40 lacp-xmit-stdby Command.........................................................................59
Table 41 link-map-profile Command ........................................................................59
Table 42 mode Command ........................................................................................59
Table 43 port Command...........................................................................................60
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FD 100/320Gbps NT and FX NT IHub Interface Guide Preface
1 Preface
This preface provides general information about the documentation set for the
7302 Intelligent Services Access Manager (7302 ISAM), the 7330 Intelligent
Services Access Manager Fiber to the Node (7330 ISAM FTTN) and the
7360 Intelligent Services Access Manager FX (7360 ISAM FX).
1.1 Scope
This documentation set provides information about safety, features and functionality,
ordering, hardware installation and maintenance, CLI and TL1 commands, and
software upgrade and migration procedures for the current release.
1.2 Audience
This documentation set is intended for planners, administrators, operators, and
maintenance personnel involved in installing, upgrading, or maintaining the
7302 ISAM, the 7330 ISAM FTTN or the 7360 ISAM FX.
1.5 Documents
Refer to the Product Information document for your product to see a list of all relevant
customer documents and their part numbers.
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2 Port Features
2.1 Configuration Overview
2.2 Ports
2.3 LAG
2.2 Ports
Ports are pre-provisioned during initialization of the node. Besides the physical ports,
the node auto-creates a single instance of a virtual port and a single instance of a
multicast port. The intent of the virtual port is highlighted in the FD 100/320Gbps NT
and FX NT IHub Services Guide. The intent of the multicast ports is highlighted in the
FD 100/320Gbps NT and FX NT IHub Router Configuration and Protocols Guide
(PIM section).
All ports have dot1q encapsulation type. No other encapsulation types are
supported. Port default MTU size is 9212 (without FCS).
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When a port is configured in access mode, one or more services can be configured
on the port depending on the encapsulation value.
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The example in Figure 2 shows an MPLS network that uses Ethernet interfaces in
the core or as an access/handoff interface to connect to different kinds of
Ethernet-enabled devices such as service gateways/routers, Q-in-Q switches,
DSLAMs or customer equipment.
IEEE 802.1ab LLDP running on each Ethernet interface between all the above
network elements may be used to discover the topology information.
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Each LLDPDU contains four mandatory TLVs and can contain optional TLVs as
selected by the network management:
• Chassis ID TLV
• Port ID TLV
• Time To Live TLV
• Zero or more optional TLVs, as allowed by the maximum size of the LLDPDU
• End Of LLDPDU TLV
The chassis ID and the port ID values are concatenated to form a logical identifier
that is used by the recipient to identify the sending LLDP agent/port. Both the chassis
ID and the port ID values can be defined in a number of convenient forms. Once
selected however, the chassis ID/port ID value combination remains the same as
long as the particular port remains operable.
A non-zero value in the TTL field of the Time To Live TLV tells the receiving LLDP
agent how long all information pertaining to this LLDPDU's identifier will be valid. This
allows the receiving LLDP agent to automatically discard all the associated
information if the sender fails to update it in a timely manner. A zero value indicates
that any information pertaining to this LLDPDU's identifier is to be discarded
immediately.
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2.3 LAG
Based on the IEEE 802.3ad standard, Link Aggregation Groups (LAGs) can be
configured to increase the bandwidth available between two network devices,
depending on the number of links installed (from 1 to 16). LAG also provides
redundancy in the event that one or more links participating in the LAG fail. All
physical links in a given LAG links combine to form one logical interface.
Packet sequencing must be maintained for any given session. The used hashing
algorithm is based on the type of traffic transported to ensure that all traffic in a flow
remains in sequence while providing effective load sharing across the links in the
LAG.
LAGs must be statically configured or formed dynamically with Link Aggregation
Control Protocol (LACP). The optional marker protocol described in IEEE 802.3ad is
not implemented.
LAGs can be configured on ports of mode access, hybrid, or network, with category
regular or residential.
An LAG cannot be configured on ports connecting to LT boards, the virtual port or
the multicast port.
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configured LAG port threshold value. If the number of available links falls below
the configured threshold, the configured threshold action determines if and at
what cost this LAG will be advertised.
For example, assume a single link in OSPF has an associated cost of 100 and the
LAG consists of four physical links. The cost associated with the logical link is 25.
If one link fails then the cost would automatically be adjusted to 33.
If dynamic cost is not configured then costing is applied based on the total number
of links configured. The cost would be calculated at 25. This will remain static
provided the number of links that are up exceeds the configured LAG threshold.
• LAG port threshold
The LAG port threshold feature allows configuration of the behavior, once the
number of available links in a LAG falls below or is equal to the specified
threshold. Two options are available:
• If the number of links available (up) in a LAG is less than the configured threshold,
then the LAG is regarded as operationally down.
For example, assume a LAG consists of eight physical links. The threshold is set to
four and dynamic costing is not configured. If the operational links is equal to or drops
below four, the link is regarded as operationally down until the number of operational
links is four or more.
• When the number of links available in a LAG is less than the configured threshold,
the LAG starts using the dynamic-cost allowing other nodes to adjust their routing
tables according to the revised costs. In this case, when the threshold is not crossed,
a fixed metric (all links operational) is advertised.
• Link-map-profile
Link-map-profile can be configured with the configure>lag>link-map-profile
<profile-id> command. A lag member port can be added to the link-map-profile
with the configure>lag>link-map-profile>link [port] [primary/secondary].
Link-map-profile failure-mode can be configured with
configure>lag>link-map-profile>failure-mode {per-link-hash | discard}. The
default failure-mode is per-link-hash. The link-map-profile configured lag can be
only associated with v-vpls service. When the lag is associated with v-vpls
service, the corresponding traffic can be pinned with the primary port of the
corresponding link-map-profile. If the primary port is not configured or operation
is down, traffic can be pinned with the secondary port, or else can take any other
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free port in the lag. For a lag, a maximum of 16 link-map-profile can be created,
with profile ID ranging from 1 to 32. Only lag member ports can be added with
link-map-profile.
There are some restrictions for link-map-profile:
• the link-map-profile feature is not supported for the NANT-D board
• each port/LAG-link can associate with only one link-map-profile
• each V-VPLS can associate with only one link-map-profile SAP
• SAPs in LAG with link-map-profile(s) can only associate with V-VPLS service
• there is no per-link-hash fallback protection for pinned traffic when default-profile has
no ports
• when the default-profile has no ports, it is expected that non-pinned traffic will drop
• link-map-profile and sub-group configurations cannot coincide in a LAG
• link-map-profile cannot exist in a LAG that is in network mode, and network mode
cannot be configured in a LAG that has link-map-profile
• link-map-profile cannot exist in a LAG that is in hybrid mode, and hybrid mode cannot
be configured in a LAG that has link-map-profile
• link-map-profile cannot exist in a LAG that has local_nt_ports configured, and
local_nt_ports cannot be configured in a LAG that has link-map-profile
• link-map-profile is not permitted in a LAG that is configured as eth-ring SAP, and
eth-ring SAP cannot be configured in a LAG that has link-map-profile
• link-map-profile does not support the combination of active and standby ports in a
LAG, for FNIO-A
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• The port being added has existing child dependencies configured on top of the
LAG (such as v-VPLS SAP). In this case the command is blocked and the
operator is warned to remove the dependencies.
• The port mode does not match the LAG mode.
• The port of type regular or residential does not match the LAG type.
• The port being added is an LT port, a virtual port or a multicast port. This attempt
will be denied.
