BitStorm 4800 Express Model 4821-A2 Command Line Interface Reference Document No.
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Contents About This Guide 1 2 Document Purpose and Intended Audience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1ix Document Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1ix Product-Related Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1x System Concepts Active Configurations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1 System Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 3 Commands Typographic Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1 Back . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-1 Clear. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-2 Clear Bridge ii ........................................ 3-2 Clear Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Configure Interface DSL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-19 Configure Interface DSL ATM VC Create . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-20 Configure Interface DSL ATM VC Delete .................. 3-21 Configure Interface DSL ATM Encapsulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-21 Configure Interface DSL Line-Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-22 Configure Interface DSL Linkupdown Trap ................ 3-23 .........................
Contents Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max Interleave Delay Downstream 3-39 Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max Interleave Delay Upstream3-39 Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max-SNR-Margin-Downstream 40 Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max-SNR-Margin-Upstream 3-40 Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max-Speed-Downstream . 3-41 ..
Contents 4821-A2-GB21-00 Configure Management InBand Address. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-58 Configure Management Out-of-Band Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-59 Configure Management Route Add . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-59 Configure Management Route Delete . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-60 Configure Management Route Show . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-60 Configure Management SNMP Access Validation . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Configure System Options Spectrum Management .......... 3-78 Configure System Options Test Timeout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-78 Configure Uplink-Tag ................................ 3-78 Configure Uplink Tagging Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-79 Configure User-Accounts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-81 Configure User-Accounts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents 4821-A2-GB21-00 Show Filter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-100 Show Filter-Binding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-101 Show Filter-Proto-Specific ............................. 3-102 Show Filter-Rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-102 Show Interface Console. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents Test . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-136 Test LEDs Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-136 Test LEDs Stop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-136 A Reference Tables Time Zones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-1 Ether Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
About This Guide Document Purpose and Intended Audience This guide describes the Command Line Interface (CLI) used to configure and monitor the BitStorm™ 4800 Express Model 4821-A2 IP DSLAM. It is designed for installers and operators. Document Summary Section Description Chapter 1, System Concepts Describes basic system concepts and terminology. Chapter 2, CLI Conventions Describes how to use the CLI. Chapter 3, Commands Describes the individual CLI commands in detail.
About This Guide Product-Related Documents Complete documentation for this product is available online at www.paradyne.com. Select Support → Technical Manuals.
System Concepts 1 Active Configurations The system has two configuration memories: Running configuration (RAM) Startup configuration (NVRAM) The system operates based on the settings in the running configuration memory (RAM). This configuration may or may not be the same as the configuration in NVRAM. All configuration changes made through any of the user interfaces (CLI, web interface, NMS) are stored only in the running configuration area.
1. System Concepts Unit A single 1U chassis is referred to as a unit. Port ID Port ID is the generic term used to refer to a DSL or Ethernet port in this document regardless of what method is used. For DSL ports, the port ID can be a number from 1 to 24, or an interface name as described below. The fast Ethernet ports are named eth1 and eth2. DSL Port ID There are several ways a DSL port can be identified in the unit. Interface Number.
1.
1. System Concepts Priority Groups When entering tagged or untagged members of a VLAN that are DSL ports, specify a priority group on the DSL port using the port-id:pg form. (See DSL Port ID on page 1-2.) If only the DSL port number is specified then the VLAN is mapped to priority group 1 for that DSL port. A VLAN can at most have only one priority group per DSL port as a member of the VLAN. The following illustrations show how priority groups affect upstream and downstream traffic.
1. System Concepts 1 Frames to be transmitted are assigned to a PG based on VLAN ID. The DSL port PG is made a member of the VLAN by using the port-id:pg form in the VLAN configuration.
1. System Concepts IGMP Snooping Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) snooping is a method of handling multicast data streams by analyzing IGMP packets to learn multicast group address and port associations. The following parameters control IGMP snooping: Leave Delay – The amount of time that the multicast stream will continue on a port after the receipt of a Leave message.
CLI Conventions 2 Overview The Command Line Interface (CLI) is accessible via either a directly connected terminal session or a Telnet connection. You can use the CLI to: Change the operational characteristics of the device by setting configuration values Display system status Perform diagnostics The system supports multiple simultaneous CLI sessions. Access Levels CLI users have one of two access levels: User – The user may display certain configuration and status information.
