Interface and Hardware Commands

bluetooth pin

To configure a new Bluetooth pin, use the bluetooth pin command in interface configuration or global configuration mode.

bluetooth pin pin

Syntax Description

pin

Pairing pin for the Bluetooth interface.

The pin is a 4-digit number.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE Amsterdam 17.1.1

This command was introduced.

This command was introduced for the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series High Performance Switches.

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.12.1

This command was introduced.

This command was introduced for the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Switches.

Usage Guidelines

The bluetooth pin command can be configured either in the interface configuration or global configuration mode. Cisco recommends using the global configuration mode to configure the Bluetooth pin.

Examples

This example shows how to configure a new Bluetooth pin using the bluetooth pin command.

Device> enable
Device# configure terminal
Device(config)# bluetooth pin 1111
Device(config)#

debug ilpower

To enable debugging of the power controller and Power over Ethernet (PoE) system, use the debug ilpower command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug ilpower {cdp | event | ha | ipc | police | port | powerman | registries | scp | sense | upoe}

no debug ilpower {cdp | event | ha | ipc | police | port | powerman | registries | scp | sense | upoe}

Syntax Description

cdp

Displays PoE Cisco Discovery Protocol (CDP) debug messages.

event

Displays PoE event debug messages.

ha

Displays PoE high-availability messages.

ipc

Displays PoE Inter-Process Communication (IPC) debug messages.

police

Displays PoE police debug messages.

port

Displays PoE port manager debug messages.

powerman

Displays PoE power management debug messages.

registries

Displays PoE registries debug messages.

scp

Displays PoE SCP debug messages.

sense

Displays PoE sense debug messages.

upoe

Displays Cisco UPOE debug messages.

Command Default

Debugging is disabled.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command is supported only on PoE-capable switches.

When you enable debugging on a switch stack, it is enabled only on the active switch. To enable debugging on a stack member, you can start a session from the active switch by using the session switch-number EXEC command. Then enter the debug command at the command-line prompt of the stack member. You also can use the remote command stack-member-number LINE EXEC command on the active switc to enable debugging on a member switch without first starting a session.

debug interface

To enable debugging of interface-related activities, use the debug interface command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug interface {interface-id | counters {exceptions | protocol memory} | null interface-number | port-channel port-channel-number | states| vlan vlan-id}

no debug interface {interface-id | counters {exceptions | protocol memory} | null interface-number | port-channel port-channel-number | states| vlan vlan-id}

Syntax Description

interface-id

ID of the physical interface. Displays debug messages for the specified physical port, identified by type switch number/module number/port, for example, gigabitethernet 1/0/2.

null interface-number

Displays debug messages for null interfaces. The interface number is always 0.

port-channel port-channel-number

Displays debug messages for the specified EtherChannel port-channel interface. The port-channel-number range is 1 to 48.

vlan  vlan-id

Displays debug messages for the specified VLAN. The vlan range is 1 to 4094.

counters

Displays counters debugging information.

exceptions

Displays debug messages when a recoverable exceptional condition occurs during the computation of the interface packet and data rate statistics.

protocol memory

Displays debug messages for memory operations of protocol counters.

states

Displays intermediary debug messages when an interface's state transitions.

Command Default

Debugging is disabled.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

If you do not specify a keyword, all debug messages appear.

The undebug interface command is the same as the no debug interface command.

When you enable debugging on a switch stack, it is enabled only on the active switch. To enable debugging on a stack member, you can start a session from the active switch by using the session switch-number EXEC command. Then enter the debug command at the command-line prompt of the stack member. You also can use the remote command stack-member-number LINE EXEC command on the active switch to enable debugging on a member switch without first starting a session.

debug lldp packets

To enable debugging of Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) packets, use the debug lldp packets command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug lldp packets

no debug lldp packets

Syntax Description

This commnd has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Debugging is disabled.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The undebug lldp packets command is the same as the no debug lldp packets command.

When you enable debugging on a switch stack, it is enabled only on the active switch. To enable debugging on a stack member, you can start a session from the active switch by using the session switch-number EXEC command.

debug platform poe

To enable debugging of a Power over Ethernet (PoE) port, use the debug platform poe command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging, use the no form of this command.

debug platform poe [error | info] [switch switch-number]

no debug platform poe [error | info] [switch switch-number]

Syntax Description

error

(Optional) Displays PoE-related error debug messages.

info

(Optional) Displays PoE-related information debug messages.

switch switch-number

(Optional) Specifies the stack member. This keyword is supported only on stacking-capable switches.

Command Default

Debugging is disabled.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The undebug platform poe command is the same as the no debug platform poe command.

debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture start

To enable debugging of packets during high CPU utilization, for an active switch, use the debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture start command in privileged EXEC mode. To disable debugging of packets during high CPU utilization, for an active switch, use the debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture stop command in privileged EXEC mode.

debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture start

debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture stop

Syntax Description

switch active

Displays information about the active switch.

punt

Specifies the punt information.

packet-capture

Specifies information about the captured packet.

start

Enables debugging of the active switch.

stop

Disables debugging of the active switch.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture start command starts the debugging of packets during high CPU utilization. The packet capture is stopped when the 4k buffer size is exceeded.

Examples

The following is a sample output from the debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture start command:


Device# debug platform software fed switch active packet-capture start 
Punt packet capturing started.

The following is a sample output from the debug platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture stop command:


Device# debug platform software fed switch active packet-capture stop 
Punt packet capturing stopped. Captured 101 packet(s)

duplex

To specify the duplex mode of operation for a port, use the duplex command in interface configuration mode. To return to the default value, use the no form of this command.

duplex {auto | full | half}

no duplex {auto | full | half}

Syntax Description

auto

Enables automatic duplex configuration. The port automatically detects whether it should run in full- or half-duplex mode, depending on the attached device mode.

full

Enables full-duplex mode.

half

Enables half-duplex mode (only for interfaces operating at 10 or 100 Mb/s). You cannot configure half-duplex mode for interfaces operating at 1000 Mb/s, 10,000 Mb/s, 2.5Gb/s, or 5Gb/s.

Command Default

The default is auto for Gigabit Ethernet ports.

Duplex options are not supported on the 1000BASE-x or 10GBASE-x (where -x is -BX, -CWDM, -LX, -SX, or -ZX) small form-factor pluggable (SFP) modules.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

For Gigabit Ethernet ports, setting the port to auto has the same effect as specifying full if the attached device does not autonegotiate the duplex parameter.


Note


Half-duplex mode is supported on Gigabit Ethernet interfaces if the duplex mode is auto and the connected device is operating at half duplex. However, you cannot configure these interfaces to operate in half-duplex mode.


Certain ports can be configured to be either full duplex or half duplex. How this command is applied depends on the device to which the switch is attached.

Starting Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.12.1 release, C9500-48Y4C and C9500-24Y4C do not support half-duplex mode on 1000BASE-T SFP transceivers for 10Mb/s and 100Mb/s speeds.

If both ends of the line support autonegotiation, we highly recommend using the default autonegotiation settings. If one interface supports autonegotiation and the other end does not, configure duplex and speed on both interfaces, and use the auto setting on the supported side.

If the speed is set to auto , the switch negotiates with the device at the other end of the link for the speed setting and then forces the speed setting to the negotiated value. The duplex setting remains as configured on each end of the link, which could result in a duplex setting mismatch.

You can configure the duplex setting when the speed is set to auto .


Caution


Changing the interface speed and duplex mode configuration might shut down and re-enable the interface during the reconfiguration.


You can verify your setting by entering the show interfaces privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to configure an interface for full-duplex operation:


Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Devic(config-if)# duplex full

enable (interface configuration)

To enable the 100 GigabitEthernet interface, use the enable command in interface configuration mode. Use the no form of the command to disable a 100 GigabitEthernet interface.

enable

no enable

Command Default

The 100 GigabitEthernet interface is enabled on physical port numbers 25 through 32.

The 100 GigabitEthernet interface is disabled on physical port numbers 1 through 24.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Fuji 16.8.1a

The command was introduced on the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Switches - High Performance.

Usage Guidelines

Use the enable command in the interface configuration mode, to enable the 100 GigabitEthernet interface.

Use the no version of the command to disable the 100 GigabitEthernet interface.

To display the current state of an interface, enter the show interface interface-id command in privileged EXEC mode.

Examples

The following example shows how to enable interface HundredGigabitEthernet 1/0/40.

When you enable the interface HundredGigabitEthernet 1/0/40, the corresponding 40 GigabitEthernet interfaces, FortyGigabitEthernet 1/0/15 and FortyGigabitEthernet 1/0/16 become inactive.

Device> enable
Device# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
Device(config)# interface hundredgigabitethernet 1/0/40
Device(config-if)# enable

The following example shows how to disable interface HundredGigabitEthernet 1/0/40 to use interface 40 GigabitEthernet 1/0/16.

When you disable a HundredGigabitEthernet interface, both the corresponding 40 GigabitEthernet interfaces, FortyGigabitEthernet1/015 and FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/16 become active.

Device> enable
Device# configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line.  End with CNTL/Z.
Device(config)# interface hundredgigabitethernet 1/0/40
Device(config-if)# no enable 
Device(config-if)# exit 

errdisable detect cause

To enable error-disable detection for a specific cause or for all causes, use the errdisable detect cause command in global configuration mode. To disable the error-disable detection feature, use the no form of this command.

errdisable detect cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard shutdown vlan | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | pagp-flap | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psp shutdown vlan | security-violation shutdown vlan | sfp-config-mismatch}

no errdisable detect cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard shutdown vlan | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | pagp-flap | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psp shutdown vlan | security-violation shutdown vlan | sfp-config-mismatch}

Syntax Description

all

Enables error detection for all error-disabled causes.

arp-inspection

Enables error detection for dynamic Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) inspection.

bpduguard shutdown vlan

Enables per-VLAN error-disable for BPDU guard.

dhcp-rate-limit

Enables error detection for DHCP snooping.

dtp-flap

Enables error detection for the Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) flapping.

gbic-invalid

Enables error detection for an invalid Gigabit Interface Converter (GBIC) module.

Note

 

This error refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module.

inline-power

Enables error detection for the Power over Ethernet (PoE) error-disabled cause.

Note

 

This keyword is supported only on switches with PoE ports.

link-flap

Enables error detection for link-state flapping.

loopback

Enables error detection for detected loopbacks.

pagp-flap

Enables error detection for the Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP) flap error-disabled cause.

pppoe-ia-rate-limit

Enables error detection for the PPPoE Intermediate Agent rate-limit error-disabled cause.

psp shutdown vlan

Enables error detection for protocol storm protection (PSP).

security-violation shutdown vlan

Enables voice aware 802.1x security.

sfp-config-mismatch

Enables error detection on an SFP configuration mismatch.

Command Default

Detection is enabled for all causes. All causes, except per-VLAN error disabling, are configured to shut down the entire port.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A cause (such as a link-flap or dhcp-rate-limit) is the reason for the error-disabled state. When a cause is detected on an interface, the interface is placed in an error-disabled state, an operational state that is similar to a link-down state.

When a port is error-disabled, it is effectively shut down, and no traffic is sent or received on the port. For the bridge protocol data unit (BPDU) guard, voice-aware 802.1x security, and port-security features, you can configure the switch to shut down only the offending VLAN on the port when a violation occurs, instead of shutting down the entire port.

If you set a recovery mechanism for the cause by entering the errdisable recovery global configuration command, the interface is brought out of the error-disabled state and allowed to retry the operation when all causes have timed out. If you do not set a recovery mechanism, you must enter the shutdown and then the no shutdown commands to manually recover an interface from the error-disabled state.

For protocol storm protection, excess packets are dropped for a maximum of two virtual ports. Virtual port error disabling using the psp keyword is not supported for EtherChannel and Flexlink interfaces.

To verify your settings, enter the show errdisable detect privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to enable error-disabled detection for the link-flap error-disabled cause:

Device(config)# errdisable detect cause link-flap

This command shows how to globally configure BPDU guard for a per-VLAN error-disabled state:

Device(config)# errdisable detect cause bpduguard shutdown vlan

This command shows how to globally configure voice-aware 802.1x security for a per-VLAN error-disabled state:

Device(config)# errdisable detect cause security-violation shutdown vlan

You can verify your setting by entering the show errdisable detect privileged EXEC command.

errdisable recovery cause

To enable the error-disabled mechanism to recover from a specific cause, use the errdisable recovery cause command in global configuration mode. To return to the default setting, use the no form of this command.

errdisable recovery cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard | channel-misconfig | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | mac-limit | pagp-flap | port-mode-failure | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psecure-violation | psp | security-violation | sfp-config-mismatch | storm-control | udld}

no errdisable recovery cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard | channel-misconfig | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | mac-limit | pagp-flap | port-mode-failure | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psecure-violation | psp | security-violation | sfp-config-mismatch | storm-control | udld}

Syntax Description

all

Enables the timer to recover from all error-disabled causes.

arp-inspection

Enables the timer to recover from the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) inspection error-disabled state.

bpduguard

Enables the timer to recover from the bridge protocol data unit (BPDU) guard error-disabled state.

channel-misconfig

Enables the timer to recover from the EtherChannel misconfiguration error-disabled state.

dhcp-rate-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the DHCP snooping error-disabled state.

dtp-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) flap error-disabled state.

gbic-invalid

Enables the timer to recover from an invalid Gigabit Interface Converter (GBIC) module error-disabled state.

Note

 

This error refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) error-disabled state.

inline-power

Enables the timer to recover from the Power over Ethernet (PoE) error-disabled state.

This keyword is supported only on switches with PoE ports.

link-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the link-flap error-disabled state.

loopback

Enables the timer to recover from a loopback error-disabled state.

mac-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the mac limit error-disabled state.

pagp-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP)-flap error-disabled state.

port-mode-failure

Enables the timer to recover from the port mode change failure error-disabled state.

pppoe-ia-rate-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the PPPoE IA rate limit error-disabled state.

psecure-violation

Enables the timer to recover from a port security violation disable state.

psp

Enables the timer to recover from the protocol storm protection (PSP) error-disabled state.

security-violation

Enables the timer to recover from an IEEE 802.1x-violation disabled state.

sfp-config-mismatch

Enables error detection on an SFP configuration mismatch.

storm-control

Enables the timer to recover from a storm control error.

udld

Enables the timer to recover from the UniDirectional Link Detection (UDLD) error-disabled state.

Command Default

Recovery is disabled for all causes.

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A cause (such as all or BDPU guard) is defined as the reason that the error-disabled state occurred. When a cause is detected on an interface, the interface is placed in the error-disabled state, an operational state similar to link-down state.

When a port is error-disabled, it is effectively shut down, and no traffic is sent or received on the port. For the BPDU guard and port-security features, you can configure the switch to shut down only the offending VLAN on the port when a violation occurs, instead of shutting down the entire port.

If you do not enable the recovery for the cause, the interface stays in the error-disabled state until you enter the shutdown and the no shutdown interface configuration commands. If you enable the recovery for a cause, the interface is brought out of the error-disabled state and allowed to retry the operation again when all the causes have timed out.

Otherwise, you must enter the shutdown and then the no shutdown commands to manually recover an interface from the error-disabled state.

You can verify your settings by entering the show errdisable recovery privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to enable the recovery timer for the BPDU guard error-disabled cause:


Device# Device#configure terminal
Device(config)# errdisable recovery cause bpduguard

errdisable recovery cause

To enable the error-disabled mechanism to recover from a specific cause, use the errdisable recovery cause command in global configuration mode. To return to the default setting, use the no form of this command.

errdisable recovery cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard | channel-misconfig | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | mac-limit | pagp-flap | port-mode-failure | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psecure-violation | psp | security-violation | sfp-config-mismatch | storm-control | udld}

no errdisable recovery cause {all | arp-inspection | bpduguard | channel-misconfig | dhcp-rate-limit | dtp-flap | gbic-invalid | inline-power | link-flap | loopback | mac-limit | pagp-flap | port-mode-failure | pppoe-ia-rate-limit | psecure-violation | psp | security-violation | sfp-config-mismatch | storm-control | udld}

Syntax Description

all

Enables the timer to recover from all error-disabled causes.

arp-inspection

Enables the timer to recover from the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) inspection error-disabled state.

bpduguard

Enables the timer to recover from the bridge protocol data unit (BPDU) guard error-disabled state.

channel-misconfig

Enables the timer to recover from the EtherChannel misconfiguration error-disabled state.

dhcp-rate-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the DHCP snooping error-disabled state.

dtp-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) flap error-disabled state.

gbic-invalid

Enables the timer to recover from an invalid Gigabit Interface Converter (GBIC) module error-disabled state.

Note

 

This error refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) error-disabled state.

inline-power

Enables the timer to recover from the Power over Ethernet (PoE) error-disabled state.

This keyword is supported only on switches with PoE ports.

link-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the link-flap error-disabled state.

loopback

Enables the timer to recover from a loopback error-disabled state.

mac-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the mac limit error-disabled state.

pagp-flap

Enables the timer to recover from the Port Aggregation Protocol (PAgP)-flap error-disabled state.

port-mode-failure

Enables the timer to recover from the port mode change failure error-disabled state.

pppoe-ia-rate-limit

Enables the timer to recover from the PPPoE IA rate limit error-disabled state.

psecure-violation

Enables the timer to recover from a port security violation disable state.

psp

Enables the timer to recover from the protocol storm protection (PSP) error-disabled state.

security-violation

Enables the timer to recover from an IEEE 802.1x-violation disabled state.

sfp-config-mismatch

Enables error detection on an SFP configuration mismatch.

storm-control

Enables the timer to recover from a storm control error.

udld

Enables the timer to recover from the UniDirectional Link Detection (UDLD) error-disabled state.

Command Default

Recovery is disabled for all causes.

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A cause (such as all or BDPU guard) is defined as the reason that the error-disabled state occurred. When a cause is detected on an interface, the interface is placed in the error-disabled state, an operational state similar to link-down state.

When a port is error-disabled, it is effectively shut down, and no traffic is sent or received on the port. For the BPDU guard and port-security features, you can configure the switch to shut down only the offending VLAN on the port when a violation occurs, instead of shutting down the entire port.

If you do not enable the recovery for the cause, the interface stays in the error-disabled state until you enter the shutdown and the no shutdown interface configuration commands. If you enable the recovery for a cause, the interface is brought out of the error-disabled state and allowed to retry the operation again when all the causes have timed out.

Otherwise, you must enter the shutdown and then the no shutdown commands to manually recover an interface from the error-disabled state.

You can verify your settings by entering the show errdisable recovery privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to enable the recovery timer for the BPDU guard error-disabled cause:


Device# Device#configure terminal
Device(config)# errdisable recovery cause bpduguard

interface

To configure an interface, use the interface command.

interface {Auto-Template interface-number | FortyGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number | GigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number | Group VI Group VI interface number | Internal Interface Internal Interface number | Loopback interface-number Null interface-number Port-channel interface-number TenGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number Tunnel interface-number Vlan interface-number }

Syntax Description

Auto-Template interface-number

Enables you to configure a auto-template interface. The range is from 1 to 999.

FortyGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number — Slot number. Value is 1.

  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 2.

GigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a Gigabit Ethernet IEEE 802.3z interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number — Slot number. The range is from 0 to 1.

  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 48.

Group VI Group VI interface number

Enables you to configure a Group VI interface. The range is from 0 to 9.

Internal Interface Internal Interface

Enables you to configure an internal interface.

Loopback interface-number

Enables you to configure a loopback interface. The range is from 0 to 2147483647.

Null interface-number

Enables you to configure a null interface. The default value is 0.

Port-channel interface-number

Enables you to configure a port-channel interface. The range is from 1 to 128.

TenGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number

    — Slot number. The range is from 0 to 1.
  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 24 and 37 to 48

    .
Tunnel interface-number

Enables you to configure a tunnel interface. The range is from 0 to 2147483647.