• The port being added exceeds the number of supported ports in a LAG, the
attempt will be denied.
• Port being added already exists in another LAG.
Figure 3 displays traffic routed between ALA-1 and ALA-2 as a LAG consisting of four
ports.
Figure 3 LAG Configuration
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Legend:
OuterVID: outer most VLAN ID of the packet
IPSA: IP Source Address
IPDA: IP Destination Address
IPPROTO: IP Protocol field in the IP Header
TCP/UDP-SRC: TCP or UDP Source Port number
TCP/UDP-DST: TCP or UDP Destination Port number
INPORT: physical port the packet arrived on
MACDA: MAC Destination Address
MACSA: MAC Source Address
ETYPE: Ethertype field
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Configuring Physical Ports with CLI FD 100/320Gbps NT and FX NT IHub Interface Guide
The following example displays an access port configuration for port nt-a:qsfp:1 with
RS-FEC Clause 91:
A:ALA-B>configure port nt-a:qsfp:1
A:ALA-B>configure>port#info
----------------------------------------------
description "Ethernet access port"
ethernet
rs-fec-mode cl91-514-528
exit
no shutdown
----------------------------------------------
A:ALA-B>config>port#
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If an access port is to be turned into a network port, use the following syntax:
A:ALA-B>config>port# shutdown
If an access or network port is to be turned into a hybrid port, use the following
syntax:
A:ALA-B>config>port# shutdown
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Symbol Description
| A vertical line indicates that one of the parameters within the brackets or braces is required.
Example: tcp-ack {true|false}
<> Angle brackets indicate that you must enter text based on the parameter inside the brackets.
Example: interface <interface-name>
[{ }] Braces within square brackets indicates that you must choose one of the optional parameters.
Example: sdp sdp-id [{gre | mpls}]
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— no rs-fec-mode
[sys-cap]
— no tx-tlvs
— tca-interval interval-number
— tca-threshold
— inputbw
— no inputbw
— outputbw
— no outputbw
— rxcrcalignerrors
— no rxcrcalignerrors
— txcrcalignerrors
— no txcrcalignerrors
— txcollisions
— no txcollisions
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4.3.1.1 description
Item Description
Description This command creates a text description for a configuration context to help identify the content
in the configuration file.
The no form of this command removes any description string from the context.
4.3.1.2 shutdown
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Item Description
Context configure>port
configure>lag
Description This command administratively disables an entity. When disabled, an entity does not change,
reset, or remove any configuration settings or statistics.
The operational state of the entity is disabled as well as the operational state of any entities
contained within.
The no form of this command administratively enables an entity.
Special cases lag — The default state for a Link Aggregation Group (LAG) is shutdown.
port — The default state for a port is shutdown.
4.3.2.1 port
Item Description
Syntax port {port-id}
no port
Context configure
Description This command enables access to the context to configure ports. All ports are pre-provisioned.
(1 of 2)
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Item Description
Parameters port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or an LT
port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num>
where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num — The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage.
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot>
where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
(2 of 2)
4.3.2.2 local_nt_ports_only
Item Description
Description This command allows the operator to enable/disable LAG hashing to only local unit ports.
Default No local_nt_ports_only
Exception This command is applicable only for back plane load shared LT ports
4.3.3.1 ethernet
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Item Description
Syntax ethernet
Context configure>port
Description This command enables access to the context to configure Ethernet port attributes.
This context can only be used when configuring Fast Ethernet, Gigabit, or 10Gigabit Ethernet
LAN ports on an appropriate MDA.
4.3.3.2 autonegotiate
Item Description
Syntax autonegotiate [limited]
[no] autonegotiate
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command enables speed and duplex autonegotiation on Fast Ethernet ports and enables
far-end fault indicator support on Gigabit ports.
There are three possible settings for autonegotiation:
• “on” or enabled with full port capabilities advertised
• “off” or disabled where there are no autonegotiation advertisements
• “limited” where a single speed/duplex is advertised.
When autonegotiation is enabled on a port, the link attempts to automatically negotiate the link
speed and duplex parameters. If autonegotiation is enabled, the configured duplex and speed
parameters are ignored.
When autonegotiation is disabled on a port, the port does not attempt to autonegotiate and will
only operate at the speed and duplex settings configured for the port. Note that disabling
autonegotiation on gigabit ports is not allowed as the IEEE 802.3 specification for gigabit
Ethernet requires autonegotiation be enabled for far end fault indication.
If the autonegotiate limited keyword option is specified the port will autonegotiate but will only
advertise a specific speed and duplex. The speed and duplex advertised are the speed and
duplex settings configured for the port. One use for limited mode is for multispeed gigabit ports
to force gigabit operation while keeping autonegotiation enabled for compliance with IEEE
801.3.
Note: The limited keyword is not supported when the Ethernet port is equipped with an
electrical SFP. Ports equipped with an electrical SFP will always negotiate up to the highest
commonly available speed.
7302 ISAM OS requires that auto-negotiation be disabled or limited for ports in a Link
Aggregation Group to guarantee a specific port speed.
The no form of this command disables autonegotiation on this port.
Default autonegotiate
(1 of 2)
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Item Description
Parameters limited — The Ethernet interface will automatically negotiate link parameters with the far end,
but will only advertise the speed and duplex mode specified by the Ethernet speed and duplex
commands.
(2 of 2)
4.3.3.3 category
Item Description
Syntax category {regular | residential}
no category
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description The port category determines the rules for MAC address learning and for user-to-user
communication. This is specified in the FD 100/320Gbps NT and FX NT IHub Services Guide,
chapter “Virtual Private LAN Service”, section “ISAM VPLS Implementation”.
The port category for an access port is either residential or regular. The port category for
access ports can be modified. For ports of mode network and hybrid, the category is fixed to
regular, it cannot be modified.
The following holds for an access port:
A network-facing port will be configured as regular port, a customer-facing port will be
configured as residential port.
When the system starts up:
• LT ports are auto- created with category residential; their mode cannot be modified
• Virtual ports are created with category regular
• Network-facing ports (including subtending ISAM ports) are created with category regular.
In case you want to reconfigure a network-facing port with the intent to connect to a subtended
ISAM, you must modify the port category to residential.
The no form of this command reverts the port to its default category.
Default For an access port: the default depends on the usage of the port:
• for LT ports: residential
• for virtual ports: regular
• for network-facing ports (including subtending ISAM ports): regular.
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4.3.3.4 dot1q-etype
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command specifies the Ethertype expected when the port's encapsulation type is dot1q.
Dot1q encapsulation is supported only on Ethernet interfaces.
When a non-default Ethertype "dot1q-etype" (that is, with value different from 0x8100), is
configured on a port, some control plane packets get dropped in the OBC and are never
processed:
• ARP Request and Response
• OSPF Protocol packets
• PIM Protocol packets
• LDP-UDP packets
• LDP-TCP packets
• ISIS protocol packets
• IP Packets having exact Source IP match with one of L3 interface addresses.
• DHCP snooped packets
• LSP PING packets
• VCCV PING packets
• VPLS IPHOST packets
• DHCP6 packets
• ICMP6 packets
• IGMP packets
• BFD packets
Workaround:
In case you need to receive and process the above list of packets on your port with different
Ethertype from 0x8100, you can do one of the following:
• configure “use-vlan-etype” on that particular port and configure the required ether type on
the corresponding v-VPLS services where SAPs are present over this port (command:
configure service vpls vlan-dot1q-etype; for more information, see the IHub services
guide).