2. CLI Conventions Logging In When the CLI connection is first established, a login prompt is displayed: Login> Enter a user name. The first time you log in on a new unit, type the name admin and press Enter. The password prompt is displayed: Password> Enter the password associated with the user name. The default password for admin is null, so press Enter without typing anything. The following prompt is displayed: PDYN> Type privilege and press Enter.
2. CLI Conventions Modes of Operation You may enter CLI commands in their entirety on one line. For example: PDYN#!configure interface dsl 1/1 line-code dmt PDYN#!configure interface dsl 1/1 latency fast Alternatively, you may logically position the command interface at any point in the command tree structure by entering partial commands. The prompt shows where you are in the command structure.
2. CLI Conventions Command History Buffer The last 15 commands are maintained in a command history buffer. You can use the Up Arrow and Down Arrow keys to scroll through and redisplay commands, then alter and resubmit a command maintained in the buffer. More Prompt The CLI lets you control the flow of text to the screen with a paging command. If paging is disabled, text is sent to the screen without interruption. If paging is enabled, only 23 lines of text are displayed at a time.
2. CLI Conventions Keyboard Definitions The following table summarizes the special uses of keys in the CLI: Press . . . To . . . Ctrl-c Clear the current command line entry, exit a command line prompt without answering, or abort the command in progress. Ctrl-z Terminate a privileged mode session and continue the session in standard mode. If Ctrl-z is entered by a user not in privileged mode, it places the user at the top of the command tree.
2. CLI Conventions Configuring the System In order to configure the unit you must be at the Administrator access level. Configuration changes take effect immediately. However, the changes are made to the running configuration, which is in RAM (Random Access Memory). You must enter the save command to save your changes to the startup configuration in NVRAM (Non-Volatile RAM).
Commands 3 Typographic Conventions Command descriptions in this chapter use the following conventions: Vertical bars ( | ) separate alternative, mutually exclusive, elements. Braces ( { } ) indicate a required choice. Square brackets ( [ ] ) indicate optional elements. Braces within brackets ( [{ }] ) indicate a required choice within an optional element. Boldface indicates fixed commands and keywords.
3. Commands Clear Clear Bridge clear bridge Minimum Access Level: Administrator The clear bridge command deletes learned entries from the bridge table. Static entries are not affected. Example: PDYN# clear bridge Clear Management clear management snmp nms-address {ip-address_1} … [ip-address_8] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The clear management snmp nms-address command clears the IP addresses that were defined for NMS validation.
3. Commands Clear Syslog clear syslog Minimum Access Level: Administrator The clear syslog command clears all the entries in the system log. Example PDYN# clear syslog Configure The configure command causes the CLI to enter configuration mode, from which you can specify what element of the system you would like to configure. configure Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure command causes the CLI to enter configuration mode.
3. Commands Configure Bridge Clear configure bridge clear Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure bridge clear command deletes learned entries from the bridge table. Static entries are not affected. Example: PDYN# configure bridge clear Configure Bridge Mode configure bridge mode {mux | switch | sms | uplink-tag} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure bridge mode command specifies the mode the bridge will operate in. mux – Multiplexing forwarding mode.
3. Commands Configure Bridge Timeout configure bridge timeout {time} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure bridge timeout command specifies the maximum amount of time a learned entry may exist in the bridge table without appearing as the source address of a received frame. time – The amount of time, in seconds, that an entry may exist. The valid range is 10–1,000,000 seconds, or 0 (zero, which specifies that no timeouts will occur). The default is 300.
3. Commands Configure Date-Timezone configure date-timezone {time-zone} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure date-timezone command specifies the offset in hours from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) that the date and time represent. time_zone – Specifies the offset in hours from Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Hours before GMT are expressed as negative numbers and hours after GMT are expressed as positive numbers (with or without a plus sign). Half hours are supported as decimals.
3. Commands Configure Factory Defaults The configure factory command loads the factory default parameters into the running configuration. The default parameters take immediate effect, but are not saved. Execute the Save command to save the parameters to Non-Volatile Random-Access Memory (NVRAM). configure factory Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure factory command loads factory default parameters.
3. Commands The activation of a filter is a three-step process that need to be executed in this order: 1. Define filter rules (see Configure Filter-Rule ) 2. Define a named filter comprising one or more rules (see Configure Filter Command) 3. Bind the filter to an interface (see Configure Filter-Binding ) Configure Filter Create configure filter create filter_name {forward | discard} [ rule_name_1]...
