Reference Guide

Supported Releases 10.3.0E or later
show hardware forwarding-table mode
Displays the current hardware forwarding table mode, and the mode after the next boot.
Syntax
show hardware forwarding-table mode
Parameters None
Defaults None
Command Mode EXEC
Usage Information Use this command to view the current hardware forwarding table mode and the mode after the next boot.
Example
OS10# show hardware forwarding-table mode
Current Settings Next-boot Settings
Mode default-mode scaled-l3-hosts
L2 MAC Entries : 163840 98304
L3 Host Entries : 147456 212992
L3 Route Entries : 16384 98304
Supported Releases 10.3.0E or later
show hardware forwarding-table mode all
Displays table sizes for the available hardware forwarding table modes.
Syntax
show hardware forwarding-table mode all
Parameters None
Defaults None
Command Mode EXEC
Usage Information Use this command to view details of all the forwarding-table modes.
Example
OS10# show hardware forwarding-table mode all
Mode default scaled-l2 scaled-l3-routes scaled-l3-hosts
L2 MAC Entries 163840 294912 32768 98304
L3 Host Entries 147456 16384 16384 212992
L3 Route Entries 16384 16384 131072 98304
Supported Releases 10.3.0E or later
Security
To help secure networks against unauthorized access, OS10 supports remote authentication dial-in service (RADIUS) client/server
authentication mechanism. The system acts as a RADIUS client and sends authentication requests to a RADIUS server that contains all
user authentication and network service access information.
A RADIUS server provides accounting, authentication (user credentials verication), and authorization (user privilege-level) services. You
can congure the security protocol used for dierent login methods and users. The RADIUS server uses a list of authentication methods to
dene the types of authentication and the sequence in which they apply. By default, only the local authentication method is used.
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System management