• configure “use-vlan-etype” on that particular port and configure system-wide ether type as
the required ether type which applies for all v-VPLS services (command: configure
system vlan-dot1q-etype; for more information, see the IHub system guide)
The no form of this command reverts the dot1q-etype value to the default.
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4.3.3.5 duplex
Table 11 duplex Command
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command specifies the Ethernet port duplex mode
Full duplex mode configuration:
• is possible on all RJ45/SFP/XFP/CFP Ethernet interface ports that support 10, 100, 1
Gbps, 10 Gbps, or 100 Gbps.
• is not possible on XFP interface ports that support only 10Gbps.
4.3.3.6 use-vlan-dot1q-etype
Item Description
Syntax use-vlan-dot1q-etype
[no] use-vlan-dot1q-etype
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command enables/disables the use of the service level dot1q-etype on SAPs (on v-VPLS
service) on this port.
4.3.3.7 egress-rate
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Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command configures the rate of traffic leaving the network.
The no form of this command reverts the value to the default.
Default no egress-rate
Parameters sub-rate — The egress rate in Kbps
Value: 1 — 100000000 Kbps
4.3.3.8 encap-type
Item Description
Syntax encap-type {dot1q or qinq}
no encap-type
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command configures the encapsulation method used to distinguish customer traffic on an
Ethernet access port or hybrid port, or different VLANs on a network port.
The no form of this command reverts the value to the default.
Default dot1q
Parameters dot1q — Ingress frames carry 802.1Q tags where each tag signifies a different service.
qinq — Supports both single and double tagged frames. Frames are mapped to a service
based on the SAPs configured for the port. Double tagged frames are mapped to QinQ SAPs
when there is a match; otherwise they are mapped to dot1q SAPs, based on the outer tag when
its inner tag is zero.
4.3.3.9 hold-time
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Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command configures port link dampening timers which reduce the number of link
transitions reported to upper layer protocols.
The hold-time value is used to dampen interface transitions.
When an interface transitions from an up state to a down state, it is immediately advertised to
the rest of the system if the hold-time-down interval is zero, but if the hold-time-down interval
is greater than zero, interface down transitions are not advertised to upper layers until the
hold-time-down interval has expired. Likewise, an interface is immediately advertised as up to
the rest of the system if the hold-time-up interval is zero, but if the hold-time-up interval is
greater than zero, up transitions are not advertised until the hold-time-up interval has expired.
The no form of this command reverts to the default values.
Default down 0 — No port link down dampening is enabled; link down transitions are immediately
reported to upper layer protocols.
up 0 — No port link up dampening is enabled; link up transitions are immediately reported to
upper layer protocols.
Parameters up hold-time-up — The delay, in seconds, to notify the upper layers after an interface
transitions from a down state to an up state.
Values: 0 — 900 seconds | 0— 90000 centiseconds
Note: hold-time-up can only be configured in centiseconds for 10GE ports
down hold-time-down — The delay, in seconds, to notify the upper layers after an interface
transitions from an up state to a down state.
Values: 0 — 900 seconds | 0— 90000 centiseconds
Note: hold-time-down can only be configured in centiseconds for 10GE ports
4.3.3.10 loopback
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
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Item Description
Description This command allow to place an access port in MAC loopback. That is, packets egressing the
port will be looped back, so they ingress the port.
For untagged packets and single tagged packets egressing the port with a VLAN different than
the configured tunnel VLAN, an extra VLAN tag (= tunnel VLAN) will be added to the packet
before looping the packet.
For tagged packets egressing the port with a VLAN equal to the configured tunnel VLAN, the
tunnel VLAN will be removed before looping the packet.
The following restrictions apply:
• To configure a port in loopback, the following conditions must be fulfilled:
• the port must be an access port
• no SAP should be configured on the port
• the port should not be part of a LAG
• the port should not be used by the Lawful Intercept feature
• A tunnel VLAN can only be modified after the loopback has been removed
• The loopback can only be removed from a port when no SAP has been defined on this port
• LAG membership:
• A port in loopback can be made member of an LAG
• Either all the ports or no ports of the LAG must be placed in loopback
Parameters tunnel — keyword, creates a loopback port in tunnel mode.
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4.3.3.11 mode
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
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Item Description
Description This command configures an Ethernet port for access mode, hybrid mode, or network mode
operation.
An access port or channel is used for customer facing traffic on which services are configured.
A Service Access Point (SAP) can only be configured on an access port or channel. When a
port is configured for access mode, the appropriate encap-type must be specified to
distinguish the services on the port. Once an Ethernet port has been configured for access
mode, multiple services can be configured on the Ethernet port. Note that ATM and Frame
Relay parameters can only be configured in the access mode. The access port can be
“regular” or “residential”.
A subset of the links that are connected to the NT I/O board can be used as either customer
links or network links. Such a link must be configured as uplink when intended to be used as
a network-facing port, alternatively the link must be configured as downlink when intended to
be used as a user-facing port.
A customer-facing port (an LT port or a downlink) can only be of mode access.
A virtual port can only be of mode access.
Network ports participate in the service provider transport or infrastructure network. Network
ports support MPLS. A network port is always of type “regular”.
Hybrid ports provide the features of both network ports and access regular ports.
The mode of a port cannot be modified if either an SAP, an LAG or an IP interface is configured
on the port or if the port is not in shutdown state.
The no form of this command restores the default.
Default access — Default channel/port mode for channelized, ASAP, and ATM MDAs.
Parameters access — Configures the Ethernet port to allow creation of SAPs on the port, the port can be
either network-facing or customer-facing.
network — Configures the Ethernet port to be a network port.
hybrid — Configures the Ethernet port to be a hybrid port.
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4.3.3.12 speed
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command configures the port speed of a Fast Ethernet port when auto-negotiation is
disabled.
If the port is configured to autonegotiate this parameter is ignored. Speed cannot be configured
for ports that are part of a Link Aggregation Group (LAG).
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Item Description
Parameters 10 — Sets the link to 10 mbps speed.
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4.3.3.13 lldp
Item Description
Syntax lldp
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command enables the context to configure Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP)
parameters on the specified port.
4.3.3.14 dest-mac
Item Description
nearest-non-tpmr — The nearest non-Two Port MAC Relay (TPMR) must be used.
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4.3.3.15 admin-status
Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet>lldp>dest-mac
Description This command configures destination MAC address parameters.
Parameters rx — The LLDP agent will receive, but will not transmit LLDP frames on this port.
tx — The LLDP agent will transmit LLDP frames on this port and will not store any information
about the remote systems connected.
tx-rx — The LLDP agent will transmit and receive LLDP frames on this port.
disabled — The LLDP agent will not transmit or receive LLDP frames on this port. If remote
systems information is received on this port and it is stored in other tables before the port's
administrative status becomes disabled, then the information will naturally age out.
4.3.3.16 tx-mgmt-address
Item Description
Syntax tx-mgmt-address [system]
no tx-mgmt-address
Context configure>port>ethernet>lldp>dest-mac
Parameters system — Specifies to use the system IP address. Note that the system address will only be
transmitted once it has been configured if this parameter is specified.
4.3.3.17 tx-tlvs
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Item Description
Context configure>port>ethernet>lldp>dest-mac
Description This command specifies which LLDP TLVs must be transmitted. The TX TLVS, defined as a
bitmap, includes the basic set of LLDP TLVs whose transmission is allowed on the local LLDP
agent by the network management.