Vlan interface-number

Enables you to configure a switch VLAN. The range is from 1 to 4094.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

You can not use the "no" form of this command.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a tunnel interface:

Device(config)# interface Tunnel 15
Device(config-if)#

The following example shows how to configure a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface

Device(config)# interface FortyGigabitEthernet 1/1/2
Device(config-if)#

interface range

To configure an interface range, use the interface range command.

interface range {Auto-Template interface-number | FortyGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number | GigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number | Group VI Group VI interface number | Internal Interface Internal Interface number | Loopback interface-number Null interface-number Port-channel interface-number TenGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number Tunnel interface-number Vlan interface-number }

Syntax Description

Auto-Template interface-number

Enables you to configure a auto-template interface. The range is from 1 to 999.

FortyGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a 40-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number — Slot number. Value is 1.

  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 2.

GigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a Gigabit Ethernet IEEE 802.3z interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number — Slot number. The range is from 0 to 1.

  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 48.

Group VI Group VI interface number

Enables you to configure a Group VI interface. The range is from 0 to 9.

Internal Interface Internal Interface

Enables you to configure an internal interface.

Loopback interface-number

Enables you to configure a loopback interface. The range is from 0 to 2147483647.

Null interface-number

Enables you to configure a null interface. The default value is 0.

Port-channel interface-number

Enables you to configure a port-channel interface. The range is from 1 to 128.

TenGigabitEthernet switch-number/slot-number/port-number

Enables you to configure a 10-Gigabit Ethernet interface.

  • switch-number — Switch ID. The range is from 1 to 8.

  • slot-number

    — Slot number. The range is from 0 to 1.
  • port-number — Port number. The range is from 1 to 24 and 37 to 48

    .
Tunnel interface-number

Enables you to configure a tunnel interface. The range is from 0 to 2147483647.

Vlan interface-number

Enables you to configure a switch VLAN. The range is from 1 to 4094.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how you can configure interface range:

Device(config)# interface range vlan 1-100

ip mtu

To set the IP maximum transmission unit (MTU) size of routed packets on all routed ports of the switch or switch stack, use the ip mtu command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default IP MTU size, use the no form of this command.

ip mtu bytes

no ip mtu bytes

Syntax Description

bytes

MTU size, in bytes. The range is from 68 up to the system MTU value (in bytes).

Command Default

The default IP MTU size for frames received and sent on all switch interfaces is 1500 bytes.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The upper limit of the IP value is based on the switch or switch stack configuration and refers to the currently applied system MTU value. For more information about setting the MTU sizes, see the system mtu global configuration command.

To return to the default IP MTU setting, you can apply the default ip mtu command or the no ip mtu command on the interface.

You can verify your setting by entering the show ip interface interface-id or show interfaces interface-id privileged EXEC command.

Examples

The following example sets the maximum IP packet size for VLAN 200 to 1000 bytes:

Device(config)# interface vlan 200
Device(config-if)# ip mtu 1000

The following example sets the maximum IP packet size for VLAN 200 to the default setting of 1500 bytes:

Device(config)# interface vlan 200
Device(config-if)# default ip mtu

This is an example of partial output from the show ip interface interface-id command. It displays the current IP MTU setting for the interface.

Device# show ip interface gigabitethernet4/0/1
GigabitEthernet4/0/1 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 18.0.0.1/24
  Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
  Address determined by setup command
  MTU is 1500 bytes
  Helper address is not set

<output truncated>

ipv6 mtu

To set the IPv6 maximum transmission unit (MTU) size of routed packets on all routed ports of the switch or switch stack, use the ipv6 mtu command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default IPv6 MTU size, use the no form of this command.

ipv6 mtu bytes

no ipv6 mtu bytes

Syntax Description

bytes

MTU size, in bytes. The range is from 1280 up to the system MTU value (in bytes).

Command Default

The default IPv6 MTU size for frames received and sent on all switch interfaces is 1500 bytes.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The upper limit of the IPv6 MTU value is based on the switch or switch stack configuration and refers to the currently applied system MTU value. For more information about setting the MTU sizes, see the system mtu global configuration command.

To return to the default IPv6 MTU setting, you can apply the default ipv6 mtu command or the no ipv6 mtu command on the interface.

You can verify your setting by entering the show ipv6 interface interface-id or show interface interface-id privileged EXEC command.

Examples

The following example sets the maximum IPv6 packet size for an interface to 2000 bytes:

Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet4/0/1
Device(config-if)# ipv6 mtu 2000

The following example sets the maximum IPv6 packet size for an interface to the default setting of 1500 bytes:

Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet4/0/1
Device(config-if)# default ipv6 mtu

This is an example of partial output from the show ipv6 interface interface-id command. It displays the current IPv6 MTU setting for the interface.

Device# show ipv6 interface gigabitethernet4/0/1
GigabitEthernet4/0/1 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 18.0.0.1/24
  Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
  Address determined by setup command
  MTU is 1500 bytes
  Helper address is not set

<output truncated>

lldp (interface configuration)

To enable Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) on an interface, use the lldp command in interface configuration mode. To disable LLDP on an interface, use the no form of this command.

lldp {med-tlv-select tlv | receive | tlv-select power-management | transmit}

no lldp {med-tlv-select tlv | receive | tlv-select power-management | transmit}

Syntax Description

med-tlv-select

Selects an LLDP Media Endpoint Discovery (MED) time-length-value (TLV) element to send.

tlv

String that identifies the TLV element. Valid values are the following:

  • inventory-management — LLDP MED Inventory Management TLV.

  • location — LLDP MED Location TLV.

  • network-policy — LLDP MED Network Policy TLV.

  • power-management — LLDP MED Power Management TLV.

receive

Enables the interface to receive LLDP transmissions.

tlv-select

Selects the LLDP TLVs to send.

power-management

Sends the LLDP Power Management TLV.

transmit

Enables LLDP transmission on the interface.

Command Default

LLDP is disabled.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command is supported on 802.1 media types.

If the interface is configured as a tunnel port, LLDP is automatically disabled.

Examples

The following example shows how to disable LLDP transmission on an interface:


Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Device(config-if)# no lldp transmit

The following example shows how to enable LLDP transmission on an interface:


Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Device(config-if)# lldp transmit

mode (power-stack configuration)

To configure power stack mode for the power stack, use the mode command in power-stack configuration mode. To return to the default settings, use the no form of the command.

mode {power-shared | redundant} [strict]

no mode

Syntax Description

power-shared

Sets the power stack to operate in power-shared mode. This is the default.

redundant

Sets the power stack to operate in redundant mode. The largest power supply is removed from the power pool to be used as backup power in case one of the other power supplies fails.

strict

(Optional) Configures the power stack mode to run a strict power budget. The stack power needs cannot exceed the available power.

Command Default

The default modes are power-shared and nonstrict.

Command Modes

Power-stack configuration (config-stackpower)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command is available only on switch stacks running the IP Base or IP Services feature set.

To access power-stack configuration mode, enter the stack-power stack power stack name global configuration command.

Entering the no mode command sets the switch to the defaults of power-shared and non-strict mode.


Note


For stack power, available power is the total power available for PoE from all power supplies in the power stack, available power is the power allocated to all powered devices connected to PoE ports in the stack, and consumed power is the actual power consumed by the powered devices.


In power-shared mode, all of the input power can be used for loads, and the total available power appears as one large power supply. The power budget includes all power from all supplies. No power is set aside for power supply failures. If a power supply fails, load shedding (shutting down of powered devices or switches) might occur.

In redundant mode, the largest power supply is removed from the power pool to use as backup power in case one of the other power supplies fails. The available power budget is the total power minus the largest power supply. This reduces the available power in the pool for switches and powered devices, but in case of a failure or an extreme power load, there is less chance of having to shut down switches or powered devices.

In strict mode, when a power supply fails and the available power drops below the budgeted power, the system balances the budget through load shedding of powered devices, even if the actual power is less than the available power. In nonstrict mode, the power stack can run in an over-allocated state and is stable as long as the actual power does not exceed the available power. In this mode, a powered device drawing more than normal power could cause the power stack to start shedding loads. This is normally not a problem because most devices do not run at full power. The chances of multiple powered devices in the stack requiring maximum power at the same time is small.

In both strict and nonstrict modes, power is denied when there is no power available in the power budget.

Examples

This is an example of setting the power stack mode for the stack named power1 to power-shared with strict power budgeting. All power in the stack is shared, but when the total available power is allotted, no more devices are allowed power.

Device(config)# stack-power stack power1
Device(config-stackpower)# mode power-shared strict
Device(config-stackpower)# exit

This is an example of setting the power stack mode for the stack named power2 to redundant. The largest power supply in the stack is removed from the power pool to provide redundancy in case one of the other supplies fails.

Device(config)# stack-power stack power2
Device(config-stackpower)# mode redundant
Device(config-stackpower)# exit

network-policy

To apply a network-policy profile to an interface, use the network-policy command in interface configuration mode. To remove the policy, use the no form of this command.

network-policy profile-number

no network-policy

Syntax Description

profile-number

The network-policy profile number to apply to the interface.

Command Default

No network-policy profiles are applied.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the network-policy profile number interface configuration command to apply a profile to an interface.

You cannot apply the switchport voice vlan command on an interface if you first configure a network-policy profile on it. However, if switchport voice vlan vlan-id is already configured on the interface, you can apply a network-policy profile on the interface. The interface then has the voice or voice-signaling VLAN network-policy profile applied.

Examples

This example shows how to apply network-policy profile 60 to an interface:

Device(config)# interface gigabitethernet1/0/1
Device(config-if)# network-policy 60

network-policy profile (global configuration)

To create a network-policy profile and to enter network-policy configuration mode, use the network-policy profile command in global configuration mode. To delete the policy and to return to global configuration mode, use the no form of this command.

network-policy profile profile-number

no network-policy profile profile-number

Syntax Description

profile-number

Network-policy profile number. The range is 1 to 4294967295.

Command Default

No network-policy profiles are defined.

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the network-policy profile global configuration command to create a profile and to enter network-policy profile configuration mode.

To return to privileged EXEC mode from the network-policy profile configuration mode, enter the exit command.

When you are in network-policy profile configuration mode, you can create the profile for voice and voice signaling by specifying the values for VLAN, class of service (CoS), differentiated services code point (DSCP), and tagging mode.

These profile attributes are contained in the Link Layer Discovery Protocol for Media Endpoint Devices (LLDP-MED) network-policy time-length-value (TLV).

Examples

This example shows how to create network-policy profile 60:


Device(config)# network-policy profile 60
Device(config-network-policy)#

power-priority

To configure Cisco StackPower power-priority values for a switch in a power stack and for its high-priority and low-priority PoE ports, use the power-priority command in switch stack-power configuration mode. To return to the default setting, use the no form of the command.

power-priority {high value | low value | switch value}

no power-priority {high | low | switch}

Syntax Description

high value

Sets the power priority for the ports configured as high-priority ports. The range is 1 to 27, with 1 as the highest priority. The high value must be lower than the value set for the low-priority ports and higher than the value set for the switch.

low value

Sets the power priority for the ports configured as low-priority ports. The range is 1 to 27. The low value must be higher than the value set for the high-priority ports and the value set for the switch.

switch value

Sets the power priority for the switch. The range is 1 to 27. The switch value must be lower than the values set for the low and high-priority ports.

Command Default

If no values are configured, the power stack randomly determines a default priority.

The default ranges are 1 to 9 for switches, 10 to 18 for high-priority ports, 19 to 27 for low-priority ports.

On non-PoE switches, the high and low values (for port priority) have no effect.

Command Modes

Switch stack-power configuration (config-stack)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

To access switch stack-power configuration mode, enter the stack-power switch switch-number global configuration command.

Cisco StackPower power-priority values determine the order for shutting down switches and ports when power is lost and load shedding must occur. Priority values are from 1 to 27; the highest numbers are shut down first.

We recommend that you configure different priority values for each switch and for its high priority ports and low priority ports to limit the number of devices shut down at one time during a loss of power. If you try to configure the same priority value on different switches in a power stack, the configuration is allowed, but you receive a warning message.


Note


This command is available only on switch stacks running the IP Base or IP Services feature set.


Examples

This is an example of setting the power priority for switch 1 in power stack a to 7, for the high-priority ports to 11, and for the low-priority ports to 20.

Device(config)# stack-power switch 1
Device(config-switch-stackpower)# stack-id power_stack_a
Device(config-switch-stackpower)# power-priority high 11
Device(config-switch-stackpower)# power-priority low 20 
Device(config-switch-stackpower)# power-priority switch 7
Device(config-switch-stackpower)# exit

power supply

To configure and manage the internal power supplies on a switch, use the power supply command in privileged EXEC mode.

power supply stack-member-number slot {A | B} {off | on}

Syntax Description

stack-member-number

Stack member number for which to configure the internal power supplies. The range is 1 to 9, depending on the number of switches in the stack.

This parameter is available only on stacking-capable switches.

slot

Selects the switch power supply to set.

A

Selects the power supply in slot A.

B

Selects the power supply in slot B.

Note

 

Power supply slot B is the closest slot to the outer edge of the switch.

off

Sets the switch power supply to off.

on

Sets the switch power supply to on.

Command Default

The switch power supply is on.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The power supply command applies to a switch or to a switch stack where all switches are the same platform.

In a switch stack with the same platform switches, you must specify the stack member before entering the slot {A | B} off or on keywords.

To return to the default setting, use the power supply stack-member-number on command.

You can verify your settings by entering the show env power privileged EXEC command.

Examples

This example shows how to set the power supply in slot A to off:

Device> power supply 2 slot A off
Disabling Power supply A may result in a power loss to PoE devices and/or switches ...
Continue? (yes/[no]): yes
Device
Jun 10 04:52:54.389: %PLATFORM_ENV-6-FRU_PS_OIR: FRU Power Supply 1 powered off
Jun 10 04:52:56.717: %PLATFORM_ENV-1-FAN_NOT_PRESENT: Fan is not present

This example shows how to set the power supply in slot A to on:

Device> power supply 1 slot B on
Jun 10 04:54:39.600: %PLATFORM_ENV-6-FRU_PS_OIR: FRU Power Supply 1 powered on

This example shows the output of the show env power command:

Device> show env power
SW  PID                 Serial#     Status           Sys Pwr  PoE Pwr  Watts
--  ------------------  ----------  ---------------  -------  -------  -----
1A  PWR-1RUC2-640WAC    DCB1705B05B OK               Good     Good     250/390
1B  Not Present

shell trigger

To create an event trigger, use the shell trigger command in global configuration mode. Use the no form of this command to delete the trigger.

shell trigger identifier description

no shell trigger identifier description

Syntax Description

identifier

Specifies the event trigger identifier. The identifier should have no spaces or hyphens between words.

description

Specifies the event trigger description text.

Command Default

System-defined event triggers:

  • CISCO_DMP_EVENT

  • CISCO_IPVSC_AUTO_EVENT

  • CISCO_PHONE_EVENT

  • CISCO_SWITCH_EVENT

  • CISCO_ROUTER_EVENT

  • CISCO_WIRELESS_AP_EVENT

  • CISCO_WIRELESS_LIGHTWEIGHT_AP_EVENT

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to create user-defined event triggers for use with the macro auto device and the macro auto execute commands.

To support dynamic device discovery when using IEEE 802.1x authentication, you need to configure the RADIUS authentication server to support the Cisco attribute-value pair: auto-smart-port =event trigger .

Examples

This example shows how to create a user-defined event trigger called RADIUS_MAB_EVENT:


Device(config)# shell trigger RADIUS_MAB_EVENT MAC_AuthBypass Event 
Device(config)# end 

show beacon all

To display the status of beacon LED on the device, use the show beacon all command in privileged EXEC mode.

show beacon { rp { active | standby} | slot slot-number } | all}

Syntax Description

rp { active | standby}

Specifies the active or the standby Switch whose beacon LED status is to be displayed.

slot slot-num

Specifies the slot whose beacon LED status is to be displayed.

all

Displays the status of all beacon LEDs.

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Fuji 16.9.1

This command was introduced.

Command Default

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Usage Guidelines

Use the command show beacon all to know the status of all beacon LEDs.

Examples

Device#show beacon all
Switch#   Beacon Status
-----------------------
*1        OFF

Examples

Device#show beacon rp active
Switch#   Beacon Status
-----------------------
*1        OFF

Examples

Device#show beacon slot 1
Switch#   Beacon Status
-----------------------
*1        OFF

show environment

To display information about the sensors, and status of fan and power supply, use the show environment command in EXEC mode.

show environment { all | counters | fan-air-direction | history | location | sensor | status | summary | table }

Syntax Description

all

(Optional) Displays the list of sensors.

counters

(Optional) Displays the operational counters of the sensors.

fan-air-direction

(Optional) Displays information of the fan tray and power supply fan air direction.

history

(Optional) Displays history of the sensor state changes.

location

(Optional) Displays the sensors by location.

sensor

(Optional) Displays sensor summary.

status

(Optional) Displays the power supply and fan tray status of the switch.

summary

(Optional) Displays a summary of all the environment monitoring sensors.

table

(Optional) Displays sensor state table.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

User EXEC (>)

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the show environment EXEC command to display the information for the switch being accessed—a standalone switch or the active switch.

Examples

This example shows a sample output of the show environment all command:

Device> show environment all

Sensor List:  Environmental Monitoring 
 Sensor           Location          State             Reading
 Temp: UADP_0_0   R1                Normal            52 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_1   R1                Normal            50 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_2   R1                Normal            50 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_3   R1                Normal            52 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_4   R1                Normal            51 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_5   R1                Normal            52 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_6   R1                Normal            63 Celsius
 Temp: UADP_0_7   R1                Normal            54 Celsius
..
<output truncated>

This example shows a sample output of the show environment status command:

Device> show environment status

Power                                                       Fan States
Supply  Model No              Type  Capacity  Status        1     2
------  --------------------  ----  --------  ------------  -----------
PS1     C9600-PWR-2KWAC       ac    2000 W    active        good  good 
PS4     C9600-PWR-2KWAC       ac    2000 W    active        good  good 

PS Current Configuration Mode : Combined
PS Current Operating State    : none

Power supplies currently active    : 2
Power supplies currently available : 2

Fantray : good
Power consumed by Fantray : 300 Watts
Fantray airflow direction : side-to-side
Fantray beacon LED: off
Fantray status LED: green

show errdisable detect

To display error-disabled detection status, use the show errdisable detect command in EXEC mode.

show errdisable detect

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

User EXEC (>)

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A gbic-invalid error reason refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module.

The error-disable reasons in the command output are listed in alphabetical order. The mode column shows how error-disable is configured for each feature.

You can configure error-disabled detection in these modes:

  • port mode—The entire physical port is error-disabled if a violation occurs.

  • vlan mode—The VLAN is error-disabled if a violation occurs.

  • port/vlan mode—The entire physical port is error-disabled on some ports and is per-VLAN error-disabled on other ports.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show errdisable detect command:


Device> show errdisable detect
ErrDisable Reason    Detection    Mode
-----------------    ---------    ----
arp-inspection       Enabled      port
bpduguard            Enabled      vlan
channel-misconfig    Enabled      port
community-limit      Enabled      port
dhcp-rate-limit      Enabled      port
dtp-flap             Enabled      port
gbic-invalid         Enabled      port
inline-power         Enabled      port
invalid-policy       Enabled      port
l2ptguard            Enabled      port
link-flap            Enabled      port
loopback             Enabled      port
lsgroup              Enabled      port
pagp-flap            Enabled      port
psecure-violation    Enabled      port/vlan
security-violatio    Enabled      port
sfp-config-mismat    Enabled      port
storm-control        Enabled      port
udld                 Enabled      port
vmps                 Enabled      port

show errdisable recovery

To display the error-disabled recovery timer information, use the show errdisable recovery command in EXEC mode.

show errdisable recovery

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

User EXEC (>)

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

A gbic-invalid error-disable reason refers to an invalid small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module interface.


Note


Though visible in the output, the unicast-flood field is not valid.


show ip interface

To display the usability status of interfaces configured for IP, use the show ip interface command in privileged EXEC mode.

show ip interface [type number] [brief]

Syntax Description

type

(Optional) Interface type.

number

(Optional) Interface number.

brief

(Optional) Displays a summary of the usability status information for each interface.