3. Commands Configure Filter Delete configure filter delete filter_name Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure filter delete command deletes a filter. filter_name – Specifies the filter to be deleted. It must not be bound to an interface. To delete a binding, use the configure filter-binding command (see Configure Filter-Binding Command). Example: PDYN# configure filter delete no_decnet Configure Filter Modify configure filter modify filter_name {forward | discard} [ rule_name_1]...
3. Commands Configure Filter Protocol-Specific configure filter proto-specific {netbios} {deny | permit} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure filter proto-specific command denies or permits traffic for a particular protocol. Protocols netbios – Microsoft’s NetBIOS traffic. deny – Specifies that traffic for the particular protocol should be denied (frames/packets are discarded). permit – Specifies that traffic for the particular protocol should be permitted (frames/packets are forwarded).
3. Commands Configure Filter-Binding Delete configure filter-binding delete filter_name port_id Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure filter-binding delete command removes the association of a filter to a port. filter_name – Specifies the filter to be associated with a port. It must exist. (See Configure Filter on page 3-7.) port_id – Specifies the DSL port whose traffic is to be filtered.
3. Commands Configure Filter-Rule Modify (L2 filter) configure filter-rule modify { rule_name} {forward | discard} {ether | ether-snap} [ ethertypes] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure filter-rule modify command modifies the parameters of an existing filtering rule. rule_name – The name of the rule to be modified. forward – If a packet matches the rule it is forwarded. discard – If a packet matches the rule it is discarded. ether – Specifies that the rule applies to Layer 2 Ethernet traffic.
3. Commands Configure Filter Operational Notes The following operational restriction apply to filters and bindings: Filters and Rules can exist independently, without regard to whether they are used in bindings. A Filter-Rule binding can be created only if both the filter and rule exist. A Port-Filter binding can be created only if both the Port and the Filter exist. A rule cannot be deleted while any filter is bound to it. A filter cannot be deleted while any port is bound to it.
3. Commands Configure IGMP Snooping Leave Delay configure igmp {port_id} snooping leave-delay {delay} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure igmp snooping leave-delay command specifies the period of time during which a multicast stream will continue to be forwarded on an interface after receipt of an IGMP leave message for that stream. port_id – Identifies the IGMP DSL port to be configured. Enter all for all ports.
3. Commands Configure IGMP Query Count configure igmp {port_id} query-count {count} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure igmp query-count determines how many quick query messages will be sent to the subscriber ports in response to a leave message. If no responses are received after this number of messages then it can be assumed that no subscribers want to be in the multicast group. In other products this parameter is also referred to as the robustness value or the number of quick query count.
3. Commands Configure IGMP Proxy Enable configure igmp-proxy {enabled | disabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure igmp proxy command enables the additional function where the unit creates IGMP query messages. enabled – The unit will act as an IGMP querier if needed. In addition the proxy function will perform quick query functions that allows a smooth changing of data streams. The IGMP Snooping function must also be enabled for this function to be enabled.
3. Commands Configure Interface Console Data-Bits configure interface console data-bits {7 | 8} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface console data-bits command sets the number of data bits in a byte on the Console port. data-bits – Valid choices are 7 and 8. The default is 8.
3. Commands Configure Interface Console Show configure interface console show Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface console show command displays parameters for the Console port without leaving configuration mode. Example: PDYN# configure interface console show Output: refer to Show Interface Console.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL This command enters the configure ADSL interface mode. You can get to this point in the menu tree one command at time (config -> interface -> adsl), or by entering the entire command at once. The user can configure a DSL port name, line code, operational state, VLAN configuration, ATM VC and encapsulation, priority group and queue method, and manipulate ADSL profiles to configure transmission parameters.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL ATM VC Create configure interface dsl { port_id:pg} atm vc create { vpi/vci} {atm_profile} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl atm vc create command defines a Virtual Channel Link (VCL) for the specified port. If the specified Virtual Circuit Identifier (VCI) or Virtual Path identifier (VPI) is unavailable or in use, the command fails.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL ATM VC Delete configure interface dsl {port_id:pg} atm vc delete { vpi/vci} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl atm vc delete command deletes a virtual connection for the specified port. port_id – Identifies the ADSL port to be configured. pg - Identifies the priority group on this port. If the priority group is not entered, it will be assumed to be group 1. delete - This deletes the specified vpi/vci from this ADSL port.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Line-Mode configure interface dsl {port_id} line-mode {ansi | dmt | g.lite | multimode} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl line-mode command specifies the line code for a ADSL port. port_id – Identifies the port to be configured. . line-mode – Valid choices are: ansi – The port uses ANSI T1.413-1998. dmt – The port uses G.dmt (G.992.3). g.lite – The port uses G.lite (G.992.4).