Each bit in the bitmap corresponds to a TLV type associated with a specific optional TLV.
Organizationally-specific TLVs are excluded from this bitmap.
There is no bit reserved for the management address TLV type since the transmission of
management address TLVs is controlled by another object.
The no form of the command resets the value to the default.
Default no tx-tlvs
Parameters port-desc — The LLDP agent should transmit port description TLVs.
4.3.3.18 tca-interval
Item Description
Syntax tca-interval
no tca-interval
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description Count of 15 min intervals based on which the TCA alarm raise/clear condition is decided.
TCA Alarm Raise: From the 32 previous 15 min valid intervals, if the configured TCA threshold
is crossed for 'TcaInterval' times then an alarm is raised.
TCA Alarm Clear: From the 32 previous 15 min valid intervals, if the configured TCA threshold
hasn't crossed for 'TcaInterval' times and an alarm is already raised for this TCA then the alarm
is cleared. On system startup, it will take a minimum of 32 intervals for clearing an already
raised alarm.
Default 32
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4.3.3.19 tca-threshold
Item Description
Syntax tca-threshold
Context configure>port>ethernet
Description This command enables the context to configure TCA threshold parameters on the specified
port.
4.3.3.20 inputbw
Item Description
Syntax inputbw
no inputbw
Context configure>port>ethernet>tca-threshold
Description Bandwidth input configures the used input bandwidth threshold as percentage of available port
bandwidth
Default no inputbw
4.3.3.21 outputbw
Item Description
Syntax outputbw
no outputbw
Context configure>port>ethernet>tca-threshold
Description Bandwidth output configures the used output bandwidth threshold as percentage of available
port bandwidth
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Item Description
Default no outputbw
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4.3.3.22 rxcrcalignerrors
Item Description
Syntax rxcrcalignerrors
no rxcrcalignerrors
Context configure>port>ethernet>tca-threshold
Description CrcAlignErrors Input configures the Receive CRC Errors threshold as percentage of total
number of Crc error packets received on the port
Default no rxcrcalignerrors
4.3.3.23 txcrcalignerrors
Item Description
Syntax txcrcalignerrors
no txcrcalignerrors
Context configure>port>ethernet>tca-threshold
Description CrcAlignErrors Output configures the Transmit CRC Errors threshold in percentage of total
number of Crc error packets transmitted on the port
Default no txcrcalignerrors
4.3.3.24 txcollisions
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Item Description
Syntax txcollisions
no txcollisions
Context configure>port>ethernet>tca-threshold
Description txCollisions Output configures the Transmit Collision threshold as percent of the total count of
Transmit Collisions Error on the port
Default no txcollisions
4.3.3.25 suppress-link-state-alarm
Table 31 suppress-link-state-alarm Command
Item Description
Syntax suppress-link-state-alarm
[no] suppress-link-state-alarm
4.3.3.26 remark
Table 32 remark Command
Item Description
Syntax remark
[no] remark
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4.3.3.27 rs-fec-mode
Table 33 rs-fec-mode Command
Item Description
Context configure > port > Ethernet > rs-fec-mode <RS-FEC mode>
Default no rs-fec-mode
4.3.4.1 lag
Item Description
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Item Description
Description This command creates the context for configuring Link Aggregation Group (LAG) attributes.
A LAG can be used to group up to sixteen ports into one logical link. The aggregation of
multiple physical links allows for load sharing and offers seamless redundancy. If one of the
links fails, traffic will be redistributed over the remaining links. Up to 16 links can be supported
in a single LAG, up to 200 LAGs can be configured on a node.
NOTE: All ports in a LAG group must have autonegotiation set to Limited or Disabled.
There are three possible settings for autonegotiation:
• “on” or enabled with full port capabilities advertised
• “off” or disabled where there is no autonegotiation advertisements
• “limited” where a single speed/duplex is advertised.
When autonegotiation is enabled on a port, the link attempts to automatically negotiate the link
speed and duplex parameters. If autonegotiation is enabled, the configured duplex and speed
parameters are ignored.
When autonegotiation is disabled on a port, the port does not attempt to autonegotiate and will
only operate at the speed and duplex settings configured for the port. Note that disabling
autonegotiation on gigabit ports is not allowed as the IEEE 802.3 specification for gigabit
Ethernet requires autonegotiation be enabled for far end fault indication.
If the autonegotiate limited keyword option is specified the port will auto-negotiate but will
only advertise a specific speed and duplex. The speed and duplex advertised are the speed
and duplex settings configured for the port. One use for limited mode is for multispeed gigabit
ports to force gigabit operation while keeping autonegotiation is enabled for compliance with
IEEE 801.3.
7302 ISAM requires that auto-negotiation be disabled or limited for ports in a Link Aggregation
Group to guarantee a specific port speed.
The no form of this command deletes the LAG from the configuration. Deleting a LAG can only
be performed while the LAG is administratively shut down. Any dependencies such as
IP-Interfaces configurations must be removed from the configuration before issuing the no lag
command.
Default No LAGs are defined.
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4.3.4.2 dynamic-cost
Item Description
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Item Description
Description This command enables OSPF costing of a Link Aggregation Group (LAG) based on the
available aggregated, operational bandwidth.
The path cost is dynamically calculated based on the interface bandwidth. OSPF path cost can
be changed through the interface metric or the reference bandwidth.
If dynamic cost is configured, then costing is applied based on the total number of links
configured and the cost advertised is inversely proportional to the number of links available at
the time. This is provided that the number of links that are up exceeds the configured LAG
threshold value at which time the configured threshold action determines if, and at what cost,
this LAG will be advertised.
For example:
Assume a physical link in OSPF has a cost associated with it of 100, and the LAG consists of
four physical links. The cost associated with the logical link is 25. If one link fails then the cost
would automatically be adjusted to 33.
• If dynamic-cost is not configured and OSPF autocost is configured, then costing is
applied based on the total number of links configured. This cost will remain static provided
the number of links that are up exceeds the configured LAG threshold value at which time
the configured threshold action determines if and at what cost this LAG will be advertised.
• If dynamic-cost is configured and OSPF autocost is not configured, the cost is determined
by the cost configured on the OSPF metric provided the number of links available exceeds
the configured LAG threshold value at which time the configured threshold action
determines if this LAG will be advertised.
• If neither dynamic-cost nor OSPF autocost are configured, the cost advertised is
determined by the cost configured on the OSPF metric provided the number of links
available exceeds the configured LAG threshold value at which time the configured
threshold action determines if this LAG will be advertised.
The no form of this command removes dynamic costing from the LAG.
Default no dynamic-cost
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4.3.4.3 encap-type
Item Description
Context configure>lag
Description This command configures the encapsulation method used to distinguish customer traffic on a
LAG. The encapsulation type is configurable on a LAG port. The LAG port and the port
member encapsulation types must match when adding a port member.
If the encapsulation type of the LAG port is changed, the encapsulation type on all the port
members will also change. The encapsulation type can be changed on the LAG port only if
there is no interface associated with it.
The no form of this command restores the default.
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Item Description
Parameters dot1q — Ingress frames carry 802.1Q tags where each tag signifies a different service.
qinq — Supports both single and double tagged frames. Frames are mapped to a service
based on the SAPs configured for the port. Double tagged frames are mapped to QinQ SAPs
when there is a match; otherwise they are mapped to dot1q SAPs, based on the outer tag
when its inner tag is zero.