Note

 

The output of the show ip interface brief command displays information of all the available interfaces whether or not the corresponding network module for these interfaces are connected. These interfaces can be configured if the network module is connected. Run the show interface status command to see which network modules are connected.

This is not applicable for Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series High-Performance switches.

Command Default

The full usability status is displayed for all interfaces configured for IP.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The Cisco IOS software automatically enters a directly connected route in the routing table if the interface is usable (which means that it can send and receive packets). If an interface is not usable, the directly connected routing entry is removed from the routing table. Removing the entry lets the software use dynamic routing protocols to determine backup routes to the network, if any.

If the interface can provide two-way communication, the line protocol is marked "up." If the interface hardware is usable, the interface is marked "up."

If you specify an optional interface type, information for that specific interface is displayed. If you specify no optional arguments, information on all the interfaces is displayed.

When an asynchronous interface is encapsulated with PPP or Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP), IP fast switching is enabled. A show ip interface command on an asynchronous interface encapsulated with PPP or SLIP displays a message indicating that IP fast switching is enabled.

You can use the show ip interface brief command to display a summary of the device interfaces. This command displays the IP address, the interface status, and other information.

The show ip interface brief command does not display any information related to Unicast RPF.

Examples

The following example shows interface information on Gigabit Ethernet interface 1/0/1:


Device# show ip interface gigabitethernet 1/0/1

GigabitEthernet1/0/1 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 10.1.1.1/16
  Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
  Address determined by setup command
  MTU is 1500 bytes
  Helper address is not set
  Directed broadcast forwarding is disabled
  Outgoing access list is not set
  Inbound access list is not set
  Proxy ARP is enabled
  Local Proxy ARP is disabled
  Security level is default
  Split horizon is enabled
  ICMP redirects are always sent
  ICMP unreachables are always sent
  ICMP mask replies are never sent
  IP fast switching is enabled
  IP fast switching on the same interface is disabled
  IP Flow switching is disabled
  IP CEF switching is enabled
  IP Feature Fast switching turbo vector
  IP VPN Flow CEF switching turbo vector
  IP multicast fast switching is enabled
  IP multicast distributed fast switching is disabled
  IP route-cache flags are Fast, CEF
  Router Discovery is disabled
  IP output packet accounting is disabled
  IP access violation accounting is disabled
  TCP/IP header compression is disabled
  RTP/IP header compression is disabled
  Policy routing is enabled, using route map PBR
  Network address translation is disabled
  BGP Policy Mapping is disabled
  IP Multi-Processor Forwarding is enabled
     IP Input features, "PBR",
         are not supported by MPF and are IGNORED
     IP Output features, "NetFlow",
         are not supported by MPF and are IGNORED

The following example shows how to display the usability status for a specific VLAN:


Device# show ip interface vlan 1

Vlan1 is up, line protocol is up
  Internet address is 10.0.0.4/24
  Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
Address determined by non-volatile memory
  MTU is 1500 bytes
  Helper address is not set
  Directed broadcast forwarding is disabled
  Outgoing access list is not set
  Inbound  access list is not set
  Proxy ARP is enabled
  Local Proxy ARP is disabled
  Security level is default
  Split horizon is enabled
  ICMP redirects are always sent
  ICMP unreachables are always sent
  ICMP mask replies are never sent
  IP fast switching is enabled
  IP fast switching on the same interface is disabled
  IP Flow switching is disabled
  IP CEF switching is enabled
  IP Fast switching turbo vector
  IP Normal CEF switching turbo vector
  IP multicast fast switching is enabled
  IP multicast distributed fast switching is disabled
  IP route-cache flags are Fast, CEF
  Router Discovery is disabled
  IP output packet accounting is disabled
  IP access violation accounting is disabled
  TCP/IP header compression is disabled
  RTP/IP header compression is disabled
  Probe proxy name replies are disabled
  Policy routing is disabled
  Network address translation is disabled
  WCCP Redirect outbound is disabled
  WCCP Redirect inbound is disabled
  WCCP Redirect exclude is disabled
  BGP Policy Mapping is disabled
  Sampled Netflow is disabled
  IP multicast multilayer switching is disabled
  Netflow Data Export (hardware) is enabled

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

Table 1. show ip interface Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Broadcast address is

Broadcast address.

Peer address is

Peer address.

MTU is

MTU value set on the interface, in bytes.

Helper address

Helper address, if one is set.

Directed broadcast forwarding

Shows whether directed broadcast forwarding is enabled.

Outgoing access list

Shows whether the interface has an outgoing access list set.

Inbound access list

Shows whether the interface has an incoming access list set.

Proxy ARP

Shows whether Proxy Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is enabled for the interface.

Security level

IP Security Option (IPSO) security level set for this interface.

Split horizon

Shows whether split horizon is enabled.

ICMP redirects

Shows whether redirect messages will be sent on this interface.

ICMP unreachables

Shows whether unreachable messages will be sent on this interface.

ICMP mask replies

Shows whether mask replies will be sent on this interface.

IP fast switching

Shows whether fast switching is enabled for this interface. It is generally enabled on serial interfaces, such as this one.

IP Flow switching

Shows whether Flow switching is enabled for this interface.

IP CEF switching

Shows whether Cisco Express Forwarding switching is enabled for the interface.

IP multicast fast switching

Shows whether multicast fast switching is enabled for the interface.

IP route-cache flags are Fast

Shows whether NetFlow is enabled on an interface. Displays "Flow init" to specify that NetFlow is enabled on the interface. Displays "Ingress Flow" to specify that NetFlow is enabled on a subinterface using the ip flow ingress command. Shows "Flow" to specify that NetFlow is enabled on a main interface using the ip route-cache flow command.

Router Discovery

Shows whether the discovery process is enabled for this interface. It is generally disabled on serial interfaces.

IP output packet accounting

Shows whether IP accounting is enabled for this interface and what the threshold (maximum number of entries) is.

TCP/IP header compression

Shows whether compression is enabled.

WCCP Redirect outbound is disabled

Shows the status of whether packets received on an interface are redirected to a cache engine. Displays "enabled" or "disabled."

WCCP Redirect exclude is disabled

Shows the status of whether packets targeted for an interface will be excluded from being redirected to a cache engine. Displays "enabled" or "disabled."

Netflow Data Export (hardware) is enabled

NetFlow Data Expert (NDE) hardware flow status on the interface.

The following example shows how to display a summary of the usability status information for each interface:


Device# show ip interface brief

Interface              IP-Address      OK? Method Status                Protocol
Vlan1                  unassigned      YES NVRAM  administratively down down
GigabitEthernet0/0     unassigned      YES NVRAM  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/1   unassigned      YES NVRAM  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/2   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/3   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/4   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/5   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/6   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down
GigabitEthernet1/0/7   unassigned      YES unset  down                  down

<output truncated>
Table 2. show ip interface brief Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Interface

Type of interface.

IP-Address

IP address assigned to the interface.

OK?

"Yes" means that the IP Address is valid. "No" means that the IP Address is not valid.

Method

The Method field has the following possible values:

  • RARP or SLARP: Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) or Serial Line Address Resolution Protocol (SLARP) request.

  • BOOTP: Bootstrap protocol.

  • TFTP: Configuration file obtained from the TFTP server.

  • manual: Manually changed by the command-line interface.

  • NVRAM: Configuration file in NVRAM.

  • IPCP: ip address negotiated command.

  • DHCP: ip address dhcp command.

  • unset: Unset.

  • other: Unknown.

Status

Shows the status of the interface. Valid values and their meanings are:

  • up: Interface is up.

  • down: Interface is down.

  • administratively down: Interface is administratively down.

Protocol

Shows the operational status of the routing protocol on this interface.

show interfaces

To display the administrative and operational status of all interfaces or for a specified interface, use the show interfaces command in the EXEC mode.

show interfaces [ interface-id | vlan vlan-id ] [ accounting | capabilities [ module number ] | description | etherchannel | flowcontrol | link [ module number ] | private-vlan mapping | pruning | stats | status [ err-disabled | inactive ] | trunk ]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member for stacking-capable switches, module, and port number) and port channels.

The port channel range is 1 to 128.

vlan vlan-id

(Optional) VLAN identification. The range is 1 to 4094.

accounting

(Optional) Displays accounting information on the interface, including active protocols and input and output packets and octets.

Note

 

The display shows only packets processed in software; hardware-switched packets do not appear.

capabilities

(Optional) Displays the capabilities of all interfaces or the specified interface, including the features and options that you can configure on the interface. Though visible in the command line help, this option is not available for VLAN IDs.

module number

(Optional) Displays capabilities of all interfaces on the switch or specified stack member.

The range is 1 to 9.

This option is not available if you entered a specific interface ID.

description

(Optional) Displays the administrative status and description set for interfaces.

Note

 

The output of the show interfaces description command displays information of all the available interfaces whether or not the corresponding network module for these interfaces are connected. These interfaces can be configured if the network module is connected. Run the show interface status command to see which network modules are connected.

This is not applicable for Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series High-Performance switches.

etherchannel

(Optional) Displays interface EtherChannel information.

flowcontrol

(Optional) Displays interface flow control information.

link [modulenumber]

(Optional) Displays the up time and down time of the interface.

private-vlan mapping

(Optional) Displays private-VLAN mapping information for the VLAN switch virtual interfaces (SVIs). This keyword is not available if the switch is running the LAN base feature set.

pruning

(Optional) Displays trunk VTP pruning information for the interface.

stats

(Optional) Displays the input and output packets by switching the path for the interface.

status

(Optional) Displays the status of the interface. A status of unsupported in the Type field means that a non-Cisco small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module is inserted in the module slot.

err-disabled

(Optional) Displays interfaces in an error-disabled state.

inactive

(Optional) Displays interfaces in an inactive state.

trunk

(Optional) Displays interface trunk information. If you do not specify an interface, only information for active trunking ports appears.


Note


Though visible in the command-line help strings, the crb , fair-queue , irb , mac-accounting , precedence , random-detect , rate-limit , and shape keywords are not supported.


Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.12.1

The link keyword was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The show interfaces capabilities command with different keywords has these results:
  • Use the show interface capabilities module number command to display the capabilities of all interfaces on that switch in the stack. If there is no switch with that module number in the stack, there is no output.

  • Use the show interfaces interface-id capabilities to display the capabilities of the specified interface.

  • Use the show interfaces capabilities (with no module number or interface ID) to display the capabilities of all interfaces in the stack.


Note


The field Last Input displayed in the command output indicates the number of hours, minutes, and seconds since the last packet was successfully received by an interface and processed by the CPU on the device. This information can be used to know when a dead interface failed.

Last Input is not updated by fast-switched traffic.

The field output displayed in the command output indicates the number of hours, minutes, and seconds since the last packet was successfully transmitted by the interface. The information provided by this field can useful for knowing when a dead interface failed.


The show interfaces link command with different keywords has these results:
  • Use the show interface link module number command to display the up time and down time of all interfaces on that switch in the stack. If there is no switch with that module number in the stack, there is no output.


    Note


    On a standalone switch, the module number refers to the slot number.


  • Use the show interfaces interface-id link to display the up time and down time of the specified interface.

  • Use the show interfaces link (with no module number or interface ID) to display the up time and down time of all interfaces in the stack.

  • If the interface is up, the up time displays the time (hours, minutes, and seconds) and the down time displays 00:00:00.

  • If the interface is down, only the down time displays the time (hours, minutes, and seconds).

Examples

Device# show interfaces accounting

Vlan1
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
                      IP          0          0          6        378
Vlan200
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.
GigabitEthernet0/0
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
                   Other     165476   11417844          0          0
           Spanning Tree    1240284   64494768          0          0
                     ARP       7096     425760          0          0
                     CDP      41368   18781072      82908   35318808
GigabitEthernet1/0/1
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.
GigabitEthernet1/0/2
                Protocol    Pkts In   Chars In   Pkts Out  Chars Out
No traffic sent or received on this interface.

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface description command when the interface has been described as Connects to Marketing by using the description interface configuration command:

Device# show interfaces fortyGigabitEthernet6/0/2 description 

Interface                      Status         Protocol Description
Fo1/0/2                        up           Connects to Marketing 
    
Device# show interfaces etherchannel
----
Port-channel34:
Age of the Port-channel   = 28d:18h:51m:46s
Logical slot/port   = 12/34          Number of ports = 0
GC                  = 0x00000000      HotStandBy port = null
Passive port list   =
Port state          = Port-channel L3-Ag Ag-Not-Inuse
Protocol            =    -
Port security       = Disabled

This is an example of output from the show interfaces stats command for a specified VLAN interface:

Device# show interfaces vlan 1 stats

Switching path    Pkts In    Chars In    Pkts Out    Chars Out
     Processor    1165354   136205310      570800     91731594
   Route cache          0           0           0            0
         Total    1165354   136205310      570800     91731594

This is an example of output from the show interfaces status err-disabled command. It displays the status of interfaces in the error-disabled state:

Device# show interfaces status err-disabled

Port 		   Name       Status         Reason
Fo1/0/2              err-disabled   gbic-invalid
Fo2/0/3              err-disabled   dtp-flap

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id pruning command:

Device# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/2 pruning

Port Vlans pruned for lack of request by neighbor

This is an example of output from the show interfaces description command:

Device# show interfaces description

Interface                      Status         Protocol Description
Vl1                            admin down     down
Gi0/0                          down           down 
Gi1/0/1                        down           down
Gi1/0/2                        down           down
Gi1/0/3                        down           down
Gi1/0/4                        down           down
Gi1/0/5                        down           down
Gi1/0/6                        down           down
Gi1/0/7                        down           down

<output truncated>

Examples

The following is a sample output of the show interfaces link command:

Device> enable 
Device# show interfaces link 
Port           Name               Down Time      Up Time
Gi1/0/1                           6w0d
Gi1/0/2                           6w0d
Gi1/0/3                           00:00:00       5w3d
Gi1/0/4                           6w0d
Gi1/0/5                           6w0d
Gi1/0/6                           6w0d
Gi1/0/7                           6w0d
Gi1/0/8                           6w0d
Gi1/0/9                           6w0d
Gi1/0/10                          6w0d
Gi1/0/11                          2d17h
Gi1/0/12                          6w0d
Gi1/0/13                          6w0d
Gi1/0/14                          6w0d
Gi1/0/15                          6w0d
Gi1/0/16                          6w0d
Gi1/0/17                          6w0d
Gi1/0/18                          6w0d
Gi1/0/19                          6w0d
Gi1/0/20                          6w0d
Gi1/0/21                          6w0d

show interfaces counters

To display various counters for the switch or for a specific interface, use the show interfaces counters command in privileged EXEC mode.

show interfaces [interface-id] counters [errors | etherchannel | module member-number | protocol status | trunk]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the physical interface, including type, stack member (stacking-capable switches only) module, and port number.

errors

(Optional) Displays error counters.

etherchannel

(Optional) Displays EtherChannel counters, including octets, broadcast packets, multicast packets, and unicast packets received and sent.

module member-number

(Optional) Displays counters for the specified member.

protocol status

(Optional) Displays the status of protocols enabled on interfaces.

trunk

(Optional) Displays trunk counters.


Note


Though visible in the command-line help string, the vlan vlan-id keyword is not supported.


Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

If you do not enter any keywords, all counters for all interfaces are included.

Examples

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters command. It displays all counters for the switch.

Device# show interfaces counters
Port            InOctets    InUcastPkts    InMcastPkts    InBcastPkts
Gi1/0/1                0              0              0              0
Gi1/0/2                0              0              0              0
Gi1/0/3         95285341          43115        1178430           1950
Gi1/0/4                0              0              0              0

<output truncated>

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters module command for module 2. It displays all counters for the specified switch in the module.

Device# show interfaces counters module 2
Port            InOctets    InUcastPkts    InMcastPkts    InBcastPkts
Gi1/0/1              520              2              0              0
Gi1/0/2              520              2              0              0
Gi1/0/3              520              2              0              0
Gi1/0/4              520              2              0              0

<output truncated>

This is an example of partial output from the show interfaces counters protocol status command for all interfaces:

Device# show interfaces counters protocol status
Protocols allocated:
Vlan1: Other, IP
Vlan20: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan30: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan40: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan50: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan60: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan70: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan80: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan90: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan900: Other, IP, ARP
Vlan3000: Other, IP
Vlan3500: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/1: Other, IP, ARP, CDP
GigabitEthernet1/0/2: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/3: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/4: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/5: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/6: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/7: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/8: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/9: Other, IP
GigabitEthernet1/0/10: Other, IP, CDP

<output truncated>

This is an example of output from the show interfaces counters trunk command. It displays trunk counters for all interfaces.

Device# show interfaces counters trunk
Port        TrunkFramesTx   TrunkFramesRx   WrongEncap
Gi1/0/1                 0               0            0
Gi1/0/2                 0               0            0
Gi1/0/3             80678               0            0
Gi1/0/4             82320               0            0
Gi1/0/5                 0               0            0

<output truncated>

show interfaces switchport

To display the administrative and operational status of a switching (nonrouting) port, including port blocking and port protection settings, use the show interfaces switchport command in privileged EXEC mode.

show interfaces [interface-id] switchport [module number]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the interface. Valid interfaces include physical ports (including type, stack member for stacking-capable switches, module, and port number) and port channels. The port channel range is 1 to 48.

module number

(Optional) Displays switchport configuration of all interfaces on the switch or specified stack member.

The range is 1 to 9.

This option is not available if you entered a specific interface ID.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the show interface switchport module number command to display the switch port characteristics of all interfaces on that switch in the stack. If there is no switch with that module number in the stack, there is no output.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show interfaces switchport command for a port. The table that follows describes the fields in the display.

Device# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/0/1 switchport
Name: Gi1/0/1
Switchport: Enabled
Administrative Mode: trunk
Operational Mode: down
Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
Negotiation of Trunking: On
Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 10 (VLAN0010)
Administrative Native VLAN tagging: enabled
Voice VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan host-association: none
Administrative private-vlan mapping: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk native VLAN: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk Native VLAN tagging: enabled
Administrative private-vlan trunk encapsulation: dot1q
Administrative private-vlan trunk normal VLANs: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk associations: none
Administrative private-vlan trunk mappings: none
Operational private-vlan: none
Trunking VLANs Enabled: 11-20
Pruning VLANs Enabled: 2-1001
Capture Mode Disabled
Capture VLANs Allowed: ALL

Protected: false
Unknown unicast blocked: disabled
Unknown multicast blocked: disabled
Appliance trust: none

Field

Description

Name

Displays the port name.

Switchport

Displays the administrative and operational status of the port. In this display, the port is in switchport mode.

Administrative Mode

Operational Mode

Displays the administrative and operational modes.

Administrative Trunking Encapsulation

Operational Trunking Encapsulation

Negotiation of Trunking

Displays the administrative and operational encapsulation method and whether trunking negotiation is enabled.

Access Mode VLAN

Displays the VLAN ID to which the port is configured.

Trunking Native Mode VLAN

Trunking VLANs Enabled

Trunking VLANs Active

Lists the VLAN ID of the trunk that is in native mode. Lists the allowed VLANs on the trunk. Lists the active VLANs on the trunk.

Pruning VLANs Enabled

Lists the VLANs that are pruning-eligible.

Protected

Displays whether or not protected port is enabled (True) or disabled (False) on the interface.

Unknown unicast blocked

Unknown multicast blocked

Displays whether or not unknown multicast and unknown unicast traffic is blocked on the interface.

Voice VLAN

Displays the VLAN ID on which voice VLAN is enabled.

Appliance trust

Displays the class of service (CoS) setting of the data packets of the IP phone.

show interfaces transceiver

To display the physical properties of a small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module interface, use the show interfaces transceiver command in EXEC mode.

show interfaces [interface-id] transceiver [detail | module number | properties | supported-list | threshold-table]

Syntax Description

interface-id

(Optional) ID of the physical interface, including type, stack member (stacking-capable switches only) module, and port number.

detail

(Optional) Displays calibration properties, including high and low numbers and any alarm information for any Digital Optical Monitoring (DoM)-capable transceiver if one is installed in the switch.

module number

(Optional) Limits display to interfaces on module on the switch.