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Linkupdown Trap configure interface dsl {port_id} linkupdown-trap {disabled | enabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl linkupdown-trap command specifies whether an SNMP trap should be sent upon link up and link down events. port_id – Identifies the port to be configured. linkupdown-trap – Valid choices are: – disabled – No traps are sent upon link up and link down events. – enabled – A trap is sent upon a link up or link down event.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Activate configure interface dsl-profile-alarm activate {profile_name} {port_id} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm activate command activates the specified Alarm profile onto the specified port(s). port_id – Identifies the port or range of ports in which the profile is to be activated. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be activated.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Create Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm create {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm create command creates a new ADSL Alarm Profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be created.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Delete Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm delete {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm delete command deletes an ADSL Alarm Profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL alarm profile to be deleted.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Downstream Error Seconds Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-es {es} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-es command modifies the downstream errored seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Downstream Loss of Frame Seconds Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-lofs {lofs} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-lofs command modifies the downstream los-of-frame-seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Downstream Loss of Signal Seconds Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-loss {loss} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-loss command modifies the downstream los-of-signal-seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Downstream Unavailable Seconds Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-uas {uas} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm downstream-us command modifies the downstream unavailable seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Decreasing Rate configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-dr {dr} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-dr command modifies the upstream decreasing rate to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Error Seconds configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-es {es} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-es command modifies the upstream errored seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Link Seconds configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-lols {lols} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-lols command modifies the upstream los-of-link-seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Signal Seconds configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-loss {loss} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-loss command modifies the upstream los-of-signal-seconds required to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Init Failure Configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-init-failure {yes | no} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-alarm upstream-decreasing-rate command modifies the upstream init failure to generate an alarm. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL Alarm profile to be modified. Yes - Enable Initialization Failure Trap messages as specified in RFC 2662.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Activate configure interface dsl-profile-line activate {profile_name } {port_id} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line activate command activates the specified profile onto the specified port(s). port_id – Identifies the port or range of ports in which the profile is to be activated. profile_name – Identifies the Adsl-profile to be activated.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Create Configure interface dsl-profile-line create {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line create command creates a new ADSL Line Profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be created. This profile contains the following line parameters: Latency - Select the channel the following rates are effective for: Fast or Interleaved.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Delete configure interface dsl-profile-line delete {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile create command deletes an ADSL Line Profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be deleted.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max Interleave Delay Downstream configure interface dsl-profile-line max-interleave-delay-downstream {delay} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line max-interleave-delay-downstream command specifies the downstream maximum delay in the interleaver/deinterleaver memory allowed when configured for interleave mode. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. delay – The delay in milliseconds.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max-SNR-Margin-Downstream configure interface dsl-profile-line max-snr-margin-downstream {margin} {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line max-snr-downstream command specifies the far end maximum SNR margin, in dB, required for the port. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. margin – Valid choices are 0–31 dB in 1-dB increments. The default is 31.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Max-Speed-Downstream configure interface dsl profile-line max-speed-downstream {rate} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line max-speed-downstream command specifies the maximum rate, in kbps, available for traffic from the port toward the CPE. If behavior is set to fixed, this is the only downstream rate. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. rate – Valid rates are: For G.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Min-SNR-Margin-Downstream Configure interface dsl min-snr-margin-downstream {margin} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line min-snr-downstream command specifies the far end minimum SNR margin, in dB, required for the port. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. margin – Valid choices are 0–31 dB in 1-dB increments. The default is 0.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Min-Speed-Downstream configure interface dsl-profile-line min-speed-downstream {rate} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line min-speed-downstream command specifies the minimum rate, in Kbps, to adapt to for traffic from the port toward the CPE. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. min-downstream-speed – Valid rates are: For DMT and ANSI: 64 to 12000 kbps in 32 kbps increments. For G.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Rate Adaptive Downstream configure interface dsl-profile-line rate-adaptive-downstream {manual | init | dynamic} {profile_name | all} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line behavior downstream command specifies whether the port will adapt its rate to downstream line conditions. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Show configure interface dsl-profile-line show {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line show command displays the contents of the specified ADSL Line Profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be displayed.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile Line Target-Margin-Upstream configure interface dsl profile-line target-margin-upstream {margin} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-line target-margin-upstream command specifies the SNR margin, in dB, required at startup for traffic toward the port from the CPE. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. margin – Valid choices are 0–31 dB in 1-dB increments.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile PSD Atur-Max-PSD configure interface dsl-profile-psd atur-max-psd {psd} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-psd atur-max-psd command specifies the ATU-R max nominal PSD, in dBm/Hz. Only applicable to ADSL units. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. psd – Valid choices are –60.0 to –38.0 dBm/Hz, in 0.1-dBm/Hz increments. Example: PDYN# configure interface dsl-profile-psd atur-max-psd –40.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Profile PSD Atur-Max-Tx-Pwr configure interface dsl-profile-psd atur-max-tx-pwr {tx_pwr} {profile_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl-profile-psd atur-max-tx-pwr command specifies the ATU-R max nominal Aggregate Transmit Power, in dBm. Only applicable to ADSL units. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL profile to be modified. tx_pwr – Valid choices are 0 to 25.5 dBm, in 0.1-dBm increments.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL Queue configure interface dsl {port_id:pg} queue {fifo | 802.1p} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl queue command assigns queuing method to be used on the ADSL port when there is more than one VLAN assigned to the priority group . fifo – The selected priority group will use a first in first out queuing method 801.2p - The selected priority group will use the priority bits in the VLAN tag as the queuing method.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL State configure interface dsl {port_id} state {disabled | enabled | reset} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl state command specifies the availability of a ADSL port. port_id – Identifies the port to be configured. state – Specifies the availability of the port. Valid choices are disabled, enabled or reset. The default is enabled.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL VLAN Priority configure interface dsl {port_id:pg} vlan priority {priority} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl vlan priority assigns the VLAN priority to be assigned to untagged frames or Priority-Tagged frames received on the ingress of this port. This value is also used if priority remapping is enabled. port_id:pg - This specifies the ADSL port and the priority group on that port. priority - The VLAN priority. Valid values are 1 through 8.
3. Commands Configure Interface DSL VLAN Ingress-Filtering configure interface dsl {port_id:pg} vlan ingress-filtering {disabled | enabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface dsl vlan ingress-filtering command will discard incoming tagged frames that are not members of this port. port_id:pg - This specifies the DSL port and the priority group on that port. disabled – The port will accept all incoming frames.
3. Commands Configure Interface Ethernet Mode configure interface ethernet {port_id} mode {auto | manual} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface ethernet mode command specifies whether the duplex mode and rate are automatically set, and the crossover type automatically sensed. port_id – Identifies the Ethernet port to be configured. The possible forms of the identifier are described in Ethernet Port ID in Chapter 1, System Concepts.
3. Commands Configure Interface Ethernet Rate configure interface ethernet {port_id} rate {10full | 10half | 100full | 100half | 1000full | 1000half} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface ethernet rate command specifies the duplex mode and rate if mode is set to manual. port_id – Identifies the Ethernet port to be configured. The possible forms of the identifier are described in Ethernet Port ID in Chapter 1, System Concepts.
3. Commands The fiber interface is always GigE (1000). The only reason for the manual mode is for older equipment that does not support the auto protocol. Configure Interface Ethernet Show configure interface ethernet [port_id] show Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface ethernet show command displays parameters for an Ethernet port without leaving configuration mode. port_id – Identifies the port whose configuration is to be displayed.
3. Commands Configure Interface Ethernet VLAN PVID configure interface ethernet {port_id} vlan pvid {pvid} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface ethernet vlan pvid assigns the VLAN ID to be assigned to untagged frames or Priority-Tagged frames received on the ingress of this port. port_id – Identifies the Ethernet port to be configured. pvid - The VLAN tag. Valid values are 1 through 4095. The default is 1.
3. Commands Configure Interface Ethernet VLAN Acceptable-Frame-Type configure interface ethernet {port_id} vlan acceptable-frame-type {all | tagged} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure interface ethernet vlan acceptable-frame-type command determines if tagged frames will be accepted on a port. port_id – Identifies the Ethernet port to be configured. tagged – With this value set, the device will discard untagged or priority-tagged frames received on this port.