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4.3.4.4 hold-time
Item Description
Description This command specifies the timer, in tenths of seconds, which controls the delay between
detecting that a LAG is down (all active ports are down) and reporting it to the higher levels.
A non-zero value can be configured, for example, when active/standby signaling is used in a
1:1 fashion to avoid informing higher levels during the small time interval between detecting
that the LAG is down and the time needed to activate the standby link.
Default 0
Parameters down hold-down-time — Specifies the hold-time for event reporting
Values: 0 — 2000
4.3.4.5 lacp
Item Description
Context configure>lag
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Item Description
Description This command specifies the LACP mode for aggregated Ethernet interfaces only. This
command enables the LACP protocol. Per the IEEE 802.3ad standard, the Link Aggregation
Control Protocol (LACP) provides a standardized means for exchanging information between
Partner Systems on a link to allow their Link Aggregation Control instances to reach agreement
on the identity of the Link Aggregation Group to which the link belongs, move the link to that
Link Aggregation Group, and enable its transmission and reception functions in an orderly
manner. LACP can be enabled on a maximum of 256 ports.
Default No LACP
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4.3.4.6 lacp-xmit-interval
Item Description
Description This command specifies the interval signaled to the peer and tells the peer at which rate it
should transmit.
Default fast
Parameters slow — Transmits packets every 30 seconds.
4.3.4.7 lacp-xmit-stdby
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Item Description
Context configure>lag
Default lacp-xmit-stdby
4.3.4.8 link-map-profile
Item Description
Context configure>lag
Description This command creates link-map-profile within one subgroup. The default failure-mode is
per-link-hash. The link can be configured as primary or secondary. Default traffic pinning is
primary.
4.3.4.9 mode
Item Description
Context configure>lag
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Item Description
Description This command configures the mode of the Link Aggregation Group (LAG).
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4.3.4.10 port
Item Description
Syntax port port-id [port-id …up to 16 total] [priority priority] [subgroup sub-group-id]
no port port-id [port-id …up to 16 total]
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Item Description
Parameters port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or an LT
port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num>
where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num — The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage.
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot>
where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
priority priority — Port priority used by LACP. The port priority is also used to determine the
primary port. The port with the highest priority is the primary port. In the event of a tie, the
smallest port ID becomes the primary port.
Values: 1 — 65535
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4.3.4.11 sub-group
Item Description
Syntax sub-group sub-group-id [preference preference threshold threshold
Description This command configures the preference and threshold for a subgroup.
preference — The preference for the subgroup. The subgroup with the lower preference value
has a higher priority.
Values: 0 — 16 (default value is 0)
threshold — The threshold value for the active links in the subgroup. If the number of active
links in a subgroup is equal to or lower then this value, a switchover to another subgroup is
initiated.
Values: 0 — 15 (default value is 0)
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4.3.4.12 sub-group-force
Item Description
Description This command selects a subgroup as the active subgroup and overrides the preference-based
subgroup selection.
The no option of this command will results in subgroups being selected as active based on
the preference.
4.3.4.13 local_nt_ports_only
Item Description
Syntax [no] local_nt_ports_only
Description This command allows the operator to enable/disable LAG hashing to only local unit ports.
Default No local_nt_ports_only
4.3.4.14 sub-group-switch-detect-time
Item Description
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Item Description
Context configure>lag lag-id
Description Duration to wait in seconds for links to become active after switch over to a subgroup. After
expiry of this duration link status will be taken into account by subgroup selection logic.
This parameter is applicable for static LAGs only.
Default 5
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4.3.4.15 port-threshold
Item Description
Description This command configures the behavior for the Link Aggregation Group (LAG) if the number of
operational links is equal to or below a threshold level.
The no form of this command reverts to the default values.
action {dynamic-cost | down} — Specifies the action to take if the number of active links in
the LAG is at or below the threshold value.
When the dynamic-cost action is specified, then dynamic costing will be activated. As a result
the LAG will remain operationally up with a cost relative to the number of operational links. The
link will only be regarded as operationally down when all links in the LAG are down.
When the down action is specified, then the LAG will be brought operationally down if the
number of operational links is equal to or less than the configured threshold value. The LAG
will only be regarded as up once the number of operational links exceeds the configured
threshold value.
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4.4.1 port
Item Description
Context show
Parameters port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or an LT
port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-name>
where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num — The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage.
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot>
where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
count — Displays only port counter summary information.
associations — Displays a list of current router interfaces to which the port is associated.
Label Description
Port ID The the physical port configured or displayed in the format as specified in Table 49.
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Label Description
Link • Yes — A physical link is present.
• No — A physical link is not present.
Port State • Up — The port is physically present and has physical link present.
• Down — The port is physically present but does not have a link.
• Ghost — A port that is not physically present.
• None — The port is in its initial creation state or about to be deleted.
• Link Up — A port that is physically present and has physical link present.
Note that when Link Up appears at the lowest level of a SONET/SDH path or a TDM
tributary, it means the physical connection is active but the port is waiting on some
other state before data traffic can flow. It is a waiting state and indicates that data traffic
will not flow until it transitions to the Up state.
• Link Down — A port that is physically present but does not have a link.
Port Mode • network — The port is configured for transport network use.
• access — The port is configured for service access.
• hybrid — The port is configured for hybrid mode. It supports the features of both
network and access regular port modes.
Port Encp dot1q — Ingress frames carry 802.1Q tags where each tag signifies a different service.
qinq — Ingress frames are mapped to a service based on the SAPs configured for the
port. Double tagged frames are mapped to QinQ SAPs when there is a match; otherwise
they are mapped to dot1q SAPs, based on the outer tag when its inner tag is zero.
LoopbackVlan The VLAN ID which will be added to packets when ports are placed in tunnel loopback
mode
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Label Description
MTU The size of the largest packet which can be sent/received on the Ethernet physical
interface, specified in octets.
Hold time up The link up dampening time in seconds. The port link dampening timer value which
reduces the number of link transitions reported to upper layer protocols.
Hold time down The link down dampening time in seconds. The down timer controls the dampening
timer for link down transitions.
Last Cleared Time Displays the time on which the statistics have been cleared.
Last State Change Displays the last time on which the operational state of the port changed state.
Configured Mode • network — The port is configured for transport network use.
• access — The port is configured for service access.
• hybrid — The port is configured for hybrid mode. It supports the features of both
network and access regular port modes.
Dot1Q Ethertype Indicates the Ethertype expected when the port's encapsulation type is Dot1Q.
Encap Type • Null — Ingress frames will not use any tags or labels to delineate a service.
• dot1q — Ingress frames carry 802.1Q tags where each tag signifies a different
service.
Auto-negotiate • True — The link attempts to automatically negotiate the link speed and duplex
parameters.
• False — The duplex and speed values are used for the link.
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Label Description
MDI/MDX The ethernet interface type:
• MDI (Media Dependent Interface)
• MDX (Media Dependent interface with crossover)
Egress Rate The maximum amount of egress bandwidth (in kilobits per second) that this Ethernet
interface can generate.
Hardware Address The interface's hardware or system assigned MAC address at its protocol sub-layer.
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The Input/Output Command output fields for a specified port are described in
Table 52.
Table 52 Input/Output Command Fields
Label Description
Octets Input/Output For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of inbound octets that have been
delivered to a higher layer protocol. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces,
the number of inbound octets that have been delivered to a higher layer protocol.
This will include discard/error octets except 'runt' octets.