This option is not available if you entered a specific interface ID.

properties

(Optional) Displays speed, duplex, and inline power settings on an interface.

supported-list

(Optional) Lists all supported transceivers.

threshold-table

(Optional) Displays alarm and warning threshold table.

Command Modes

User EXEC (>)

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id transceiver properties command:

Device# show interfaces transceiver                                       

If device is externally calibrated, only calibrated values are printed.      
++ : high alarm, +  : high warning, -  : low warning, -- : low alarm.        
NA or N/A: not applicable, Tx: transmit, Rx: receive.                        
mA: milliamperes, dBm: decibels (milliwatts).                                

                                           Optical   Optical
           Temperature  Voltage  Current   Tx Power  Rx Power
Port       (Celsius)    (Volts)  (mA)      (dBm)     (dBm)   
---------  -----------  -------  --------  --------  --------
Gi5/1/2      42.9       3.28      22.1      -5.4      -8.1   
Te5/1/3      32.0       3.28      19.8       2.4      -4.2   


Device# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/1/1 transceiver properties
		Name : Gi1/1/1
		Administrative Speed: auto 
		Operational Speed: auto 
		Administrative Duplex: auto
		Administrative Power Inline: enable
		Operational Duplex: auto
		Administrative Auto-MDIX: off
		Operational Auto-MDIX: off

This is an example of output from the show interfaces interface-id transceiver detail command:


Device# show interfaces gigabitethernet1/1/1 transceiver detail
		ITU Channel not available (Wavelength not available),
		Transceiver is internally calibrated.
		mA:milliamperes, dBm:decibels (milliwatts), N/A:not applicable.
		++:high alarm, +:high warning, -:low warning, -- :low alarm.
		A2D readouts (if they differ), are reported in parentheses.
		The threshold values are uncalibrated.
		
		                            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
		         Temperature        Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
		Port     (Celsius)         (Celsius)   (Celsius)  (Celsius)  (Celsius)
		-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
		Gi1/1/1  29.9               74.0        70.0       0.0        -4.0
		                            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
		         Voltage            Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
		Port     (Volts)            (Volts)     (Volts)    (Volts)    (Volts)
		-------  ---------------    ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
		Gi1/1/1  3.28               3.60        3.50       3.10       3.00

		         Optical            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
		         Transmit Power     Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
		Port     (dBm)              (dBm)       (dBm)      (dBm)      (dBm)
		-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
		Gi1/1/1  1.8                7.9         3.9        0.0        -4.0
		
		         Optical            High Alarm  High Warn  Low Warn   Low Alarm
		         Receive Power      Threshold   Threshold  Threshold  Threshold
		Port     (dBm)              (dBm)       (dBm)      (dBm)      (dBm)
		-------  -----------------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------
		Gi1/1/1  -23.5              -5.0        -9.0       -28.2      -32.2

Device# show interfaces transceiver supported-list
Transceiver Type           Cisco p/n min version     
                               supporting DOM        
------------------       -------------------------   

   DWDM GBIC                ALL                      
   DWDM SFP                 ALL                      
   RX only WDM GBIC         ALL                      
   DWDM XENPAK              ALL                      
   DWDM X2                  ALL                      
   DWDM XFP                 ALL                      
   CWDM GBIC                NONE                     
   CWDM X2                  ALL                      
   CWDM XFP                 ALL                      
   XENPAK ZR                ALL                      
   X2 ZR                    ALL                      
   XFP ZR                   ALL                      
   Rx_only_WDM_XENPAK       ALL                      
   XENPAK_ER                10-1888-04               
   X2_ER                    ALL                      
   XFP_ER                   ALL                      
   XENPAK_LR                10-1838-04               
   X2_LR                    ALL                      
   XFP_LR                   ALL                      
   XENPAK_LW                ALL                      
   X2_LW                    ALL                      
   XFP_LW                   NONE                     
   XENPAK SR                NONE                     
   X2 SR                    ALL                      
   XFP SR                   ALL                      
   XENPAK LX4               NONE                     
   X2 LX4                   NONE                     
   XFP LX4                  NONE                     
   XENPAK CX4               NONE                     
   X2 CX4                   NONE
   XFP CX4                  NONE
   SX GBIC                  NONE
   LX GBIC                  NONE
   ZX GBIC                  NONE
   CWDM_SFP                 ALL
   Rx_only_WDM_SFP          NONE
   SX_SFP                   ALL
   LX_SFP                   ALL
   ZX_SFP                   ALL
   EX_SFP                   ALL
   SX SFP                   NONE
   LX SFP                   NONE
   ZX SFP                   NONE
   GIgE BX U SFP            NONE
   GigE BX D SFP            ALL
   X2 LRM                   ALL
   SR_SFPP                  ALL
   LR_SFPP                  ALL
   LRM_SFPP                 ALL
   ER_SFPP                  ALL
   ZR_SFPP                  ALL
   DWDM_SFPP                ALL
   GIgE BX 40U SFP          ALL
   GigE BX 40D SFP          ALL
   GigE BX 40DA SFP         ALL
   GIgE BX 80U SFP          ALL
   GigE BX 80D SFP          ALL
   GIG BXU_SFPP             ALL
   GIG BXD_SFPP             ALL
   GIG BX40U_SFPP           ALL
   GIG BX40D_SFPP           ALL
   GigE Dual Rate LX SFP    ALL
   CWDM_SFPP                ALL
   CPAK_SR10                ALL
   CPAK_LR4                 ALL
   QSFP_LR                  ALL
   QSFP_SR                  ALL

This is an example of output from the show interfaces transceiver threshold-table command:


Device# show interfaces transceiver threshold-table
              Optical Tx     Optical Rx    Temp     Laser Bias    Voltage
                                                    current
             -------------  -------------  ------   ------------  ---------

 DWDM GBIC
Min1             -4.00        -32.00        -4            N/A          4.65
Min2              0.00        -28.00        0             N/A          4.75
Max2              4.00         -9.00        70            N/A          5.25
Max1              7.00         -5.00        74            N/A          5.40
 DWDM SFP
Min1             -4.00        -32.00        -4            N/A          3.00
Min2              0.00        -28.00        0             N/A          3.10
Max2              4.00         -9.00        70            N/A          3.50
Max1              8.00         -5.00        74            N/A          3.60
 RX only WDM GBIC
Min1              N/A         -32.00        -4            N/A          4.65
Min2              N/A         -28.30        0             N/A          4.75
Max2              N/A          -9.00        70            N/A          5.25
Max1              N/A          -5.00        74            N/A          5.40
 DWDM XENPAK
Min1             -5.00        -28.00        -4            N/A          N/A
Min2             -1.00        -24.00        0             N/A          N/A
Max2              3.00         -7.00        70            N/A          N/A
Max1              7.00         -3.00        74            N/A          N/A
 DWDM X2
Min1             -5.00        -28.00        -4            N/A          N/A
Min2             -1.00        -24.00        0             N/A          N/A
Max2              3.00         -7.00        70            N/A          N/A
Max1              7.00         -3.00        74            N/A          N/A
 DWDM XFP
Min1             -5.00        -28.00        -4            N/A          N/A
Min2             -1.00        -24.00        0             N/A          N/A
Max2              3.00         -7.00        70            N/A          N/A
Max1              7.00         -3.00        74            N/A          N/A
 CWDM X2
Min1              N/A           N/A         0             N/A          N/A
Min2              N/A           N/A         0             N/A          N/A
Max2              N/A           N/A         0             N/A          N/A
Max1              N/A           N/A         0             N/A          N/A

<output truncated>

show inventory

To display the product inventory listing of all Cisco products installed in the networking device, use the show inventory command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show inventory {fru | oid | raw} [entity]

fru

(Optional) Retrieves information about all Field Replaceable Units (FRUs) installed in the Cisco networking device.

oid

(Optional) Retrieves information about the vendor specific hardware registration identifier referred to as object identifier (OID).

The OID identifies the MIB object’s location in the MIB hierarchy, and provides a means of accessing the MIB object in a network of managed devices

raw

(Optional) Retrieves information about all Cisco products referred to as entities installed in the Cisco networking device, even if the entities do not have a product ID (PID) value, a unique device identifier (UDI), or other physical identification.

entity

(Optional) Name of a Cisco entity (for example, chassis, backplane, module, or slot). A quoted string may be used to display very specific UDI information; for example “sfslot 1” will display the UDI information for slot 1 of an entity named sfslot.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.6.1

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.6.3

This command was enhanced to display the serial number for the chassis.

Usage Guidelines

The show inventory command retrieves and displays inventory information about each Cisco product in the form of a UDI. The UDI is a combination of three separate data elements: a product identifier (PID), a version identifier (VID), and the serial number (SN).

The PID is the name by which the product can be ordered; it has been historically called the “Product Name” or “Part Number.” This is the identifier that one would use to order an exact replacement part.

The VID is the version of the product. Whenever a product has been revised, the VID will be incremented. The VID is incremented according to a rigorous process derived from Telcordia GR-209-CORE, an industry guideline that governs product change notices.

The SN is the vendor-unique serialization of the product. Each manufactured product will carry a unique serial number assigned at the factory, which cannot be changed in the field. This is the means by which to identify an individual, specific instance of a product.

The UDI refers to each product as an entity. Some entities, such as a chassis, will have subentities like slots. Each entity will display on a separate line in a logically ordered presentation that is arranged hierarchically by Cisco entities.

Use the show inventory command without options to display a list of Cisco entities installed in the networking device that are assigned a PID.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show inventory command:

Device#show inventory
9500-32QC-SVL#show inv
NAME: "Switch 1 Chassis", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Chassis"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10V

NAME: "Switch 1 Power Supply Module 0", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series 650W AC Power Supply"
PID: C9K-PWR-650WAC-R  , VID: V00  , SN: ART2148F53T

NAME: "Switch 1 Power Supply Module 1", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series 650W AC Power Supply"
PID: C9K-PWR-650WAC-R  , VID: V01  , SN: ART2151FC04

NAME: "Switch 1 Fan Tray 0", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            

NAME: "Switch 1 Fan Tray 1", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            

NAME: "Switch 1 Slot 1 Supervisor", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Router"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10V

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/2", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC2144034J-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/4", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE SR4"
PID: QSFP-40G-SR4        , VID: 03   , SN: AVP1824S0YQ     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/5", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101UL-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/8", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101N6-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/10", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: A    , SN: DTS2045A271-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/11", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K013-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/15", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIS1922011T-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/16-qsa", DESCR: "CVR 10GE SFP "
PID: CVR-QSFP-SFP10G     , VID: V01  , SN: DTY204604UN     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/16", DESCR: "10GE CU3M"
PID: SFP-H10GB-CU3M      , VID: R    , SN: TED1739B9HY     
          
NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/18", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K10U-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/19", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2030K4U6-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/22", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU5M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU5M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC203508YN-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/24", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Y-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/25", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF20412069-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/28", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC214402J7-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/30", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Z-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/32", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: 01   , SN: LCC1922G2E8-A   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/33", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF20412159-A   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/47", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21010360-B   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/48", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU1M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU1M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21450009-A   

NAME: "Switch 2 Chassis", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Chassis"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10L

NAME: "Switch 2 Power Supply Module 0", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series 650W AC Power Supply"
PID: C9K-PWR-650WAC-R  , VID: V00  , SN: ART2141FAZ4

NAME: "Switch 2 Fan Tray 4", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            

NAME: "Switch 2 Fan Tray 5", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            
          
NAME: "Switch 2 Slot 1 Supervisor", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Router"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10L

NAME: "SATA disk", DESCR: "disk0 Drive"
PID: C9K-F1-SSD-240G   , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L1J0

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/4", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE SR4"
PID: QSFP-40G-SR4        , VID: 03   , SN: AVP1824S0YS     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/6", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K0ZN-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/7", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K0ZN-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/8", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2030K4U6-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/9", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC2144034J-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/10", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC10M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC10M    , VID: A    , SN: DTS2101A050-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/11", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU5M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU5M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC203508R1-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/13", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Y-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/14", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU2M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU2M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC2039000Z-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/15", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: A    , SN: DTS2045A271-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/17", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101N6-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/18", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K013-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/19", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101UL-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/20", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIS1922011T-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/21-qsa", DESCR: "CVR 10GE SFP "
PID: CVR-QSFP-SFP10G     , VID: V01  , SN: DTY20460528     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/21", DESCR: "10GE CU3M"
PID: SFP-H10GB-CU3M      , VID: B2   , SN: LRM204581VA     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/28", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC214402J7-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/30", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Z-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet2/0/32", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: 01   , SN: LCC1922G2E8-B   

NAME: "HundredGigE2/0/33", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21010653-B   

NAME: "HundredGigE2/0/47", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21010360-A   
          
NAME: "HundredGigE2/0/48", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU1M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU1M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21450009-B   

Table 3. show inventory Field Descriptions

Field

Description

NAME

Physical name (text string) assigned to the Cisco entity. For example, console or a simple component number (port or module number), such as “1,” depending on the physical component naming syntax of the device.

DESCR

Physical description of the Cisco entity that characterizes the object. The physical description includes the hardware serial number and the hardware revision.

PID

Entity product identifier. Equivalent to the entPhysicalModelName MIB variable in RFC 2737.

VID

Entity version identifier. Equivalent to the entPhysicalHardwareRev MIB variable in RFC 2737.

SN

Entity serial number. Equivalent to the entPhysicalSerialNum MIB variable in RFC 2737.

For diagnostic purposes, the show inventory command can be used with the raw keyword to display every RFC 2737 entity including those without a PID, UDI, or other physical identification.


Note


The raw keyword option is primarily intended for troubleshooting problems with the show inventory command itself.


Enter the show inventory command with an entity argument value to display the UDI information for a specific type of Cisco entity installed in the networking device. In this example, a list of Cisco entities that match the sfslot argument string is displayed.

Device#show inventory "Switch 1 Chassis"
NAME: "Switch 1 Chassis", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Chassis"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10V

NAME: "Switch 1 Power Supply Module 0", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series 650W AC Power Supply"
PID: C9K-PWR-650WAC-R  , VID: V00  , SN: ART2148F53T

NAME: "Switch 1 Power Supply Module 1", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series 650W AC Power Supply"
PID: C9K-PWR-650WAC-R  , VID: V01  , SN: ART2151FC04

NAME: "Switch 1 Fan Tray 0", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            

NAME: "Switch 1 Fan Tray 1", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Fan Tray"
PID: C9K-T1-FANTRAY    , VID:      , SN:            

NAME: "Switch 1 Slot 1 Supervisor", DESCR: "Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Router"
PID: C9500-32QC        , VID: V00  , SN: CAT2144L10V

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/2", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC2144034J-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/4", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE SR4"
PID: QSFP-40G-SR4        , VID: 03   , SN: AVP1824S0YQ     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/5", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101UL-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/8", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIW211101N6-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/10", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: A    , SN: DTS2045A271-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/11", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K013-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/15", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE AOC3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-AOC3M     , VID: D    , SN: FIS1922011T-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/16-qsa", DESCR: "CVR 10GE SFP "
PID: CVR-QSFP-SFP10G     , VID: V01  , SN: DTY204604UN     

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/16", DESCR: "10GE CU3M"
PID: SFP-H10GB-CU3M      , VID: R    , SN: TED1739B9HY     
          
NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/18", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K10U-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/19", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2030K4U6-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/22", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU5M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU5M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC203508YN-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/24", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Y-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/25", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF20412069-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/28", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: A0   , SN: JPC214402J7-A   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/30", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: D    , SN: TED2047K13Z-B   

NAME: "FortyGigabitEthernet1/0/32", DESCR: "QSFP 40GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-H40G-CU3M      , VID: 01   , SN: LCC1922G2E8-A   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/33", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF20412159-A   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/47", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU3M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU3M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21010360-B   

NAME: "HundredGigE1/0/48", DESCR: "QSFP 100GE CU1M"
PID: QSFP-100G-CU1M      , VID: A    , SN: APF21450009-A   

You can request even more specific UDI information with the entity argument value enclosed in quotation marks.

show memory platform

To display memory statistics of a platform, use the show memory platform command in privileged EXEC mode.

show memory platform [compressed-swap | information | page-merging]

Syntax Description

compressed-swap

(Optional) Displays platform memory compressed-swap information.

information

(Optional) Displays general information about the platform.

page-merging

(Optional) Displays platform memory page-merging information.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Free memory is accurately computed and displayed in the Free Memory field of the command output.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show memory platform command:

Switch# show memory platform
 
 Virtual memory   : 12874653696
  Pages resident   : 627041
  Major page faults: 2220
  Minor page faults: 2348631

  Architecture     : mips64
  Memory (kB)
    Physical       : 3976852
    Total          : 3976852
    Used           : 2761276
    Free           : 1215576
    Active         : 2128196
    Inactive       : 1581856
    Inact-dirty    : 0
    Inact-clean    : 0
    Dirty          : 0
    AnonPages      : 1294984
    Bounce         : 0
    Cached         : 1978168
    Commit Limit   : 1988424
    Committed As   : 3343324
    High Total     : 0
    High Free      : 0
    Low Total      : 3976852
    Low Free       : 1215576
    Mapped         : 516316
    NFS Unstable   : 0
    Page Tables    : 17124
    Slab           : 0
    VMmalloc Chunk : 1069542588
    VMmalloc Total : 1069547512
    VMmalloc Used  : 2588
    Writeback      : 0
    HugePages Total: 0
    HugePages Free : 0
    HugePages Rsvd : 0
    HugePage Size  : 2048

  Swap (kB)
    Total          : 0
    Used           : 0
    Free           : 0
    Cached         : 0

  Buffers (kB)     : 437136

  Load Average
    1-Min          : 1.04
    5-Min          : 1.16
    15-Min         : 0.94
   
 

The following is sample output from the show memory platform information command:

Device# show memory platform information

 Virtual memory   : 12870438912
  Pages resident   : 626833
  Major page faults: 2222
  Minor page faults: 2362455

  Architecture     : mips64
  Memory (kB)
    Physical       : 3976852
    Total          : 3976852
    Used           : 2761224
    Free           : 1215628
    Active         : 2128060
    Inactive       : 1584444
    Inact-dirty    : 0
    Inact-clean    : 0
    Dirty          : 284
    AnonPages      : 1294656
    Bounce         : 0
    Cached         : 1979644
    Commit Limit   : 1988424
    Committed As   : 3342184
    High Total     : 0
    High Free      : 0
    Low Total      : 3976852
    Low Free       : 1215628
    Mapped         : 516212
    NFS Unstable   : 0
    Page Tables    : 17096
    Slab           : 0
    VMmalloc Chunk : 1069542588
    VMmalloc Total : 1069547512
    VMmalloc Used  : 2588
    Writeback      : 0
    HugePages Total: 0
    HugePages Free : 0
    HugePages Rsvd : 0
    HugePage Size  : 2048

  Swap (kB)
    Total          : 0
    Used           : 0
    Free           : 0
    Cached         : 0

  Buffers (kB)     : 438228

  Load Average
    1-Min          : 1.54
    5-Min          : 1.27
    15-Min         : 0.99

show module

To display module information such as switch number, model number, serial number, hardware revision number, software version, MAC address and so on, use this command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.

show module [switch-num]

Syntax Description

switch-num

(Optional) Number of the switch.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

User EXEC (>)

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Entering the show module command without the switch-num argument is the same as entering the show module all command.

show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower

To display inline power messages within a trace buffer, use the show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower command in privileged EXEC mode.

show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower [switch stack-member-number]

Syntax Description

switch stack-member-number

(Optional) Specifies the stack member number for which to display inline power messages within a trace buffer.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This is an output example from the show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower command:

Device# show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 1 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 1.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 2 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 2.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 3 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 3.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 4 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 4.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 5 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 5.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 6 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 6.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 7 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 7.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 8 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 8.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC 9 3] Initialized inline power system configuration fo
r slot 9.
[10/23/12 14:05:10.984 UTC a 3] Inline power subsystem initialized.
[10/23/12 14:05:18.908 UTC b 264] Create new power pool for slot 1
[10/23/12 14:05:18.909 UTC c 264] Set total inline power to 450 for slot 1
[10/23/12 14:05:20.273 UTC d 3] PoE is not supported on .
[10/23/12 14:05:20.288 UTC e 3] PoE is not supported on .
[10/23/12 14:05:20.299 UTC f 3] PoE is not supported on .
[10/23/12 14:05:20.311 UTC 10 3] PoE is not supported on .
[10/23/12 14:05:20.373 UTC 11 98] Inline power process post for switch 1
[10/23/12 14:05:20.373 UTC 12 98] PoE post passed on switch 1
[10/23/12 14:05:20.379 UTC 13 3] Slot #1: PoE initialization for board id 16387
[10/23/12 14:05:20.379 UTC 14 3] Set total inline power to 450 for slot 1
[10/23/12 14:05:20.379 UTC 15 3] Gi1/0/1 port config Initialized
[10/23/12 14:05:20.379 UTC 16 3] Interface Gi1/0/1 initialization done.
[10/23/12 14:05:20.380 UTC 17 3] Gi1/0/24 port config Initialized
[10/23/12 14:05:20.380 UTC 18 3] Interface Gi1/0/24 initialization done.
[10/23/12 14:05:20.380 UTC 19 3] Slot #1: initialization done.
[10/23/12 14:05:50.440 UTC 1a 3] Slot #1: PoE initialization for board id 16387
[10/23/12 14:05:50.440 UTC 1b 3] Duplicate init event

show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower-ha

To display inline power high availability messages within a trace buffer, use the show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower-ha command in privileged EXEC mode.

show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower-ha [switch stack-member-number]

Syntax Description

switch stack-member-number

(Optional) Specifies the stack member number for which to display inline power messages within a trace buffer.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This is an output example from the show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower-ha command:

Device# show mgmt-infra trace messages ilpower-ha
[10/23/12 14:04:48.087 UTC 1 3] NG3K_ILPOWER_HA: Created NGWC ILP CF client succ
essfully.

show mgmt-infra trace messages platform-mgr-poe

To display platform manager Power over Ethernet (PoE) messages within a trace buffer, use the show mgmt-infra trace messages platform-mgr-poe privileged EXEC command.

show mgmt-infra trace messages platform-mgr-poe [switch stack-member-number]

Syntax Description

switch stack-member-number

(Optional) Specifies the stack member number for which to display messages within a trace buffer.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This is an example of partial output from the show mgmt-infra trace messages platform-mgr-poe command:

Device# show mgmt-infra trace messages platform-mgr-poe
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 1 5495] PoE Info: get power controller param sent:
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 2 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 1 (0:0)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 3 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 2 (0:1)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 4 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 3 (0:2)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 5 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 4 (0:3)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 6 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 5 (0:4)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 7 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 6 (0:5)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 8 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 7 (0:6)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 9 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 8 (0:7)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC a 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 9 (0:8)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC b 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 10 (0:9)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC c 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 11 (0:10)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC d 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 12 (0:11)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC e 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 13 (e:0)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC f 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 14 (e:1)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 10 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 15 (e:2)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 11 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 16 (e:3)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 12 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 17 (e:4)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 13 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 18 (e:5)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 14 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 19 (e:6)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 15 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 20 (e:7)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 16 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 21 (e:8)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 17 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 22 (e:9)
[10/23/12 14:04:06.431 UTC 18 5495] PoE Info: POE_SHUT sent for port 23 (e:10)

show network-policy profile

To display the network-policy profiles, use the show network policy profile command in privileged EXEC mode.

show network-policy profile [profile-number] [detail]

Syntax Description

profile-number

(Optional) Displays the network-policy profile number. If no profile is entered, all network-policy profiles appear.

detail

(Optional) Displays detailed status and statistics information.

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show network-policy profile command:

Device# show network-policy profile
Network Policy Profile 10
   voice vlan 17 cos 4
  Interface:
   none
Network Policy Profile 30
   voice vlan 30 cos 5
  Interface:
   none
Network Policy Profile 36
   voice vlan 4 cos 3
  Interface:
   Interface_id

show platform hardware bluetooth

To display information about Bluetooth interface, use the show platform hardware bluetooth command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform hardware bluetooth

Command Default

None

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE Amsterdam 17.1.1

This command was introduced.

This command was introduced for the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series High Performance Switches.

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.12.1

This command was introduced.

This command was introduced for the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Switches.

Usage Guidelines

The show platform hardware bluetooth command is to be used when an external USB Bluetooth dongle is connected on the device.

Examples

This example shows how to display the information of the Bluetooth interface using the show platform hardware bluetooth command.

Device> enable
Device# show platform hardware bluetooth
Controller: 0:1a:7d:da:71:13
Type: Primary
Bus: USB
State: DOWN
Name:
HCI Version:

show platform hardware capacity


Note


This command is not supported on the C9500-12Q-E, C9500-12Q-A, C9500-24Q-E, C9500-24Q-A, C9500-40X-E, and C9500-40X-A models of the Cisco Catalyst 9500 Series Switches.



Note


The existing show platform hardware capacity command is currently supported, but is going to be deprecated. Use the show tech-support resource command instead.


To determine system hardware capacity, use the show platform hardware capacity command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform hardware capacity

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

This command has no default settings.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification
Cisco IOS XE Fuji 16.8.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

This example shows how to determine the system hardware capacity

Device# show platform hardware capacity
   
Module        Model                Operational Status
------------- -------------------- ------------------------
subslot 1/0   C9500H-32QC          ok

Load Average
 Slot  Status  1-Min  5-Min 15-Min
  RP0 Healthy   0.07   0.16   0.13

Memory (kB)
 Slot  Status    Total     Used (Pct)     Free (Pct) Committed (Pct)
  RP0 Healthy 15958108  3060492 (19%) 12897616 (81%)  25941080 (163%)

CPU Utilization
 Slot  CPU   User System   Nice   Idle    IRQ   SIRQ IOwait
  RP0    0   0.70   0.20   0.00  99.10   0.00   0.00   0.00
         1   0.39   0.09   0.00  99.50   0.00   0.00   0.00
         2   0.80   0.40   0.00  98.80   0.00   0.00   0.00
         3   1.10   0.20   0.00  98.69   0.00   0.00   0.00
         4   0.00   0.00   0.00 100.00   0.00   0.00   0.00
         5   2.20   0.00   0.00  97.80   0.00   0.00   0.00
         6   0.10   3.20   0.00  96.70   0.00   0.00   0.00
         7   0.00   0.00   0.00 100.00   0.00   0.00   0.00



 *: interface is up
 IHQ: pkts in input hold queue     IQD: pkts dropped from input queue
 OHQ: pkts in output hold queue    OQD: pkts dropped from output queue
 RXBS: rx rate (bits/sec)          RXPS: rx rate (pkts/sec)
 TXBS: tx rate (bits/sec)          TXPS: tx rate (pkts/sec)
 TRTL: throttle count

  Interface                   IHQ       IQD       OHQ       OQD      RXBS      RXPS      TXBS      TXPS      TRTL
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Vlan1                         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* GigabitEthernet0/0            0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/1                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/2                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/3                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/4                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/5                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/6                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/7                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/8                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/9                       0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/10                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/11                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/12                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/13                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/14                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/15                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/16                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/17                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/18                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/19                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/20                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/21                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/22                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/23                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/24                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/25                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/26                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/27                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/28                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/29                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/30                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
* Fo1/0/31                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  Fo1/0/32                      0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/33             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/34             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/35             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/36             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/37             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/38             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/39             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/40             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/41             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/42             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/43             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/44             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/45             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/46             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/47             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
  HundredGigE1/0/48             0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0         0
ASIC 0 Info
------------
ASIC 0 HSN Table 0 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 0 HSN Table 1 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 0 HSN Table 2 Software info:       FSE 0
        TILE 0: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSN Table 3 Software info:       FSE 0
        TILE 0: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSN Table 4 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 0 HSN Table 5 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 0 HSN Table 6 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSN Table 7 Software info:       FSE 2
        TILE 0: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSF Table 0 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSF Table 1 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSF Table 2 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSF Table 3 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 0 HSF Table 4 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
OVF Info
--------
Table 0 info:   FSE0: 0, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB  1: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  2: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB  3: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  4: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB  5: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  6: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB  7: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  8: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB  9: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 10: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 11: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 12: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 13: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 14: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 15: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 16: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 17: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 18: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 19: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 20: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 21: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 22: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3      MAB 23: Unicast MAC addresses srip 0 1 2 3
Table 1 info:   FSE0: 1, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  8: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  9: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 10: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 11: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 12: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 13: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 14: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 15: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 16: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 17: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 18: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 19: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 20: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 21: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 22: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 23: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
Table 2 info:   FSE0: 1, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  8: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  9: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 10: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 11: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 12: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 13: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 14: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 15: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 16: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 17: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 18: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 19: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 20: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 21: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 22: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 23: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
Table 3 info:   FSE0: 2, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  1: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  2: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  3: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  4: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  5: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  6: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  7: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  8: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB  9: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 10: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 11: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 12: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 13: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 14: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 15: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 16: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 17: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 18: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 19: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 20: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 21: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 22: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3    MAB 23: SGT_DGT         srip 0 1 2 3
TLQ Info
--------
Table 0 info:   FSE0: 255, FSE1: 255    #hwmabs: 4, #swmabs: 4
        MAB  0: (null)          srip    MAB  1: (null)          srip
        MAB  2: (null)          srip    MAB  3: (null)          srip
Table 1 info:   FSE0: 255, FSE1: 255    #hwmabs: 4, #swmabs: 4
        MAB  0: (null)          srip    MAB  1: (null)          srip
        MAB  2: (null)          srip    MAB  3: (null)          srip
TAQ Info
--------
Table 0 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 1: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 3: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
Table 1 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 1: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 3: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
Table 2 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 1: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 3: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 3 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 1: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 3: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 4 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 1: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 3: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 5 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 1: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 3: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 6 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 1: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 3: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 7 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 1: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 3: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 8 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 1: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 3: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 9 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 32
        MAB 0: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 1: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 3: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 4: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 5: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 6: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 7: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 8: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 9: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 10: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2     MAB 11: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 12: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2     MAB 13: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 14: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2     MAB 15: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 16: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2     MAB 17: Input Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 18: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 19: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 20: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 21: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 22: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 23: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 24: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 25: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 26: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 27: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 28: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 29: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 30: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2         MAB 31: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
Table 10 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 32
        MAB 0: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 1: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 3: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 4: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 5: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 6: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 7: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 8: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 9: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 10: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3    MAB 11: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 12: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3    MAB 13: Output Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 14: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 15: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 16: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 17: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 18: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 19: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 20: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 21: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 22: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 23: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 24: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 25: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 26: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 27: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 28: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 29: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 30: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3        MAB 31: Output Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 11 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 1: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 3: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
Table 12 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 1: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 3: Input Non Ipv4 Security Access Control Entries srip 0 2
ASIC 1 Info
------------
ASIC 1 HSN Table 0 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 1 HSN Table 1 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 1 HSN Table 2 Software info:       FSE 2
        TILE 0: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSN Table 3 Software info:       FSE 2
        TILE 0: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSN Table 4 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 1 HSN Table 5 Software info:       FSE 255
        TILE 0: (null)          srip
        TILE 1: (null)          srip
ASIC 1 HSN Table 6 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSN Table 7 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSF Table 0 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSF Table 1 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSF Table 2 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSF Table 3 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
ASIC 1 HSF Table 4 Software info:       FSE 1
        TILE 0: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 1: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 2: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 3: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 4: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 5: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 6: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
        TILE 7: Directly or indirectly connected routes srip 0 1 2 3
OVF Info
--------
Table 0 info:   FSE0: 2, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB  1: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  2: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB  3: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  4: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB  5: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  6: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB  7: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB  8: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB  9: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 10: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 11: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 12: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 13: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 14: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 15: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 16: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 17: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 18: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 19: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 20: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 21: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
        MAB 22: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3       MAB 23: L3 Multicast entries srip 0 1 2 3
Table 1 info:   FSE0: 1, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  1: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  2: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  3: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  4: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  5: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  6: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  7: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  8: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  9: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 10: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 11: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 12: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 13: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 14: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 15: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 16: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 17: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 18: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 19: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 20: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 21: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 22: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 23: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
Table 2 info:   FSE0: 1, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  1: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  2: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  3: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  4: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  5: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  6: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  7: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  8: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  9: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 10: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 11: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 12: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 13: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 14: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 15: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 16: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 17: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 18: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 19: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 20: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 21: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 22: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 23: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
Table 3 info:   FSE0: 1, FSE1: 255      #hwmabs: 24, #swmabs: 24
        MAB  0: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  1: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  2: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  3: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  4: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  5: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  6: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  7: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB  8: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB  9: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 10: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 11: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 12: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 13: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 14: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 15: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 16: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 17: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 18: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 19: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 20: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 21: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
        MAB 22: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3   MAB 23: L2 Multicast entries srip 1 3
TLQ Info
--------
Table 0 info:   FSE0: 255, FSE1: 255    #hwmabs: 4, #swmabs: 4
        MAB  0: (null)          srip    MAB  1: (null)          srip
        MAB  2: (null)          srip    MAB  3: (null)          srip
Table 1 info:   FSE0: 255, FSE1: 255    #hwmabs: 4, #swmabs: 4
        MAB  0: (null)          srip    MAB  1: (null)          srip
        MAB  2: (null)          srip    MAB  3: (null)          srip
TAQ Info
--------
Table 0 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 1  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Ingress Netflow ACEs srip 0 2    MAB 1: Ingress Netflow ACEs srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Ingress Netflow ACEs srip 0 2    MAB 3: Ingress Netflow ACEs srip 0 2
Table 1 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 1: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 3: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
Table 2 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 1: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 3: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
Table 3 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 0  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 1: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2       MAB 3: Policy Based Routing ACEs srip 0 2
Table 4 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 1  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Egress Netflow ACEs srip 1 3     MAB 1: Egress Netflow ACEs srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Egress Netflow ACEs srip 1 3     MAB 3: Egress Netflow ACEs srip 1 3
Table 5 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 2  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Flow SPAN ACEs  srip 0 2         MAB 1: Flow SPAN ACEs  srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Flow Egress SPAN ACEs srip 1 3   MAB 3: Flow Egress SPAN ACEs srip 1 3
Table 6 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 7  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Control Plane Entries srip 1 3   MAB 1: Control Plane Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Control Plane Entries srip 1 3   MAB 3: Control Plane Entries srip 1 3
Table 7 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 6  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 1: Tunnels         srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 3: Tunnels         srip 0 2
Table 8 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 6  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 1: Tunnels         srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 3: Tunnels         srip 0 2
Table 9 (TAQ) info:     ASE: 3  #hwmabs: 32
        MAB 0: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2   MAB 1: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2   MAB 3: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 4: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2   MAB 5: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 6: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2   MAB 7: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 8: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2   MAB 9: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 10: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 11: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 12: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 13: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 14: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 15: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 16: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2  MAB 17: Input Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 18: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 19: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 20: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 21: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 22: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 23: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 24: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 25: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 26: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 27: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 28: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 29: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 30: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2      MAB 31: Input Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 0 2
Table 10 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 3  #hwmabs: 32
        MAB 0: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3  MAB 1: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 2: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3  MAB 3: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 4: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3  MAB 5: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 6: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3  MAB 7: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 8: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3  MAB 9: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 10: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 11: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 12: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 13: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 14: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 15: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 16: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3         MAB 17: Output Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 18: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 19: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 20: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 21: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 22: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 23: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 24: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 25: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 26: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 27: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 28: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 29: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
        MAB 30: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3     MAB 31: Output Non Ipv4 QoS Access Control Entries srip 1 3
Table 11 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 6  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 1: Tunnels         srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Tunnels         srip 0 2         MAB 3: Macsec SPD      srip 1 3
Table 12 (TAQ) info:    ASE: 5  #hwmabs: 4
        MAB 0: Lisp Instance Mapping Entries srip 0 2   MAB 1: Lisp Instance Mapping Entries srip 0 2
        MAB 2: Lisp Instance Mapping Entries srip 0 2   MAB 3: Lisp Instance Mapping Entries srip 0 2

show platform hardware fed switch forward

To display device-specific hardware information, use the show platform hardware fed switch switch_number command.

This topic elaborates only the forwarding-specific options, that is, the options available with the show platform hardware fed switch { switch_num | active | standby } forward summary command.

The output of the show platform hardware fed switch switch_number forward summary displays all the details about the forwarding decision taken for the packet.

show platform hardware fed switch {switch_num | active | standby} forward summary

Syntax Description

switch { switch_num | active | standby }

The switch for which you want to display information. You have the following options :

  • switch_num —ID of the switch.

  • active —Displays information relating to the active switch.

  • standby —Displays information relating to the standby switch, if available.

forward summary

Displays packet forwarding information.

Note

 

Support for the keyword summary has been discontinued in the Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.6.1 release and later releases.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.6.1 and later releases

Supprort for the keyword summary was discontinued.

Usage Guidelines

Do not use this command unless a technical support representative asks you to. Use this command only when you are working directly with a technical support representative while troubleshooting a problem.

Fields displayed in the command output are explained below.

  • Station Index : The Station Index is the result of the layer 2 lookup and points to a station descriptor which provides the following:

    • Destination Index : Determines the egress port(s) to which the packets should be sent to. Global Port Number(GPN) can be used as the destination index. A destination index with15 down to 12 bits set indicates the GPN to be used. For example, destination index - 0xF04E corresponds to GPN - 78 (0x4e).

    • Rewrite Index : Determines what needs to be done with the packets. For layer 2 switching, this is typically a bridging action

    • Flexible Lookup Pipeline Stages(FPS) : Indicates the forwarding decision that was taken for the packet - routing or bridging

    • Replication Bit Map : Determines if the packets should be sent to CPU or stack

      • Local Data Copy = 1

      • Remote Data copy = 0

      • Local CPU Copy = 0

      • Remote CPU Copy = 0

Examples

This is an example of output from the show platform hardware fed switch { switch_num | active | standby } forward summary command.

Device#show platform hardware fed switch 1 forward summary
Time: Fri Sep 16 08:25:00 PDT 2016

Incomming Packet Details:  

###[ Ethernet ]###
  dst       = 00:51:0f:f2:0e:11
  src       = 00:1d:01:85:ba:22
  type      = ARP
###[ ARP ]###
     hwtype    = 0x1
     ptype     = IPv4
     hwlen     = 6
     plen      = 4
     op        = is-at
     hwsrc     = 00:1d:01:85:ba:22
     psrc      = 10.10.1.33
     hwdst     = 00:51:0f:f2:0e:11
     pdst      = 10.10.1.1

Ingress:
Switch             : 1
Port               : GigabitEthernet1/0/1
Global Port Number : 1
Local Port Number  : 1
Asic Port Number   : 21
ASIC Number        : 0
STP state          :
	                   blkLrn31to0: 0xffdfffdf
	                   blkFwd31to0: 0xffdfffdf
Vlan               : 1
Station Descriptor : 170
DestIndex          : 0xF009
DestModIndex       : 2
RewriteIndex       : 2
Forwarding Decision: FPS 2A L2 Destination

Replication Bitmap:
Local CPU copy     : 0
Local Data copy    : 1
Remote CPU copy    : 0
Remote Data copy   : 0

Egress:
Switch             : 1
Outgoing Port      : GigabitEthernet1/0/9
Global Port Number : 9
ASIC Number        : 0
Vlan               : 1

show platform hardware fed switch forward interface

To debug forwarding information and to trace the packet path in the hardware forwarding plane, use the show platform hardware fed switch switch_number forward interface command. This command simulates a user-defined packet and retrieves the forwarding information from the hardware forwarding plane. A packet is generated on the ingress port based on the packet parameters that you have specified in this command. You can also provide a complete packet from the captured packets stored in a PCAP file.