3. Commands Configure Management Default Gateway Address This command is used to configure the management IP address, subnet mask and gateway address. These IP addresses are in the management domain, not the user domain. configure management default-gateway {ip_address} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management default gateway command specifies the IP address of the next hop router for the management traffic.
3. Commands Configure Management Out-of-Band Address This command is used to configure the management IP address, subnet mask and gateway address. These IP addresses are in the management domain, not the user domain. configure management out-of-band address {bootp | {{ip_address} { subnet_mask} } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management out-of-band address command specifies the IP address of the unit that will accept management traffic on the out-of-band management port.
3. Commands Configure Management Route Delete configure management route delete {ip_address} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management route delete command deletes an explicit route based on the specified destinations. To modify an existing route, the administrator will first need to delete the route and then add a new route. ip_address – Specifies the destination IP address. Example: PDYN# configure management route delete 137.90.127.
3. Commands Configure Management SNMP Access Validation configure management snmp access-validation {disabled | enabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management snmp access-validation command specifies whether the unit validates the IP address of incoming SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) messages. disabled – No access validation occurs. This is the default.
3. Commands Configure Management SNMP NMS Trap Address configure management snmp nms-traps { traps_address1}... [ traps_address8] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management snmp nms-traps command specifies the IP addresses of up to eight trap managers to which traps are sent. traps_address1... traps_address8 – Specifies one to eight IP addresses of traps managers. Example: PDYN# configure management snmp nms-traps 135.76.90.90 135.76.91.1 The product sends all traps in SNMPV1 format.
3. Commands Configure Management SNMP Read Only Community String configure management snmp public-string { public_community_string} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure management snmp public-string command specifies the community string for read-only access. public_community_string – Specifies the string used for read-only access. It may be up to 32 printable characters. The default is public.
3. Commands Configure Proxy ARP NHR configure proxy-arp nhr {ip_address} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure proxy-arp nhr command determines the default Next-Hop Router (NHR) address for all subscriber ports in the system. This value is used by the proxy-arp function. ip_address – Specifies the IP address of the next-hop router for subscriber ports. . Example: PDYN# configure proxy-arp nhr 135.75.90.
3. Commands Configure Scheduled Backup Dynamic configure scheduled-backup dynamic [hh:mm] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure scheduled-backup dynamic command specifies that automatic configuration backup will occur after each configuration change. hh:mm – Specifies the amount of time after a configuration change that a configuration backup will automatically occur. Time is specified in hours (1–24) and minutes (0–59) separated by a colon. The default and minimum is 00:30 (30 minutes).
3. Commands Configure Scheduled Backup FTP configure scheduled-backup ftp {ip_address} {user_name} {password} {filename} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure scheduled-backup ftp command defines the FTP (File Transfer Protocol) server used for automatic configuration backup. ip_address – Specifies the network address of the FTP server. user_name – Specifies a user name accepted by the FTP server. password – Specifies the password associated with the user name.
3. Commands Configure Security This command is used to limits the number of active IP addresses on a port. The Administrator can set the limit of the number of IP addresses that are allowed on the port. The limit can range from 1 to 20. The Administrator may configure a static IP address so that it is always part of the table of authorized IP addresses. The number of learned addresses is reduced by each static entry. The IP addresses are the most recently learned addresses.
3. Commands Configure Security IP Add Static Address configure security ip {port_id} add {ip_address} {nhr_address} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure security ip add command specifies an IP address allowed to be active on a particular DSL port. port_id – Identifies the DSL port to be affected. The possible forms of the identifier are described in Chapter 2, Terminology and Conventions. ip_address – Specifies an IP address allowed to be active on the port.
3. Commands Configure Security IP Max Addresses configure security ip {port_id} max-ip {max_ip} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure security ip max-ip command specifies the number of IP addresses allowed to be active on a particular DSL port. port_id – Identifies the port to be affected. The possible forms of the identifier are described in Chapter 2, Terminology and Conventions. max_ip – Specifies the maximum number of IP addresses allowed on the port. The valid range is 1–20.
3. Commands Configure Security MAC Add configure security mac { port_id} add {mac_address} vlan Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure security mac add command is used to limit access to the system based on the MAC address and VLAN of the inbound traffic on the DSL ports. The system monitors the MAC addresses and VLAN on a port. If this feature is enabled, then only the MAC addresses and VLANs that have been entered by the administrator are allowed on the selected port.