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of outbound octets that have been
delivered to a higher layer protocol. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces,
the number of outbound octets that have been delivered to a higher layer protocol.
Packets Input/Output For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of inbound packets that have been
delivered to a higher layer protocol. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces,
the number of inbound packets that have been delivered to a higher layer protocol.
This will include discard packets but will not include error packets.
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of outbound packets that have been
delivered to a higher layer protocol. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces,
the number of outbound packets that have been delivered to a higher layer protocol.
Errors Input/Output For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of inbound packets that contained errors
preventing them from being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. For
character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the number of inbound transmission
units that contained errors preventing them from being deliverable to a higher-layer
protocol.
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of outbound packets that could not be
transmitted because of errors. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the
number of outbound transmission units that could not be transmitted because of
errors.
Unicast Packets The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-) layer, which
Input/Output were not addressed to a multicast or broadcast address at this sub-layer. The total
number of packets that higher-level protocols requested be transmitted, and which
were not addressed to a multicast or broadcast address at this sub-layer, including
those that were discarded or not sent.
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
Multicast Packets The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-) layer, which
Input/Output were addressed to a multicast address at this sub-layer. For a MAC layer protocol,
this includes both Group and Functional addresses. The total number of packets that
higher-level protocols requested be transmitted, and which were addressed to a
multicast address at this sub-layer, including those that were discarded or not sent.
For a MAC layer protocol, this includes both Group and Functional addresses.
Broadcast Packets The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-) layer, which
Input/Output were addressed to a broadcast address at this sub-layer. The total number of
packets that higher-level protocols requested be transmitted, and which were
addressed to a multicast address at this sub-layer, including those that were
discarded or not sent. For a MAC layer protocol, this includes both Group and
Functional addresses.
Discards Input/Output The number of inbound packets chosen to be discarded to possibly free up buffer
space.
Unknown Proto Discards For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of packets received via the interface
Input/Output which were discarded because of an unknown or unsupported protocol. For
character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces that support protocol multiplexing the
number of transmission units received via the interface which were discarded
because of an unknown or unsupported protocol. For any interface that does not
support protocol multiplexing, this counter will always be 0. For ATM, this field
displays cells discarded on an invalid vpi/vci. Unknown proto discards do not show
up in the packet counts.
Errors This field displays the number of cells discarded due to uncorrectable HEC errors.
Errors do not show up in the raw cell counts.
(2 of 2)
Label Description
Broadcast Pckts The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-) layer, which
were addressed to a broadcast address at this sub-layer.
The total number of packets that higher-level protocols requested be transmitted,
and which were addressed to a multicast address at this sub-layer, including those
that were discarded or not sent.
For a MAC layer protocol, this includes both Group and Functional addresses.
Multicast Pckets The number of packets, delivered by this sub-layer to a higher (sub-) layer, which
were addressed to a multicast address at this sub-layer. For a MAC layer protocol,
this includes both Group and Functional addresses. The total number of packets
that higher-level protocols requested be transmitted, and which were addressed to
a multicast address at this sub-layer, including those that were discarded or not
sent. For a MAC layer protocol, this includes both Group and Functional addresses.
Undersize Pckets The total number of packets received that were less than 64 octets long (excluding
framing bits, but including FCS octets) and were otherwise well formed.
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
Oversize Pckts The total number of packets received that were longer than can be accepted by the
physical layer of that port (2048 octets excluding framing bits, but including FCS
octets for GE ports) and were otherwise well formed.
Collisions The best estimate of the total number of collisions on this Ethernet segment.
Drop Events The total number of events in which packets were dropped by the probe due to lack
of resources. Note that this number is not necessarily the number of packets
dropped; it is just the number of times this condition has been detected.
CRC Align Errors The total number of packets received that had a length (excluding framing bits, but
including FCS octets) of between 64 and 1518 octets, inclusive, but had either a bad
Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a
bad FCS with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
Fragments The total number of packets received that were less than 64 octets in length
(excluding framing bits but including FCS octets) and had either a bad Frame Check
Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS with a
non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
Jabbers The total number of packets received that were longer than 1518 octets (excluding
framing bits, but including FCS octets), and had either a bad Frame Check
Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS with a
non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
Ingress Pool Size The amount of ingress buffer space, expressed as a percentage of the available
buffer space that will be allocated to the port or channel for ingress buffering.
Octets The total number of octets received.
Packets to The number of packets received that were equal to or less than the displayed octet
limit.
Alignment Errors The total number of packets received that had a length (excluding framing bits, but
including FCS octets) of between 64 and 2048 octets, inclusive, but had either a bad
Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a
bad FCS with a non-integral number of octets.
FCS Errors The number of frames received on a particular interface that are an integral number
of octets in length but do not pass the FCS check
Symbol Errors The number of times there was an invalid data symbol when a valid carrier was
present.
(2 of 2)
If the ethernet option is chosen when executing the show command, the following
is displayed:
• the specific port command output fields as described in Table 51
• the input/output command output fields as described in Table 52
• additional detailed port command output fields as described in Table 54.
Table 54 describes the detailed port command input/output fields.
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Label Description
Drop events Input/Output The total number of events in which packets were dropped by the probe due to lack
of resources while receiving. Note that this number is not necessarily the number
of packets dropped; it is just the number of times this condition has been detected.
The total number of events in which packets were dropped by the probe due to lack
of resources while transmitting. Note that this number is not necessarily the number
of packets dropped; it is just the number of times this condition has been detected.
Undersize Pckts The total number of packets received that were less than 64 octets long (excluding
Input/Output framing bits, but including FCS octets) and were otherwise well formed.
The total number of packets transmitted that were less than 64 octets long
(excluding framing bits, but including FCS octets) and were otherwise well formed.
Oversize Pckts The total number of packets received that were longer than can be accepted by the
Input/Output physical layer of that port (2048 octets excluding framing bits, but including FCS
octets for GE ports) and were otherwise well formed.
The total number of packets transmitted that were longer than can be accepted by
the physical layer of that port (2048 octets excluding framing bits, but including FCS
octets for GE ports) and were otherwise well formed.
Jabbers Input/Output The total number of packets received that were longer than 2048 octets (excluding
framing bits, but including FCS octets), and had either a bad Frame Check
Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS with
a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
The total number of packets transmitted that were longer than 2048 octets
(excluding framing bits, but including FCS octets), and had either a bad Frame
Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS
with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
Fragments Input/Output The total number of packets received that were less than 64 octets in length
(excluding framing bits but including FCS octets) and had either a bad Frame
Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS
with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
The total number of packets transmitted that were less than 64 octets in length
(excluding framing bits but including FCS octets) and had either a bad Frame
Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS
with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
CRC Align errors The total number of packets received that had a length (excluding framing bits, but
Input/Output including FCS octets) of between 64 and 2048 octets, inclusive, but had either a
bad Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error)
or a bad FCS with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
The total number of packets transmitted that had a length (excluding framing bits,
but including FCS octets) of between 64 and 2048 octets, inclusive, but had either
a bad Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error)
or a bad FCS with a non-integral number of octets (Alignment Error).
Packets of Input/Output The number of packets received that were equal to or less than the displayed octet
limit.
The number of packets transmitted that were equal to or less than the displayed
octet limit.
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Label Description
Encap Value The dot1q or qinq encapsulation value on the port for this IP interface
4.4.2 internal-port
Item Description
Description This command is used to view the individual slot-port of the LT-NT back plane ports, and is
only applicable for LTs with multiple forwarding planes.