This topic elaborates only the interface forwarding-specific options, that is, the options available with the show platform hardware fed switch { switch_num | active | standby } forward interface command.

show platform hardware fed switch {switch_num | active | standby} forward interface interface-type interface-number source-mac-address destination-mac-address {protocol-number | arp | cos | ipv4 | ipv6 | mpls}

show platform hardware fed switch {switch_num | active | standby} forward interface interface-type interface-number pcap pcap-file-name number packet-number data

show platform hardware fed switch {switch_num | active | standby} forward interface interface-type interface-number vlan vlan-id source-mac-address destination-mac-address {protocol-number | arp | cos | ipv4 | ipv6 | mpls}

Syntax Description

switch { switch_num | active | standby }

The switch on which packet tracing has to be scheduled. The input port should be available on this switch. You have the following options :

  • switch_num —ID of the switch on which the ingress port is present.

  • active —indicates the active switch on which the the ingress port is present.

  • standby —indicates the standby switch on which the ingress port is present.

    Note

     

    This keyword is not supported.

interface interface-type interface-number

The input interface on which packet trace is simulated.

source-mac-address

The source MAC address of the packet you want to simulate.

destination-mac-address

The MAC address of the destination interface in hexadecimal format.

protocol-number

The number assigned to any L3 protocol.

arp

The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) parameters.

ipv4

The IPv4 packet parameters.

ipv6

The IPv6 packet parameters.

mpls

The Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) label parameters.

cos

The class of service (CoS) number from 0 to 7 to set priority.

pcap pcap-file-name

Name of the pcap file in internal flash (flash:).

Ensure that the file already exists in flash:.

number packet-number

Specifies the packet number in the pcap file.

vlan vlan-id

VLAN id of the dot1q header in the simulated packet. The range is 1 to 4096.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Fuji 16.9.1

The command was enhanced to support MPLS/ARP/VxLAN packet parameters and trace packets captured in a PCAP file.

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

The command was enhanced to support data capture across a stack.

Usage Guidelines

Do not use this command unless a technical support representative asks you to. Use this command only when you are working directly with a technical support representative while troubleshooting a problem.

This command supports the following packet types:

  • Non-IP packets with any L3 protocol

  • ARP packets

  • IPv4 packets with any L4 protocol

  • IPv4 packets with TCP/UDP/IGMP/ICMP/SCTP payload

  • VxLAN packets

  • MPLS packets with up to 3 Labels and meta data

  • MPLS packets with IPv4/IPv6 payload

  • IPv6 packets with TCP/UDP/IGMP/ICMP/SCTP payload

In a stack environment, you can trace packets across the stack irrespective of the number of stack members and topology. The show platform hardware fed switch switch-number forward interface interface-type interface-number command consolidates packet-forwarding information of all the stack members on the ingress switch. To achieve this, ensure that the switch number specified in the switch_num and interface-number arguments are of the input switch and that the number matches.

To trace any particular packet from the captured packets stored in a PCAP file, use the show platform hardware fed switch forward interface interface-type interface-number pcap pcap-file-name number packet-number data command.

Examples

This is an example of output from the show platform hardware fed switch { switch_num | active | standby } forward interface command.

Device#show platform hardware fed switch active forward interface gigabitEthernet 1/0/35 0000.0022.0055 0000.0055.0066 ipv4 44.44.0.2 55.55.0.2 udp 1222 3333

Show forward is running in the background. After completion, syslog will be generated.

*Sep 24 05:57:36.614: %SHFWD-6-PACKET_TRACE_DONE: Switch 1 R0/0: fed: Packet Trace Complete:  Execute (show platform hardware fed switch <> forward last summary|detail)
*Sep 24 05:57:36.614: %SHFWD-6-PACKET_TRACE_FLOW_ID: Switch 1 R0/0: fed: Packet Trace Flow id is 150323855361

show platform hardware fed switch forward last summary

To display a summary of packet tracing data from a switch or switches in a stack, use the show platform hardware fed switch switch_number forward last summary command.

The output of the show platform hardware fed switch switch_number forward last summary command displays all the details about the forwarding decision taken for the packet from the last time the show forward command was run.

show platform hardware fed switch {switch_number | active | standby} forward last summary

Syntax Description

switch { switch_number | active | standby }

The switch on which you want to schedule a packet capture for a port. You have the following options :

  • switch_num —ID of the switch on which the ingress port is present.

  • active —indicates the active switch on which the the ingress port is present.

  • standby —indicates the standby switch on which the ingress port is present.

    Note

     

    This keyword is not supported.

forward last summary

Displays packet forwarding information.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.6.1 and later releases

Support for the keyword summary was discontinued.

Cisco IOS XE Fuji 16.9.1

Support for keywords last and summary is introduced.

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

The output of the command was enhanced to display the details about all the copies of the packets and the corresponding outgoing ports.

Usage Guidelines

Do not use this command unless a technical support representative asks you to. Use this command only when you are working directly with a technical support representative while troubleshooting a problem.

With Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1, show platform hardware fed switch forward last summary command is enhanced to:

  • Inject the debug packets from the CPU to simulate the incoming port and packets

  • Use the debug packets to trace the packet in hardware data-path to provide forwarding details such as lookup, adjacency, rewrite information, drop decision, outgoing port and so on

  • Drop the original packets at egress so as not to transmit the packet to the outgoing port

  • Send a copy of all the packets to the CPU and display the details in the packet tracing output

Examples

This is an example of output from the show platform hardware fed switch { switch_number | active | standby } forward last summary command.
Device#show platform hardware fed switch active forward last summary
Input Packet Details:
###[ Ethernet ]###
  dst       = 01:00:5e:01:01:02
  src       = 00:00:00:03:00:05
  type      = 0x0
###[ Raw ]###
     load      = '00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00'
Ingress: 
   Port                      : GigabitEthernet1/0/11
   Global Port Number        : 11
   Local Port Number         : 11
   Asic Port Number          : 10
   Asic Instance             : 1
   Vlan                      : 20
   Mapped Vlan ID            : 6
   STP Instance              : 4
   BlockForward              : 0
   BlockLearn                : 0
   L3 Interface              : 39
       IPv4 Routing          : enabled
       IPv6 Routing          : enabled
       Vrf Id                : 0
   Adjacency:                 
       Station Index         : 3      [SI_DIET_L2]
       Destination Index     : 18
       Rewrite Index         : 2
       Replication Bit Map   : 0x15   ['localData', 'remoteData', 'coreData']
   Decision:                  
       Destination Index     : 24     [DI_DIET_L2]
       Rewrite Index         : 2      [RI_L2]
       Dest Mod Index        : 9      [DMI_IGMP_CTRL_Q]
       CPU Map Index         : 0      [CMI_NULL]
       Forwarding Mode       : 0      [Bridging]
       Replication Bit Map   :        ['localData', 'remoteData', 'coreData']
       Winner                :        L2DESTMACVLAN LOOKUP
       Qos Label             : 65
       SGT                   : 0
       DGTID                 : 0
Egress:   
   Possible Replication      : 
       Port                  : GigabitEthernet1/0/11
       Port                  : GigabitEthernet1/0/22
       Port                  : GigabitEthernet2/0/1
   Output Port Data          : 
     Port                    : GigabitEthernet1/0/22
       Global Port Number    : 22
       Local Port Number     : 22
       Asic Port Number      : 21
       Asic Instance         : 0
       Unique RI             : 2
       Rewrite Type          : 1      [L2_BRIDGE]
       Mapped Rewrite Type   : 1      [L2_BRIDGE]
       Vlan                  : 20
       Mapped Vlan ID        : 6
     Port                    : GigabitEthernet2/0/1
       Global Port Number    : 97
       Local Port Number     : 1
       Asic Port Number      : 0
       Asic Instance         : 1
       Unique RI             : 2
       Rewrite Type          : 1      [L2_BRIDGE]
       Mapped Rewrite Type   : 1      [L2_BRIDGE]
       Vlan                  : 20
       Mapped Vlan ID        : 6
          
Output Packet Details:    
   Port                      : GigabitEthernet1/0/22
###[ Ethernet ]###
  dst       = 01:00:5e:01:01:02
  src       = 00:00:00:03:00:05
  type      = 0x0
###[ Raw ]###
     load      = '00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00'
   Port                      : GigabitEthernet2/0/1
###[ Ethernet ]###
  dst       = 01:00:5e:01:01:02
  src       = 00:00:00:03:00:05
  type      = 0x0
###[ Raw ]###
     load      = '00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 
     00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00'
********************************************************************************

show platform resources

To display platform resource information, use the show platform reources command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform resources

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output of this command displays the used memory, which is total memory minus the accurate free memory.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform resources command:

Switch# show platform resources 

**State Acronym: H - Healthy, W - Warning, C - Critical                                             
Resource                 Usage                 Max             Warning         Critical        State
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Control Processor       7.20%                 100%            90%             95%             H    
  DRAM                   2701MB(69%)           3883MB          90%             95%             H  

show platform software audit

To display the SE Linux Audit logs, use the show platform software audit command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software audit { all | summary | [ switch { switch-number | active | standby}] { 0 | F0 | R0 | { FP | RP} { active}}}

Syntax Description

all

Shows the audit log from all the slots.

summary

Shows the audit log summary count from all the slots.

switch

Shows the audit logs for a slot on a specific switch.

switch-number

Selects the switch with the specified switch number.

switch active

Selects the active instance of the switch.

standby

Selects the standby instance of the switch.

0

Shows the audit log for the SPA-Inter-Processor slot 0.

F0

Shows the audit log for the Embedded-Service-Processor slot 0.

R0

Shows the audit log for the Route-Processor slot 0.

FP active

Shows the audit log for the active Embedded-Service-Processor slot.

RP active

Shows the audit log for the active Route-Processor slot.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command was introduced in the Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1 as a part of the SELinux Permissive Mode feature. The show platform software audit command displays the system logs containing the access violation events.

In Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1, operation in a permissive mode is available - with the intent of confining specific components (process or application) of the IOS-XE platform. In the permissive mode, access violation events are detected and system logs are generated, but the event or operation itself is not blocked. The solution operates mainly in an access violation detection mode.

Examples

The following is a sample output of the show software platform software audit summary command:

Device# show platform software audit summary

===================================
AUDIT LOG ON switch 1
-----------------------------------
AVC Denial count: 58
===================================

The following is a sample output of the show software platform software audit all command:

Device# show platform software audit all

===================================
AUDIT LOG ON switch 1
-----------------------------------
========== START ============
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.584:100): avc:  denied  { read } for  pid=14017 comm="mcp_trace_filte" name="crashinfo" dev="rootfs" ino=13667 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_disk_crashinfo_t:s0 tclass=lnk_file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.584:100): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=14017 comm="mcp_trace_filte" path="/mnt/sd1" dev="sda1" ino=2 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_disk_crashinfo_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.586:101): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=14028 comm="ls" path="/tmp/ufs/crashinfo" dev="tmpfs" ino=58407 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_ncd_tmp_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.586:102): avc:  denied  { read } for  pid=14028 comm="ls" name="crashinfo" dev="tmpfs" ino=58407 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_ncd_tmp_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438600.896:119): avc:  denied  { execute } for  pid=8300 comm="sh" name="id" dev="loop0" ino=6982 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438600.897:120): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=8300 comm="sh" path="/tmp/sw/mount/cat9k-rpbase.2018-10-02_00.13_mhungund.SSA.pkg/nyquist/usr/bin/id" dev="loop0" ino=6982 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438615.535:121): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438624.916:122): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=8600 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438648.936:123): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=9307 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438678.649:124): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438696.969:125): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=10057 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438732.973:126): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=10858 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438778.008:127): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=11579 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438800.156:128): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438834.099:129): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=12451 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539440246.697:149): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539440299.119:150): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
========== END ============
===================================

The following is a sample output of the show software platform software audit switch command:

Device# show platform software audit switch active R0

========== START ============
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.584:100): avc:  denied  { read } for  pid=14017 comm="mcp_trace_filte" name="crashinfo" dev="rootfs" ino=13667 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_disk_crashinfo_t:s0 tclass=lnk_file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.584:100): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=14017 comm="mcp_trace_filte" path="/mnt/sd1" dev="sda1" ino=2 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_disk_crashinfo_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.586:101): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=14028 comm="ls" path="/tmp/ufs/crashinfo" dev="tmpfs" ino=58407 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_ncd_tmp_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539222292.586:102): avc:  denied  { read } for  pid=14028 comm="ls" name="crashinfo" dev="tmpfs" ino=58407 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_trace_filter_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_ncd_tmp_t:s0 tclass=dir permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438624.916:122): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=8600 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438648.936:123): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=9307 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438678.649:124): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438696.969:125): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=10057 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438732.973:126): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=10858 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438778.008:127): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=11579 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438800.156:128): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438834.099:129): avc:  denied  { execute_no_trans } for  pid=12451 comm="auto_upgrade_se" path="/bin/bash" dev="rootfs" ino=7276 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_auto_upgrade_server_rp_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=1
type=AVC msg=audit(1539438860.907:130): avc:  denied  { name_connect } for  pid=26421 comm="nginx" dest=8098 scontext=system_u:system_r:polaris_nginx_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:polaris_caf_api_port_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket permissive=1
========== END ============
===================================

show platform software fed switch punt cpuq rates

To display the rate at which packets are punted, including the drops in the punted path, use the show platform software fed switch punt cpuq rates command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software fed switch {switch-number | active | standby} punt cpuq rates

Syntax Description

switch{switch-number | active | standby}

Displays information about the switch. You have the following options:

  • switch-number.

  • active —Displays information relating to the active switch.

  • standby —Displays information relating to the standby switch, if available.

    Note

     

    This keyword is not supported.

punt

Specifies the punt informtion.

cpuq

Specifies information about CPU receive queue.

rates

Specifies the rate at which the packets are punted.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output of this command displays the rate in packets per second at intervals of 10 seconds, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software fed switch active punt cpuq rates command.

Device#show platform software fed switch active punt cpuq rates 

Punt Rate CPU Q Statistics


Packets per second averaged over 10 seconds, 1 min and 5 mins
======================================================================================
 Q  |         Queue            |  Rx    |  Rx   |  Rx   |  Drop  |  Drop   |  Drop  
 no |         Name             |  10s   |  1min |  5min |  10s   |  1min   |  5min  
======================================================================================
 0  CPU_Q_DOT1X_AUTH                0        0        0        0        0        0       
 1  CPU_Q_L2_CONTROL                0        0        0        0        0        0       
 2  CPU_Q_FORUS_TRAFFIC             336      266      320      0        0        0       
 3  CPU_Q_ICMP_GEN                  0        0        0        0        0        0       
 4  CPU_Q_ROUTING_CONTROL           0        0        0        0        0        0       
 5  CPU_Q_FORUS_ADDR_RESOLUTION     0        0        0        0        0        0       
 6  CPU_Q_ICMP_REDIRECT             0        0        0        0        0        0       
 7  CPU_Q_INTER_FED_TRAFFIC         0        0        0        0        0        0       
 8  CPU_Q_L2LVX_CONTROL_PKT         0        0        0        0        0        0       
 9  CPU_Q_EWLC_CONTROL              0        0        0        0        0        0       
 10 CPU_Q_EWLC_DATA                 0        0        0        0        0        0       
 11 CPU_Q_L2LVX_DATA_PKT            0        0        0        0        0        0       
 12 CPU_Q_BROADCAST                 0        0        0        0        0        0       
 13 CPU_Q_LEARNING_CACHE_OVFL       0        0        0        0        0        0       
 14 CPU_Q_SW_FORWARDING             0        0        0        0        0        0       
 15 CPU_Q_TOPOLOGY_CONTROL          0        0        0        0        0        0       
 16 CPU_Q_PROTO_SNOOPING            0        0        0        0        0        0       
 17 CPU_Q_DHCP_SNOOPING             0        0        0        0        0        0       
 18 CPU_Q_TRANSIT_TRAFFIC           0        0        0        0        0        0       
 19 CPU_Q_RPF_FAILED                0        0        0        0        0        0       
 20 CPU_Q_MCAST_END_STATION_SERVICE 0        0        0        0        0        0       
 21 CPU_Q_LOGGING                   0        0        0        0        0        0       
 22 CPU_Q_PUNT_WEBAUTH              0        0        0        0        0        0       
 23 CPU_Q_HIGH_RATE_APP             0        0        0        0        0        0       
 24 CPU_Q_EXCEPTION                 0        0        0        0        0        0       
 25 CPU_Q_SYSTEM_CRITICAL           0        0        0        0        0        0       
 26 CPU_Q_NFL_SAMPLED_DATA          0        0        0        0        0        0       
 27 CPU_Q_LOW_LATENCY               0        0        0        0        0        0       
 28 CPU_Q_EGR_EXCEPTION             0        0        0        0        0        0       
 29 CPU_Q_FSS                       0        0        0        0        0        0       
 30 CPU_Q_MCAST_DATA                0        0        0        0        0        0       
 31 CPU_Q_GOLD_PKT                  0        0        0        0        0        0       

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

Table 4. show platform software fed switch active punt cpuq rates Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Queue Name

Name of the queue.

Rx

The rate at which the packets are received per second in 10s, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

Drop

The rate at which the packets are dropped per second in 10s, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

show platform software fed switch punt packet-capture display

To display packet capture information during high CPU utilization, use the show platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture display command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture display { detailed | hexdump}

Syntax Description

switch{switch-number| active| standby}

Displays information about a switch. You have the following options:

  • active —Displays information relating to the active switch.

  • standby —Displays information relating to the standby switch, if available.

    Note

     

    The standby keyword is not supported.

punt

Specifies punt information.

packet-capture display

Specifies information about the captured packet.

detailed

Specifies detailed information about the captured packet.

hex-dump

Specifies information about the captured packet, in hex format.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output of this command displays the periodic and persistent logs of CPU-bound packets, inband CPU traffic rates, and running CPU processes when the CPU passes a high CPU utilization threshold.

Examples

The following is a sample output from the show platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture display detailed command:


Device# show platform software fed switch active punt packet-capture display detailed 
Punt packet capturing: disabled. Buffer wrapping: disabled
Total captured so far: 101 packets. Capture capacity : 4096 packets

------ Packet Number: 1, Timestamp: 2018/09/04 23:22:10.179 ------
 interface : GigabitEthernet2/0/2 [if-id: 0x00000032] (physical)
 ether hdr : dest mac: 0100.0ccc.cccd, src mac: 2c36.f8fc.4884
 ether hdr : ethertype: 0x0032

 Doppler Frame Descriptor :
   0000000044004E04  C00F402D94510000  0000000000000100  0000400401000000
   0000000001000050  000000006D000100  0000000025836200  0000000000000000

 Packet Data Dump (length: 68 bytes) :
   01000CCCCCCD2C36  F8FC48840032AAAA  0300000C010B0000  00000080012C36F8
   FC48800000000080  012C36F8FC488080  040000140002000F  0071000000020001
   244E733E

------ Packet Number: 2, Timestamp: 2018/09/04 23:22:10.179 ------
 interface : GigabitEthernet2/0/2 [if-id: 0x00000032] (physical)
 ether hdr : dest mac: 0180.c200.0000, src mac: 2c36.f8fc.4884
 ether hdr : ethertype: 0x0026
!
!
! 

show platform software fed switch punt rates interfaces

To display the overall statistics of punt rate for all the interfaces, use the show platform software fed switch punt rates interfaces command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software fed switch {switch-number | active | standby} punt rates interfaces [interface-id]

Syntax Description

switch{switch-number| active| standby}

Displays information about the switch. You have the following options:

  • switch-number.

  • active —Displays information relating to the active switch.

  • standby —Displays information relating to the standby switch, if available.

    Note

     

    This keyword is not supported.

punt

Specifies the punt informtion.

rates

Specifies the rate at which the packets are punted.

interfaces [interface-id]

(Optional) Displays the overall statistics for an interface and also the per-queue configuration for the interface at an interval of 10 seconds.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output displays the punt rates in packets per second at intervals of 10 seconds, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software fed switch active punt rates interfaces command for all the interfaces.

Device#show plataform software fed switch active punt rates interfaces

Punt Rate on Interfaces Statistics

Packets per second averaged over 10 seconds, 1 min and 5 mins

===========================================================================================
                             |           |  Rx   |  Rx   |  Rx   |  Drop |  Drop  |  Drop
 Interface Name              |  IF_ID    |  10s  |  1min |  5min |  10s  |  1min  |  5min
===========================================================================================
 Vlan3                         0x00000034    1000    1000     520       0       0       0
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

Table 5. show platform software fed switch active punt rates interfaces Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Interface Name

Name of the physical interface.

IF_ID

ID of the physical interface.

Rx

The per second rate at which the packets are received in 10s, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

Drop

The per second rate at which the packets are dropped in 10s, 1 minute and 5 minutes.

The following is sample output from the show platform software fed switch active punt rates interfaces interface-id command for a specific interface.

Device#show platform software fed switch active punt rates interfaces 0x31
Punt Rate on Single Interfaces Statistics

Interface : Port-channel1 [if_id: 0x31]

  Received                         Dropped
  --------                         -------
   Total          : 29617            Total           : 0       
   10 sec average : 0                10 sec average  : 0       
    1 min average : 0                 1 min average  : 0       
    5 min average : 0                 5 min average  : 0       

Per CPUQ punt stats on the interface (rate averaged over 10s interval)
==========================================================================
 Q  |         Queue                 |  Recv   |  Recv  |  Drop  |  Drop  |
 no |         Name                  |  Total  |  Rate  |  Total |  Rate  |
==========================================================================
 0   CPU_Q_DOT1X_AUTH                       0        0        0        0
 1   CPU_Q_L2_CONTROL                   29519        0        0        0
 2   CPU_Q_FORUS_TRAFFIC                    0        0        0        0
 3   CPU_Q_ICMP_GEN                         0        0        0        0
 4   CPU_Q_ROUTING_CONTROL                  0        0        0        0
 5   CPU_Q_FORUS_ADDR_RESOLUTION            0        0        0        0
 6   CPU_Q_ICMP_REDIRECT                    0        0        0        0
 7   CPU_Q_INTER_FED_TRAFFIC                0        0        0        0
 8   CPU_Q_L2LVX_CONTROL_PKT                0        0        0        0
 9   CPU_Q_EWLC_CONTROL                     0        0        0        0
 10  CPU_Q_EWLC_DATA                        0        0        0        0
 11  CPU_Q_L2LVX_DATA_PKT                   0        0        0        0
 12  CPU_Q_BROADCAST                        0        0        0        0
 13  CPU_Q_LEARNING_CACHE_OVFL              0        0        0        0
 14  CPU_Q_SW_FORWARDING                    0        0        0        0
 15  CPU_Q_TOPOLOGY_CONTROL                98        0        0        0
 16  CPU_Q_PROTO_SNOOPING                   0        0        0        0
 17  CPU_Q_DHCP_SNOOPING                    0        0        0        0
 18  CPU_Q_TRANSIT_TRAFFIC                  0        0        0        0
 19  CPU_Q_RPF_FAILED                       0        0        0        0
 20  CPU_Q_MCAST_END_STATION_SERVICE        0        0        0        0
 21  CPU_Q_LOGGING                          0        0        0        0
 22  CPU_Q_PUNT_WEBAUTH                     0        0        0        0
 23  CPU_Q_HIGH_RATE_APP                    0        0        0        0
 24  CPU_Q_EXCEPTION                        0        0        0        0
 25  CPU_Q_SYSTEM_CRITICAL                  0        0        0        0
 26  CPU_Q_NFL_SAMPLED_DATA                 0        0        0        0
 27  CPU_Q_LOW_LATENCY                      0        0        0        0
 28  CPU_Q_EGR_EXCEPTION                    0        0        0        0
 29  CPU_Q_FSS                              0        0        0        0
 30  CPU_Q_MCAST_DATA                       0        0        0        0
 31  CPU_Q_GOLD_PKT                         0        0        0        0

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

Table 6. show platform software fed switch punt rates interfaces interface-id Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Queue Name

Name of the queue.

Recv Total

Total number of packets received.

Recv Rate

Per second rate at which the packets are received.

Drop Total

Total number of packets dropped.

Drop Rate

Per second rate at which the packets are dropped.

show platform software ilpower

To display the inline power details of all the PoE ports on the device, use the show platform software ilpower command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software ilpower { details | port { GigabitEthernet interface-number } | system slot-number }

Syntax Description

details

Displays inline power details for all the interfaces.

port

Displays inline power port configuration.

GigabitEthernet interface-number

The GigabitEthernet interface number. Values range from 0 to 9.

system slot-number

Displays inline power system configuration.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

The command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software ilpower details command:

Device# show platform software ilpower details
ILP Port Configuration for interface Gi1/0/1
    Initialization Done:   Yes
    ILP Supported:         Yes
    ILP Enabled:           Yes
    POST:                  Yes
    Detect On:             No
    Powered Device Detected            No
    Powered Device Class Done          No
    Cisco Powered Device:              No
    Power is On:           No
    Power Denied:          No
    Powered Device Type:               Null
    Powerd Device Class:              Null
    Power State:           NULL
    Current State:         NGWC_ILP_DETECTING_S
    Previous State:        NGWC_ILP_SHUT_OFF_S
    Requested Power in milli watts:       0
    Short Circuit Detected:                 0
    Short Circuit Count:             0
    Cisco Powerd Device Detect Count: 0
    Spare Pair mode:       0
        IEEE Detect:       Stopped
        IEEE Short:        Stopped
        Link Down:         Stopped
        Voltage sense:            Stopped
    Spare Pair Architecture:       1
    Signal Pair Power allocation in milli watts: 0
    Spare Pair Power On:   0
    Powered Device power state:        0
    Timer:
        Power Good:        Stopped
        Power Denied:      Stopped
        Cisco Powered Device Detect:   Stopped


show platform software memory

To display memory information for a specified switch, use the show platform software memory command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software memory [chunk | database | messaging] process slot

Syntax Description

Syntax Description

chunk

(Optional) Displays chunk memory information for the specified process.

database

(Optional) Displays database memory information for the specified process.

messaging

(Optional) Displays messaging memory information for the specified process.

The information displayed is for internal debugging purposes only.

process

Level that is being set. Options include:

  • bt-logger —The Binary-Tracing Logger process.

  • btrace-manager —The Btrace Manager process.

  • chassis-manager —The Chassis Manager process.

  • cli-agent —The CLI Agent process.

  • cmm —The CMM process.

  • dbm —The Database Manager process.

  • dmiauthd —The DMI Authentication Daemon process.

  • emd —The Environmental Monitoring process.

  • fed —The Forwarding Engine Driver process.

  • forwarding-manager —The Forwarding Manager process.

  • geo —The Geo Manager process.

  • gnmi —The GNMI process.

  • host-manager —The Host Manager process.

  • interface-manager —The Interface Manager process.

  • iomd —The Input/Output Module daemon (IOMd) process.

  • ios —The IOS process.

  • iox-manager —The IOx Manager process.

  • license-manager —The License Manager process.

  • logger —The Logging Manager process.

  • mdt-pubd —The Model Defined Telemetry Publisher process.

  • ndbman —The Netconf DataBase Manager process.

  • nesd —The Network Element Synchronizer Daemon process.

  • nginx —The Nginx Webserver process.

  • nif_mgr —The NIF Manager process.

  • platform-mgr —The Platform Manager process.

  • pluggable-services —The Pluggable Services process.

  • replication-mgr —The Replication Manager process.

  • shell-manager —The Shell Manager process.

  • sif —The Stack Interface (SIF) Manager process.

  • smd —The Session Manager process.

  • stack-mgr —The Stack Manager process.

  • syncfd —The SyncmDaemon process.

  • table-manager —The Table Manager Server.

  • thread-test —The Multithread Manager process.

  • virt-manager —The Virtualization Manager process.

slot

Hardware slot where the process for which the level is set, is running. Options include:

  • number —Number of the SIP slot of the hardware module where the level is set. For instance, if you want to specify the SIP in SIP slot 2 of the switch, enter 2.

  • SIP-slot / SPA-bay—Number of the SIP switch slot and the number of the shared port adapter (SPA) bay of that SIP. For instance, if you want to specify the SPA in bay 2 of the SIP in switch slot 3, enter 3/2.

  • F0 —The Embedded Service Processor slot 0.

  • FP active —The active Embedded Service Processor.

  • R0 —The route processor in slot 0.

  • RP active —The active route processor.

  • RP standby —The standby route processor.

  • switch active —The active switch.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is a sample output displaying the abbreviated (brief keyword) memory information for the Forwarding Manager process for Cisco Catalyst 9000 Series ESP slot 0:


Device# show platform software memory forwarding-manager switch 1 fp active brief
 
  module                  allocated     requested     allocs        frees
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Summary                 5702540       5619788       121888        116716
  AOM object              1920374       1920310       4             0
  AOM links array         880379        880315        4             0
  smc_message             819575        819511        4             0
  AOM update state        640380        640316        4             0
  dpidb-config            208776        203544        351           24
  fman-infra-avl          178016        153680        1521          0
  AOM batch               152373        152309        4             0
  AOM asynchronous conte  128388        128324        4             0
  AOM basic data          124824        124760        5             1
  eventutil               118939        118299        50            10
  AOM tree node           96465         96385         5             0
  AOM tree root           72377         72313         4             0
  acl                     36090         31914         504           243
  fman-infra-ipc          35326         24366         115097        114412
  AOM uplink update node  32386         32322         4             0
  unknown                 30528         23808         424           4
  uipeer                  27232         27152         5             0
  fman-infra-qos          26872         24712         164           29
  cce-class               19427         15411         251           0
  l2 control protocol     15472         12896         325           164
  fman-infra-cce          15272         13576         106           0
  smc_channel             15223         15159         4             0
  unknown                 14208         8736          447           105
  chunk                   12513         12033         33            3
  cce-bind                8496          7552          82            23
  MATM mac entry          8040          5928          544           412
  adj                     7064          6312          157           110
  route-pfx               6116          5412          157           113
  Filter_rules            4912          4896          1             0
  fman-infra-dpidb        4130          2338          112           0
  SMC Buffer              3794          3202          43            6
  urpf-list               3028          2100          85            27
  lookup                  2480          2160          30            10
  MATM mac table          2432          1600          148           96
  cdllib                  1688          1672          1             0
  route-tbl               1600          1264          21            0
  FNF Flowdef             1492          1460          3             1
  acl-ref                 1120          1024          8             2
  cgm-lib                 1120          880           410           395
  pbr_if_cfg              1088          976           205           198
  FNF Monitor             1048          1032          1             0
  pbr_routemap            960           864           18            12
!  
!
!

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

Table 7. show platform software memory brief Field Descriptions

Field

Description

module

Name of submodule.

allocated

Memory, allocated in bytes.

requested

Number of bytes requested by application.

allocs

Number of discrete allocation event attempts.

frees

Number of free events.

show platform software process list

To display the list of running processes on a platform, use the show platform software process list command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software process list switch {switch-number | active | standby} {0 | F0 | R0} [name process-name | process-id process-ID | sort memory | summary]

Syntax Description

switch switch-number

Displays information about the switch. Valid values for switch-number argument are from 0 to 9.

active

Displays information about the active instance of the switch.

standby

Displays information about the standby instance of the switch.

0

Displays information about the shared port adapters (SPA) Interface Processor slot 0.

F0

Displays information about the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

R0

Displays information about the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

name process-name

(Optional) Displays information about the specified process. Enter the process name.

process-id process-ID

(Optional) Displays information about the specified process ID. Enter the process ID.

sort

(Optional) Displays information sorted according to processes.

memory

(Optional) Displays information sorted according to memory.

summary

(Optional) Displays a summary of the process memory of the host device.

Command Modes

Privileged EXE (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

The Size column in the output was modified to display Resident Set Size (RSS) in KB.

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

The command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software process list switch active R0 command:

Switch# show platform software process list switch active R0 summary
      
Total number of processes: 278
  Running          : 2
  Sleeping         : 276
  Disk sleeping    : 0
  Zombies          : 0
  Stopped          : 0
  Paging           : 0

  Up time          : 8318
  Idle time        : 0
  User time        : 216809
  Kernel time      : 78931

  Virtual memory   : 12933324800
  Pages resident   : 634061
  Major page faults: 2228
  Minor page faults: 3491744

  Architecture     : mips64
  Memory (kB)
    Physical       : 3976852
    Total          : 3976852
    Used           : 2766952
    Free           : 1209900
    Active         : 2141344
    Inactive       : 1589672
    Inact-dirty    : 0
    Inact-clean    : 0
    Dirty          : 4
    AnonPages      : 1306800
    Bounce         : 0
    Cached         : 1984688
    Commit Limit   : 1988424
    Committed As   : 3358528
    High Total     : 0
    High Free      : 0
    Low Total      : 3976852
    Low Free       : 1209900
    Mapped         : 520528
    NFS Unstable   : 0
    Page Tables    : 17328
    Slab           : 0
    VMmalloc Chunk : 1069542588
    VMmalloc Total : 1069547512
    VMmalloc Used  : 2588
    Writeback      : 0
    HugePages Total: 0
    HugePages Free : 0
    HugePages Rsvd : 0
    HugePage Size  : 2048

  Swap (kB)
    Total          : 0
    Used           : 0
    Free           : 0
    Cached         : 0

  Buffers (kB)     : 439528

  Load Average
    1-Min          : 1.13
    5-Min          : 1.18
    15-Min         : 0.92


Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software process list switch active R0 command:

Device# show platform software process list switch active R0 
Name                     Pid    PPid  Group Id  Status    Priority  Size        
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
systemd                    1       0         1  S               20  7892        
kthreadd                   2       0         0  S               20  0           
ksoftirqd/0                3       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/0:0H               5       2         0  S                0  0           
rcu_sched                  7       2         0  S               20  0           
rcu_bh                     8       2         0  S               20  0           
migration/0                9       2         0  S       4294967196  0           
migration/1               10       2         0  S       4294967196  0           
ksoftirqd/1               11       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/1:0H              13       2         0  S                0  0           
migration/2               14       2         0  S       4294967196  0           
ksoftirqd/2               15       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/2:0H              17       2         0  S                0  0           
systemd-journal          221       1       221  S               20  4460        
kworker/1:3              246       2         0  S               20  0           
systemd-udevd            253       1       253  S               20  5648        
kvm-irqfd-clean          617       2         0  S                0  0           
scsi_eh_6                620       2         0  S               20  0           
scsi_tmf_6               621       2         0  S                0  0           
usb-storage              622       2         0  S               20  0           
scsi_eh_7                625       2         0  S               20  0           
scsi_tmf_7               626       2         0  S                0  0           
usb-storage              627       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/7:1              630       2         0  S               20  0           
bioset                   631       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/3:1H             648       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/0:1H             667       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/1:1H             668       2         0  S                0  0           
bioset                   669       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/6:2              698       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/2:2              699       2         0  S               20  0           
kworker/2:1H             703       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/7:1H             748       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/5:1H             749       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/6:1H             754       2         0  S                0  0           
kworker/7:2              779       2         0  S               20  0           
auditd                   838       1       838  S               16  2564       
.
.
.

Examples

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

Table 8. show platform software process list Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Name

Displays the command name associated with the process. Different threads in the same process may have different command values.

Pid

Displays the process ID that is used by the operating system to identify and keep track of the processes.

PPid

Displays process ID of the parent process.

Group Id

Displays the group ID

Status

Displays the process status in human readable form.

Priority

Displays the negated scheduling priority.

Size

Prior to Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1:

Displays Virtual Memory size.

From Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1 onwards:

Displays the Resident Set Size (RSS) that shows how much memory is allocated to that process in the RAM.

show platform software process memory

To display the amount of memory used by each system process, use the show platform software process memory command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform process memory switch{ switch-number| active| standby} { 0| F0| FP| R0} { all[ sorted| virtual[ sorted] ] | name process-name{ maps| smaps[ summary] } | process-id process-id{ maps| smaps[ summary] } }

Syntax Description

switch switch-number

Displays information about the switch. Enter the switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance of the device.

standby

Specifies the standby instance of the device.

0

Specifies the Shared Port Adapter (SPA) Interface Processor slot 0.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

FP

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP).

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

all

Lists all processes.

sorted

(Optional) Sorts the output based on Resident Set Size (RSS).

virtual

(Optional) Specifies virtual memory.

name process-name

Specifies a process name.

maps

Specifies the memory maps of a process.

smaps summary

Specifies the smaps summary of a process.

process-id process-id

Specifies a process identifier.

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC(#)

Examples:

The following is a sample output from the show platform software process memory active R0 all command:

Device# show platform software process memory switch active R0 all

   Pid       RSS       PSS      Heap    Shared   Private              Name  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1      4876      3229      1064      1808      3068           systemd  
   118      3184      1327       132      2352       832   systemd-journal  
   159      3008      1191       396      1996      1012     systemd-udevd  
   407      3192      1262       132      2196       996       dbus-daemon  
  3406      4772      3064       264      1940      2832          virtlogd  
  3411      5712      3474      2964      2344      3368       droputil.sh  
  3416      2588       358       132      2336       252       libvirtd.sh  
  3420      5708      3484      2976      2308      3400      reflector.sh  
  3424      1804       263       132      1632       172            xinetd  
  3425       964       118       132       872        92             sleep  
  3434      3060       844       528      2304       756            oom.sh  
  3442      2068       606       132      1604       464           rpcbind  
  3485      2380       845       132      1636       744         rpc.statd  
  3486      1632       338       132      1348       284   boothelper_evt.  
  3493      1136       156       132      1004       132       inotifywait  
  3504      2048       753       132      1372       676        rpc.mountd  
  3584      2868       620        36      2384       484             rotee  
  3649      1032       116       132       944        88             sleep  
  3705      2784       613        36      2296       488             rotee  
  3718      2856       610        36      2376       480             rotee  
  3759      1292       184       132      1136       156       inotifywait  
  3787      4256      2040      1640      2300      1956          iptbl.sh  
  3894      2948       637        36      2460       488             rotee  
  4017      1380       175       132      1236       144       inotifywait  
  4866      1820       287       132      1624       196            xinetd  
  5887      1692       257       132      1508       184            xinetd  
  5891      7248      4984      4584      2348      4900   rollback_timer.  
  5893      1764       257       132      1588       176            xinetd  
  6031      2804       601        36      2332       472             rotee  
  6037      1228       163       132      1092       136       inotifywait  
  6077      4736      3389      2992      1368      3368           psvp.sh  
  6115      1620       476        36      1152       468             rotee  
  6122       624       149       132       480       144       inotifywait  
  6127      5440      4077      3680      1384      4056            pvp.sh  
  6165      1736       592        36      1152       584             rotee  
  6245       624       149       132       480       144       inotifywait  
  6353      2592      1260       924      1352      1240           pman.sh  
  6470      1632       488        36      1152       480             rotee  
  6499      2588      1262       924      1348      1240           pman.sh  
  6666      1640       496        36      1152       488             rotee  
  6718      2584      1258       800      1348      1236           pman.sh  
  6736      8360      7020      6640      1360      7000   auto_upgrade_cl  
  6909      1636       492        36      1152       484             rotee  
  6955      2588      1262       928      1348      1240           pman.sh  
  7029      2196       679        40      1552       644   auto_upgrade_se  
  7149      1636       492        36      1152       484             rotee  
  7224     13200      4595        48      9368      3832         bt_logger  
  7295      2588      1262       800      1348      1240           pman.sh  
.
.
.

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

Table 9. show platform software process memory Field Descriptions

Field

Description

PID

Displays the process ID that is used by the operating system to identify and keep track of the processes.

RSS

Displays the Resident Set Size (in kilobytes (KB)) that shows how much memory is allocated to that process in the RAM.

PSS

Displays the Proportional Set Size of a process. This is the count of pages it has in memory, where each page is divided by the number of processes sharing it.

Heap

Displays where all user-allocated memory is located.