Parameters <port-id> - slot-port name for which information to be displayed. The syntax is:
lt-link:rack/self/slot/slot-port.
Label Description
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4.4.3 lldp
Item Description
Context show>port>ethernet
Description This command displays Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) information.
Item Description
Syntax [curr-15min-stats|curr-day-stats|prev-15min-stats|prev-day-stats] [interval-number
interval-number]
Context show>port>ethernet
Description This command displays historical Ethernet statistics collection for NT uplink and LT ports. It
supports 96 intervals of 15min stats and 7 intervals of day stats.
Parameters curr-15min-stats - Displays current 15 minutes statistics.
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Label Description
Port-id Specifies the physical port ID. This shows the NT uplink port (port-id). The syntax is:
port-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num>
where:
• slot-address - nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type - sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp
• port-num - the port-number
• sub-port-num — The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for
4x10G mode on boards with qsfp cage.
Elapsed-time One plus the wallclock time expressed in seconds modulo 900 (for 15min intervals)
or 86400 (for 1-day intervals). This indicates the number of seconds that have
elapsed since the beginning of the current interval.
Range:
• 15-min interval: 1-900
• 1-day interval: 1-86400
Measured-time The amount of time in the interval over which the performance monitoring
information is actually counted. This value will be the same as the interval duration
except in a situation where the performance monitoring data could not be collected
for any reason. Per time interval, the measured time corresponds with the
accumulation period.
Range:
• 15-min interval: 0-900
• 1-day interval: 0-86400
Note: the measured time can increment more than the value mentioned above when
the wallclock time changes happen.
Valid-intervals The number of intervals for which the statistics were collected. It counts both the
invalid and the valid intervals.
Interval-number The number of intervals elapsed since the current interval. This is shown only in the
prev-15min-stats and prev-day-stats.
Octets input/output • Octets Input displays the total number of octets received in the port. It includes
the frames which are good, error, and discarded.
• Octets Output displays the total number of octets transmitted in the port. It
includes the frames which are good, error, and discarded on the port.
Packets input/output • Packets Input displays the total number of frames received in the port. It includes
the frames which are good, error, and discarded on the port.
• Packets Output displays the total number of frames transmitted in the port. It
includes the frames which are good, error, and discarded on the port.
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
PacketsDrops • PacketDrops Input displays the total number of frames which are received been
input/output dropped in the port. It includes both errors and discarded frames on the port.
• PacketDrops Output displays the total number of frames which are transmitted
been dropped in the port. It counts only the discarded frames on the port.
Discards input/output The PacketDrops statistics are further divided into Errors and Discards.
• Discard Input displays the total number of frames which are received been
discarded (for example, vlan mismatch, unknown proto, and so on) in the port.
• Discard output displays the total number of frames which are transmitted been
discarded (for example, STP blocked port drops the data frames on the egress,
and so on) in the port.
Errors input/output The PacketDrops statistics are further divided into Errors and Discards.
• Errors Input displays the total number of frames which are received in the port
been dropped due to the frame errors (Undersize Pckts, Oversize Pckts,
Collisions, Drop Events, CRC/Align Errors, Fragments, Jabbers, and so on).
• Errors Output always displays as zero.
Bandwidth Input/Output Specifies the average input/output bandwidth since the beginning of the current
15-minute interval
crcalignerrors Specifies the align errors as a percentage of the count of the total number of packets
Input/Output received since the beginning of the current 15-minute interval that had a length
(excluding framing bits, but including FCS octets) of between 64 and 1518 octets,
inclusive, but had either a bad Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral
number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS with a non-integral number of octets
(Alignment Error).
txcollisions Input/Output Specifies the transmitted collisions as a percentage of the total count of Transmit
Collisions Error since the beginning of the current 15-minute interval
(2 of 2)
Label Description
Port-id Specifies the physical port ID. This shows the LT port (port-id). The syntax is:
port-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num>
lt: 1/1/1
Elapsed-time One plus the wallclock time expressed in seconds modulo 900 (for 15min intervals)
or 86400 (for 1-day intervals). This indicates the number of seconds that have
elapsed since the beginning of the current interval.
Range:
• 15-min interval: 1-900
• 1-day interval: 1-86400
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
Measured-time The amount of time in the interval over which the performance monitoring
information is actually counted. This value will be the same as the interval duration
except in a situation where the performance monitoring data could not be collected
for any reason. Per time interval, the measured time corresponds with the
accumulation period.
Range:
• 15-min interval: 0-900
• 1-day interval: 0-86400
Note: the measured time can increment more than the value mentioned above when
the wallclock time changes happen.
Valid-intervals The number of intervals for which the statistics were collected. It counts both the
invalid and the valid intervals.
Interval-number The number of intervals elapsed since the current interval. This is shown only in the
prev-15min-stats and prev-day-stats.
Octets input/output • Octets Input displays the total number of octets received in the port. It includes
the frames which are good, error and discarded.
• Octets Output displays the total number of octets transmitted in the port. It
includes the frames which are good, error and discarded on the port.
Packets input/output • Packets Input displays the total number of frames received in the port. It includes
the frames which are good, error, and discarded on the port.
• Packets Output displays the total number of frames transmitted in the port. It
includes the frames which are good, error and discarded on the port.
PacketsDrops • PacketDrops Input displays the total number of frames which are received been
input/output dropped in the port. It includes both errors and discarded frames on the port.
• PacketDrops Output displays the total number of frames which are transmitted
been dropped in the port. It counts only the discarded frames on the port.
Discards input/output The PacketDrops statistics are further divided into Errors and Discards.
• Discard Input displays the total number of frames which are received been
discarded (for example, vlan mismatch, unknown proto, and so on) in the port.
• Discard output displays the total number of frames which are transmitted been
discarded (for example, STP blocked port drops the data frames on the egress,
and so on) in the port.
Errors input/output The PacketDrops statistics are further divided into Errors and Discards.
• Errors Input displays the total number of frames which are received in the port
been dropped due to the frame errors (Undersize Pckts, Oversize Pckts,
Collisions, Drop Events, CRC/Align Errors, Fragments, Jabbers, and so on).
• Errors Output always displays as zero.
(2 of 2)
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Item Description
Context show
Description Displaying cumulative of last 10 min, 1 min, 5-sec port counter statistics. Polling happens for
every 2.5 sec in hardware.
Label Description
Port-id Specifies the physical port ID. This shows the NT uplink port (port-id).
The syntax is: port-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num> no
sched
where:no sched
• slot-address - nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type - sfp, xfp, qsfp, cfpno sched
• port-num - the port-number
• sub-port-num - The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for
4x10G mode on boards with qsfp cage
Octets input/output • Octets Input displays the total number of octets received in the port for
last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. • Octets Output displays the total number of octets
transmitted in the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
Packets unicast no • Packet unicast Input displays the total number of unicast packets received in the
sched port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. no sched
input/output • Packet unicast Output displays the total number of unicast packets transmitted in
the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
Packets multicast no • Packet multicast Input displays the total number of multicast packets received in
sched the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. no sched
input/output • Packet multicast Output displays the total number of multicast packets transmitted
in the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
Packets broadcast no • Packet broadcast Input displays the total number of broadcast packets received in
sched the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. no sched
input/output • Packet broadcast Output displays the total number of broadcast packets
transmitted in the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
Pps input/output Pps input displays average packets per second received in the port for last 5-sec,
last-1-min, last-10-min.no sched
Pps output displays average packets per second transmitted in the port for last
5-sec, last-1-min, last-10-min.