Shared

Shared clean + Shared dirty

Private

Private clean + Private dirty

Name

Displays the command name associated with the process. Different threads in the same process may have different command values.

show platform software process slot switch

To display platform software process switch information, use the show platform software process slot switch command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software process slot switch {switch-number | active | standby} {0 | F0 | R0} monitor [cycles no-of-times [interval delay [lines number]]]

Syntax Description

switch-number

Switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance.

standby

Specifies the standby instance.

0

Specifies the shared port adapter (SPA) interface processor slot 0.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

monitor

Monitors the running processes.

cycles no-of-tmes

(Optional) Sets the number of times to run monitor command. Valid values are from 1 to 4294967295. The default is 5.

interval delay

(Optional) Sets a delay after each . Valid values are from 0 to 300. The default is 3.

lines number

(Optional) Sets the number of lines of output displayed. Valid values are from 0 to 512. The default is 0.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output of the show platform software process slot switch and show processes cpu platform monitor location commands display the output of the Linux top command. The output of these commands display Free memory and Used memory as displayed by the Linux top command. The values displayed for the Free memory and Used memory by these commands do not match the values displayed by the output of other platform-memory related CLIs.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform software process slot monitor command:


Switch# show platform software process slot switch active R0 monitor

top - 00:01:52 up 1 day, 11:20,  0 users,  load average: 0.50, 0.68, 0.83
Tasks: 311 total,   2 running, 309 sleeping,   0 stopped,   0 zombie
Cpu(s):  7.4%us,  3.3%sy,  0.0%ni, 89.2%id,  0.0%wa,  0.0%hi,  0.1%si,  0.0%st
Mem:   3976844k total,  3955036k used,    21808k free,   419312k buffers
Swap:        0k total,        0k used,        0k free,  1946764k cached

  PID USER      PR  NI  VIRT  RES  SHR S %CPU %MEM    TIME+  COMMAND            
 5693 root      20   0  3448 1368  912 R    7  0.0   0:00.07 top                
17546 root      20   0 2044m 244m  79m S    7  6.3 186:49.08 fed main event     
18662 root      20   0 1806m 678m 263m S    5 17.5 215:32.38 linux_iosd-imag    
30276 root      20   0  171m  42m  33m S    5  1.1 125:06.77 repm               
17835 root      20   0  935m  74m  63m S    4  1.9  82:28.31 sif_mgr            
18534 root      20   0  182m 150m  10m S    2  3.9   8:12.08 smand              
    1 root      20   0  8440 4740 2184 S    0  0.1   0:09.52 systemd            
    2 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00 kthreadd           
    3 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:02.86 ksoftirqd/0        
    5 root       0 -20     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00 kworker/0:0H       
    7 root      RT   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:01.44 migration/0        
    8 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00 rcu_bh             
    9 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:23.08 rcu_sched          
   10 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:58.04 rcuc/0             
   11 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0  21:35.60 rcuc/1             
   12 root      RT   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:01.33 migration/1  


show platform software status control-processor

To display platform software control-processor status, use the show platform software status control-processor command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software status control-processor [brief]

Syntax Description

brief

(Optional) Displays a summary of the platform control-processor status.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show platform memory software status control-processor command:

Switch# show platform software status control-processor
        
2-RP0: online, statistics updated 7 seconds ago
Load Average: healthy
  1-Min: 1.00, status: healthy, under 5.00
  5-Min: 1.21, status: healthy, under 5.00
  15-Min: 0.90, status: healthy, under 5.00
Memory (kb): healthy
  Total: 3976852
  Used: 2766284 (70%), status: healthy
  Free: 1210568 (30%)
  Committed: 3358008 (84%), under 95%
Per-core Statistics
CPU0: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.40, System:  1.70, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 93.80
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.10, IOwait:  0.00
CPU1: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  3.80, System:  1.20, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 94.90
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.10, IOwait:  0.00
CPU2: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  7.00, System:  1.10, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 91.89
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU3: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.49, System:  0.69, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 94.80
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
          
3-RP0: unknown, statistics updated 2 seconds ago
Load Average: healthy
  1-Min: 0.24, status: healthy, under 5.00
  5-Min: 0.27, status: healthy, under 5.00
  15-Min: 0.32, status: healthy, under 5.00
Memory (kb): healthy
  Total: 3976852
  Used: 2706768 (68%), status: healthy
  Free: 1270084 (32%)
  Committed: 3299332 (83%), under 95%
Per-core Statistics
CPU0: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.50, System:  1.20, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 94.20
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.10, IOwait:  0.00
CPU1: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  5.20, System:  0.50, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 94.29
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU2: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  3.60, System:  0.70, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 95.69
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU3: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  3.00, System:  0.60, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 96.39
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00

4-RP0: unknown, statistics updated 2 seconds ago
Load Average: healthy
  1-Min: 0.21, status: healthy, under 5.00
  5-Min: 0.24, status: healthy, under 5.00
  15-Min: 0.24, status: healthy, under 5.00
Memory (kb): healthy
  Total: 3976852
  Used: 1452404 (37%), status: healthy
  Free: 2524448 (63%)
  Committed: 1675120 (42%), under 95%
Per-core Statistics
CPU0: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  2.30, System:  0.40, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 97.30
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU1: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.19, System:  0.69, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 95.10
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU2: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.79, System:  0.79, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 94.40
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU3: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  2.10, System:  0.40, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 97.50
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00

9-RP0: unknown, statistics updated 4 seconds ago
Load Average: healthy
  1-Min: 0.20, status: healthy, under 5.00
  5-Min: 0.35, status: healthy, under 5.00
  15-Min: 0.35, status: healthy, under 5.00
Memory (kb): healthy
  Total: 3976852
  Used: 1451328 (36%), status: healthy
  Free: 2525524 (64%)
  Committed: 1675932 (42%), under 95%
Per-core Statistics
CPU0: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  1.90, System:  0.50, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 97.60
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU1: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  4.39, System:  0.19, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 95.40
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU2: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  5.70, System:  1.00, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 93.30
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.00, IOwait:  0.00
CPU3: CPU Utilization (percentage of time spent)
  User:  1.30, System:  0.60, Nice:  0.00, Idle: 98.00
  IRQ:  0.00, SIRQ:  0.10, IOwait:  0.00


The following is sample output from the show platform memory software status control-processor brief command:

Switch# show platform software status control-processor brief

Load Average
 Slot  Status  1-Min  5-Min 15-Min
2-RP0 Healthy   1.10   1.21   0.91
3-RP0 Healthy   0.23   0.27   0.31
4-RP0 Healthy   0.11   0.21   0.22
9-RP0 Healthy   0.10   0.30   0.34

Memory (kB)
 Slot  Status    Total     Used (Pct)     Free (Pct) Committed (Pct)
2-RP0 Healthy  3976852  2766956 (70%)  1209896 (30%)   3358352 (84%)
3-RP0 Healthy  3976852  2706824 (68%)  1270028 (32%)   3299276 (83%)
4-RP0 Healthy  3976852  1451888 (37%)  2524964 (63%)   1675076 (42%)
9-RP0 Healthy  3976852  1451580 (37%)  2525272 (63%)   1675952 (42%)

CPU Utilization
 Slot  CPU   User System   Nice   Idle    IRQ   SIRQ IOwait
2-RP0    0   4.10   2.00   0.00  93.80   0.00   0.10   0.00
         1   4.60   1.00   0.00  94.30   0.00   0.10   0.00
         2   6.50   1.10   0.00  92.40   0.00   0.00   0.00
         3   5.59   1.19   0.00  93.20   0.00   0.00   0.00
3-RP0    0   2.80   1.20   0.00  95.90   0.00   0.10   0.00
         1   4.49   1.29   0.00  94.20   0.00   0.00   0.00
         2   5.30   1.60   0.00  93.10   0.00   0.00   0.00
         3   5.80   1.20   0.00  93.00   0.00   0.00   0.00
4-RP0    0   1.30   0.80   0.00  97.89   0.00   0.00   0.00
         1   1.30   0.20   0.00  98.50   0.00   0.00   0.00
         2   5.60   0.80   0.00  93.59   0.00   0.00   0.00
         3   5.09   0.19   0.00  94.70   0.00   0.00   0.00
9-RP0    0   3.99   0.69   0.00  95.30   0.00   0.00   0.00
         1   2.60   0.70   0.00  96.70   0.00   0.00   0.00
         2   4.49   0.89   0.00  94.60   0.00   0.00   0.00
         3   2.60   0.20   0.00  97.20   0.00   0.00   0.00


show platform software thread list

To display the list of threads on a platform, use the show platform software thread list command in privileged EXEC mode.

show platform software thread list switch{ switch-number| active| standby} { 0| F0| FP active| R0} pname{ cdman| vidman| all} tname{ main| pktio| rt| all}

Syntax Description

switch switch-number

Displays information about the switch. Enter the switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance of the device.

standby

Specifies standby instance of the device.

0

Specifies the Shared Port Adapter (SPA) Interface Processor slot 0.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

FP active

Specifies the active instance of Embedded Service Processor (ESP).

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

pname

Specifies a process name. The possible values are cdman , vidman , and all .

tname

Specifies a thread name. The possible values are main , pktio , rt , and all .

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC(#)

Examples:

The following is sample output from the show platform software thread list switch active R0 pname cdman tname all command:

Device# show platform software thread list switch active R0 pname cdman tname all  

Name           Tid    PPid  Group Id  Core    Vcswch   Nvcswch  Status    Priority       TIME+  Size        
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
cdman         8407    7295      8407     1         0         0  S               20       12309  36976       

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

Table 10. show platform software thread list Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Name

Displays the command name associated with the process. Different threads in the same process may have different command values.

Tid

Displays the process ID.

PPid

Displays the process ID of the parent process.

Group Id

Displays the group ID.

Core

Displays processor information.

Vcswch

Displays the number of voluntary context switches.

Nvcswch

Displays the number of non-voluntary context switches.

Status

Displays the process status in human readable form.

Priority

Displays the negated scheduling priority.

TIME+

Displays the time since the start of the process.

Size

Displays the Resident Set Size (in kilobytes (KB)) that shows how much memory is allocated to that process in the RAM.

show processes cpu platform

To display information about the CPU utilization of the IOS-XE processes, use the show processes cpu platform command in privileged EXEC mode.

show processes cpu platform [ [ sorted[ 1min| 5min| 5sec] ] location switch{ switch-number| active| standby} { F0| FP active| R0| RP active} ]

Syntax Description

sorted

(Optional) Displays output sorted based on percentage of CPU usage on a platform.

1min

(Optional) Sorts based on 1 minute intervals.

5min

(Optional) Sorts based on 5 minute intervals.

5sec

(Optional) Sorts based on 5 second intervals.

location

Specifies the Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) location.

switch switch-number

Displays information about the switch. Enter the switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance of the device.

standby

Specifies the standby instance of the device.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

FP active

Specifies active instances on the Embedded Service Processor (ESP).

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

RP active

Specifies active instances on the Route Processor (RP).

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Examples:

The following is sample output from the show processes cpu platform command:

Device# show processes cpu platform 

CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  3%, five minutes:  2%
Core 0: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  2%, five minutes:  2%
Core 1: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 2: CPU utilization for five seconds:  3%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 3: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  5%, five minutes:  2%
   Pid    PPid    5Sec    1Min    5Min  Status        Size  Name                  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1       0      0%      0%      0%  S             4876  systemd               
     2       0      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kthreadd              
     3       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/0           
     5       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/0:0H          
     7       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rcu_sched             
     8       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rcu_bh                
     9       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/0           
    10       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/0            
    11       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/1            
    12       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/1           
    13       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/1           
    15       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/1:0H          
    16       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/2            
    17       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/2           
    18       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/2           
    20       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/2:0H          
    21       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/3            
    22       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/3           
    23       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/3           
    24       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/3:0           
    25       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/3:0H          
    26       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kdevtmpfs             
    27       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  netns                 
    28       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  perf                  
    29       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  khungtaskd            
    30       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  writeback             
    31       2      7%      8%      8%  S                0  ksmd                  
    32       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  khugepaged            
    33       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  crypto                
    34       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  bioset                
    35       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kblockd               
    36       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ata_sff               
    37       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rpciod                
    63       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kswapd0               
    64       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  vmstat                
    65       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  fsnotify_mark         
.
.
.

The following is sample output from the show processes cpu platform sorted 5min location switch 5 R0

Device# show processes cpu platform sorted 5min location switch 5 R0

CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 0: CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 1: CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 2: CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 3: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  2%, five minutes:  1%
Core 4: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 5: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 6: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 7: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
   Pid    PPid    5Sec    1Min    5Min  Status        Size  Name                
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 16358   15516      4%      4%      4%  S           221376  fed main event      
 14062   12756      1%      1%      1%  S            52140  sif_mgr             
 32105    8618      0%      0%      0%  S              260  inotifywait         
 31396   31393      0%      0%      0%  S            36516  python2.7           
 31393   31271      0%      0%      0%  S             2744  rdope.sh            
 31319       1      0%      0%      0%  S             2648  rotee               
 31271       1      0%      0%      0%  S             3852  pman.sh             
 29671       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/u16:0       
 29341   29329      0%      0%      0%  S             1780  sntp                
 29329       1      0%      0%      0%  S             2788  stack_sntp.sh  
.
.
.

The following is sample output from the show processes cpu platform location switch 7 R0 command:

Device# show processes cpu platform location switch 7 R0

CPU utilization for five seconds:  3%, one minute:  3%, five minutes:  3%
Core 0: CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  5%, five minutes:  5%
Core 1: CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute: 11%, five minutes:  5%
Core 2: CPU utilization for five seconds: 22%, one minute:  7%, five minutes:  6%
Core 3: CPU utilization for five seconds:  5%, one minute:  6%, five minutes:  6%
Core 4: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 5: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 6: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  0%
Core 7: CPU utilization for five seconds:  0%, one minute:  0%, five minutes:  6%
   Pid    PPid    5Sec    1Min    5Min  Status        Size  Name                
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1       0      0%      0%      0%  S             8044  systemd             
     2       0      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kthreadd            
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show processes cpu platform history

To display information about the CPU usage history of a system, use the show processes cpu platform history command.

show processes cpu platform history[ 1min| 5min| 5sec| 60min] location switch{ switch-number| active| standby} { 0| F0| FP active| R0}

1min

(Optional) Displays CPU utilization history with 1 minute intervals.

5min

(Optional) Displays CPU utilization history with 5 minute intervals.

5sec

(Optional) Displays CPU utilization history with 5 second intervals.

60min

(Optional) Displays CPU utilization history with 60 minute intervals.

location

Specifies the Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) location.

switch switch-number

Displays information about the switch. Enter the switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance of the device.

standby

Specifies the standby instance of the device.

0

Specifies the Shared Port Adapter (SPA) Interface Processor slot 0.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

FP active

Specifies active instances on the Embedded Service Processor (ESP).

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

Command History

Release

Modification

Cisco IOS XE Gibraltar 16.10.1

This command was introduced.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Examples:

The following is sample output from the show processes cpu platform command:

Device# show processes cpu platform 

CPU utilization for five seconds:  1%, one minute:  3%, five minutes:  2%
Core 0: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  2%, five minutes:  2%
Core 1: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 2: CPU utilization for five seconds:  3%, one minute:  1%, five minutes:  1%
Core 3: CPU utilization for five seconds:  2%, one minute:  5%, five minutes:  2%
   Pid    PPid    5Sec    1Min    5Min  Status        Size  Name                  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
     1       0      0%      0%      0%  S             4876  systemd               
     2       0      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kthreadd              
     3       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/0           
     5       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/0:0H          
     7       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rcu_sched             
     8       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rcu_bh                
     9       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/0           
    10       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/0            
    11       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/1            
    12       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/1           
    13       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/1           
    15       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/1:0H          
    16       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/2            
    17       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/2           
    18       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/2           
    20       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/2:0H          
    21       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  watchdog/3            
    22       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  migration/3           
    23       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ksoftirqd/3           
    24       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/3:0           
    25       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kworker/3:0H          
    26       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kdevtmpfs             
    27       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  netns                 
    28       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  perf                  
    29       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  khungtaskd            
    30       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  writeback             
    31       2      7%      8%      8%  S                0  ksmd                  
    32       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  khugepaged            
    33       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  crypto                
    34       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  bioset                
    35       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kblockd               
    36       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  ata_sff               
    37       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  rpciod                
    63       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  kswapd0               
    64       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  vmstat                
    65       2      0%      0%      0%  S                0  fsnotify_mark         
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The following is sample output from the show processes cpu platform history 5sec command:

Device# show processes cpu platform history 5sec

5 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
10 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
15 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
20 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
25 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
30 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
35 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
40 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
45 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
50 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
55 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
60 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
65 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
70 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
75 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
80 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
85 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
90 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
95 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
100 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
105 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
110 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
115 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
120 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
125 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
130 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
135 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
140 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
145 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 1%
150 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
155 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
160 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
165 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
170 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
175 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
180 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
185 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
190 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
195 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
200 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
205 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
210 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
215 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
220 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
225 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
230 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
235 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
240 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
245 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
250 seconds ago, CPU utilization: 0%
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show processes cpu platform monitor

To displays information about the CPU utilization of the IOS-XE processes, use the show processes cpu platform monitor command in privileged EXEC mode.

show processes cpu platform monitor location switch {switch-number | active | standby} {0 | F0 | R0}

Syntax Description

location

Displays information about the Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) location.

switch

Specifies the switch.

switch-number

Switch number.

active

Specifies the active instance.

standby

Specifies the standby instance.

0

Specifies the shared port adapter (SPA) interface processor slot 0.

F0

Specifies the Embedded Service Processor (ESP) slot 0.

R0

Specifies the Route Processor (RP) slot 0.

Command Modes

Privileged EXEC (#)

Command History

Release Modification

Cisco IOS XE Everest 16.5.1a

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The output of the show platform software process slot switch and show processes cpu platform monitor location commands display the output of the Linux top command. The output of these commands display Free memory and Used memory as displayed by the Linux top command. The values displayed for the Free memory and Used memory by these commands do not match the values displayed by the output of other platform-memory related CLIs.

Examples

The following is sample output from the show processes cpu monitor location switch active R0 command:

Switch# show processes cpu platform monitor location switch active R0 

top - 00:04:21 up 1 day, 11:22,  0 users,  load average: 0.42, 0.60, 0.78
Tasks: 312 total,   4 running, 308 sleeping,   0 stopped,   0 zombie
Cpu(s):  7.4%us,  3.3%sy,  0.0%ni, 89.2%id,  0.0%wa,  0.0%hi,  0.1%si,  0.0%st
Mem:   3976844k total,  3956928k used,    19916k free,   419312k buffers
Swap:        0k total,        0k used,        0k free,  1947036k cached

  PID USER      PR  NI  VIRT  RES  SHR S %CPU %MEM    TIME+  COMMAND            
 6294 root      20   0  3448 1368  912 R    9  0.0   0:00.07 top                
17546 root      20   0 2044m 244m  79m S    7  6.3 187:02.07 fed main event     
30276 root      20   0  171m  42m  33m S    7  1.1 125:15.54 repm               
   16 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    5  0.0  22:07.92 rcuc/2             
   21 root      20   0     0    0    0 R    5  0.0  22:13.24 rcuc/3             
18662 root      20   0 1806m 678m 263m R    5 17.5 215:47.59 linux_iosd-imag    
   11 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    4  0.0  21:37.41 rcuc/1             
10333 root      20   0  6420 3916 1492 S    4  0.1   4:47.03 btrace_rotate.s    
   10 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    2  0.0   0:58.13 rcuc/0             
 6304 root      20   0   776   12    0 R    2  0.0   0:00.01 ls                 
17835 root      20   0  935m  74m  63m S    2  1.9  82:34.07 sif_mgr            
    1 root      20   0  8440 4740 2184 S    0  0.1   0:09.52 systemd            
    2 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00 kthreadd           
    3 root      20   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:02.86 ksoftirqd/0        
    5 root       0 -20     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00 kworker/0:0H       
    7 root      RT   0     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:01.44 migration/0 


show processes memory

To display the amount of memory used by each system process, use the show processes memory command in privileged EXEC mode.

show processes memory [ process-id | sorted [ a