Mbps input/output Mbps input displays average megabits per second received in the port for last 5-sec,
last-1-min, last-10-min packet statistics.no sched
Mbps output displays average megabits per second transmitted in the port for last
5-sec, last-1-min, last-10-min packet statistics
Tagged Packets • Packet tagged Input displays the total number of tagged packets received in the
input/output port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. no sched
• Packet tagged Output displays the total number of tagged packets transmitted in
the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
Untagged Packets • Packet untagged Input displays the total number of untagged packets received in
input/output the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min. no sched
• Packet untagged Output displays the total number of untagged packets transmitted
in the port for last-5-sec,last-1-min,last-10-min.no sched
(2 of 2)
4.5.1 lag
Table 64 lag command
Item Description
(1 of 2)
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Item Description
Parameters lag-id — Displays only information on the specified LAG ID.
Default: Display information for all LAG IDs.
Values: 1 — 64
associations — Displays a list of current router interfaces to which the LAG is assigned
(2 of 2)
Label Description
LAG ID The LAG or multi-link bundle ID that the port is assigned to.
Port-Threshold The number of operational links for the LAG at or below which the configured action will be
invoked.
Up-Link-Count The number of ports that are physically present and have physical links present.
Local-NT-Ports-O Specifies LAG hashing to only local unit ports is enabled/disabled.
nly
Label Description
LAG ID The LAG or multi-link trunk (MLT) that the port is assigned to.
Port Threshold If the number of available links is equal or below this number, the threshold action
is executed.
Thres. Last Cleared The last time that keep-alive statistics were cleared.
Dynamic Cost The OSPF costing of a link aggregation group based on the available aggregated,
operational bandwidth.
Configured Address The base chassis Ethernet MAC address.
(1 of 3)
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Label Description
Hold-Time Down The timer, in tenths of seconds, which controls the delay between detecting that a
LAG is down and reporting it to the higher levels.
Thres. Exceeded Cnt The number of times that the drop count was reached.
Threshold Action Action to take when the number of available links is equal or below the port
threshold.
Encap Type The encapsulation method used to distinguish customer traffic on a LAG.
Active/stdby Indicates that the member port is selected as the active or standby link.
Primary Indicates that the member port is the primary port of the LAG.
Sub-group Displays the member subgroup where the member port belongs to.
(2 of 3)
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Label Description
Sub-group switch-count Displays the number of subgroup switchovers.
Forced-active subgroup Displays the subgroup to which the operator has forced a switchover.
Subgroup switch Displays the number of seconds to wait for links to come up after a switchover
detection time before deciding if the switchover was successful.
Link map profile ID The link map profile ID that is configured with the LAG.
(3 of 3)
Label Description
LAG ID The LAG or multi-link trunk (MLT) that the port is assigned to.
Input Bytes The number of incoming bytes for the LAG on a per-port basis.
Input Packets The number of incoming packets for the LAG on a per-port basis.
Output Bytes The number of outbound bytes for the LAG on a per-port basis.
Output Packets The number of outbound packets for the LAG on a per-port basis.
Input/Output Errors For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of inbound packets that contained errors
preventing them from being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol. For character-
oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the number of inbound transmission units that
contained errors preventing them from being deliverable to a higher-layer protocol.
For packet-oriented interfaces, the number of outbound packets that could not be
transmitted because of errors. For character-oriented or fixed-length interfaces, the
number of outbound transmission units that could not be transmitted because of
errors.
Totals Displays the column totals for bytes, packets, and errors.
Label Description
(1 of 2)
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Label Description
Name The name of the IP interface.
Encap Val The dot1q or Q-in-Q values of the port for the IP interface.
(2 of 2)
Label Description
Link map profile ID The link map profile ID that is configured with the LAG.
Label Description
4.6.1 lag
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Item Description
Syntax lag lag-id [lag-id...(up to 5 max)] [interval seconds] [repeat repeat] [absolute | rate]
Context monitor
Description This command enables LAG monitoring. The specified port(s) statistical information displays at
the configured interval until the configured count is reached.
When the keyword rate is specified, the “rate per second” for each statistic is displayed instead
of the delta.
Monitor commands are similar to show commands but only statistical information displays.
Monitor commands display the selected statistics according to the configured number of times
at the interval specified.
absolute — When the absolute keyword is specified, the raw statistics are displayed, without
processing. No calculations are performed on the delta or rate statistics.
rate — When the rate keyword is specified, the rate-per-second for each statistic is displayed
instead of the delta.
4.6.2 port
Item Description
Syntax port port-id [port-id...(up to 5 max)] [interval seconds] [repeat repeat] [absolute | rate]
Context monitor
Description This command enables port traffic monitoring. The specified port(s) statistical information
displays at the configured interval until the configured count is reached.
The first screen displays the current statistics related to the specified port(s). The subsequent
statistical information listed for each interval is displayed as a delta to the previous display.
When the keyword rate is specified, the “rate per second” for each statistic is displayed instead
of the delta.
Monitor commands are similar to show commands but only statistical information displays.
Monitor commands display the selected statistics according to the configured number of times
at the interval specified.
(1 of 2)
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Item Description
Parameters port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or hybrid
port (nwport-id) or an LT port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num> where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num - The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot> where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
interval seconds — Configures the interval for each display in seconds.
Default: 10 seconds
Values: 5 — 60
absolute — When the absolute keyword is specified, the raw statistics are displayed, without
processing. No calculations are performed on the delta or rate statistics.
rate — When the rate keyword is specified, the rate-per-second for each statistic is displayed
instead of the delta.
(2 of 2)
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Octets 0 0
Packets 39 175
Errors 0 0
==========================================================================
A:ALA-12>monitor#
4.7.1 lag
Item Description
(1 of 2)
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Item Description
Context clear
Description This command clears statistics for the specified LAG ID.
(2 of 2)
4.7.2 port
Item Description
Context clear
Description This command clears port statistics for the specified port(s).
Parameters port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or hybrid
port (nwport-id) or an LT port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num>
where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num - The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot> where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
statistics — Specifies that port statistics will be cleared.
4.7.3 sliding-win-stats
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Item Description
Syntax sliding-win-stats
Context clear
Description This command clears the statistics of of last 10 min, 1 min, 5-sec port counter.
4.7.4 historical-stats
Item Description
Description This command clears the historical Ethernet statistics collection of NT and NTIO ports.
Parameters historical-stats all — Specifies that historical Ethernet statistics will be cleared.
4.8.1 lag
Item Description
Context debug
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Item Description
Parameters lag-id — Specifies the link aggregation group ID.
port-id — Specifies the physical port ID. This can be either a network port (nwport-id) or hybrid
port (nwport-id) or an LT port (ltport-id). The syntax is:
• For nwport-id: <slot-address>:<port-type>:<port-num><sub-port-num> where:
• slot-address — nt, nt-a, nt-b or ntio-1
• port-type — sfp, xfp, cfp, qsfp, vp, eth, ieee1588 or AI
• port-num — the port-number
• sub-port-num - The sub port number within a qsfp cage. Applicable only for 4x10G
mode on boards with qsfp cage
• For ltport-id: lt:<rack>/<shelf>/<slot> where:
• lt — keyword
• rack — number identifying the rack
• shelf — number identifying the shelf
• slot — number identifying the slot
sm — Specifies to display trace LACP state machine.
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