3. Commands Configure Security MAC Delete configure security mac {port_id} delete {mac_address | all} vlan Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure security mac delete command deletes a MAC address in the table of addresses allowed to send data to a particular DSL port. port_id – Identifies the port to be affected. The possible forms of the identifier are described in Chapter 2, Terminology and Conventions. mac_address – Specifies a MAC address to be deleted.
3. Commands Configure SNTP This command is used to configure the Simple Network Time Protocol client. Configure SNTP Enable configure sntp {disabled | enabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure sntp command determines whether the unit makes SNTP requests. disabled – The unit does not make SNTP requests. Date and time must be set manually. enabled – The unit updates the date and time periodically by sending requests to an SNTP server.
3. Commands Configure SNTP Interval configure sntp interval {interval} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure sntp interval command specifies the frequency that the unit should make SNTP requests to update the date and time. The units makes a time request whenever it powers on, then it makes periodic requests based in the interval specified. interval – The period, in hours, between SNTP requests. Valid values are 1–24. The default is 24 hours.
3. Commands Configure Syslog Threshold configure syslog threshold {emergency | alert | information | debug} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure syslog threshold command specifies the levels of messages that are written to the system log. emergency – Emergency and higher priority messages are written to the system log. alert – Alert and higher priority messages are written to the system log. This is the default.
3. Commands Configure Syslog Remote Create configure syslog remote create {ip_address} [udp_port] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure syslog remote create command specifies the IP address to send syslog messages. ip_address – The address of a remote Syslog server. The default is 0.0.0.0 The system only supports one remote Syslog server. To change the IP address of the server, the user enters a new IP address using the configure syslog remote create command.
3. Commands Configure System Name configure system information system-name { name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure system information system-name command stores a name identifying the system. name – Up to 36 printable characters. No spaces are allowed.
3. Commands Configure System Options Date Display Format configure system options date-display-format {dd/mm/yy | mm/dd/yy} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure system options date-display-format command determines the date format displayed and accepted by the system. dd/mm/yy – The date display format is in the order day, month, year. mm/dd/yy – The date display format is in the order month, day, year. This is the default.
3. Commands Configure System Options Spectrum Management configure system options spectrum-management {enabled | disabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure system options spectrum management command specifies whether the system enables the spectrum management capability.
3. Commands Configure Uplink Tagging Base configure uplink-tag base {base} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure uplink-tag base command determines the base value to be used for setting VLAN tags for the DSL ports. base – Specifies the base value used in setting the range of VLAN tags. The valid values are: 16, 256, 512, 768, 1024, 1280, 1536, 1792, 2048, 2304, 2560, 2816, 3072, 3328, 3584, 3840. The default is 16.
3.
3. Commands Configure User-Accounts This command is used to configure users of the system. Maximum number of users is 20. Only a user with Administrator privilege can create or delete users. When an Administrator creates a user account they also determine the privilege level by the number of passwords they give the user – the privilege_password that gives a user admin privilege is optional. Any administrator can delete any other administrator or user.
3. Commands Configure User-Accounts Delete configure user-accounts delete {user} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure user-accounts delete command deletes a user account. user – Specifies the user account to be deleted. Example: PDYN# configure user-accounts delete tempacct Configure VLAN This command is used to configure the parameters related to the VLAN table.
3. Commands Configure VLAN Delete configure vlan delete {vlan_id | vlan_name} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure vlan delete command is used to delete a unique VLAN for the system. vlan_id - This value specifies the VLAN to be deleted. vlan_name - This value uses the assigned VLAN name to identify the VLAN to be deleted.
3. Commands Configure VLAN Modify Next Hop Router configure vlan modify {vlan_id | vlan_name} nhr {ip_address} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure vlan modify nhr command is used to define the next hop router address for the subscribers on this vlan. vlan_id - This value specifies the VLAN to be modified. ip_address - This value is the IP address of the next hop router for the subscribers on this VLAN. Example: PDYN# configure vlan 77 modify nhr 135.90.1.
3. Commands Configure VLAN Modify Ports configure vlan modify {vlan_id | vlan_name} ports {tagged | untagged } {delete | port-id:pg | port-list} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure vlan modify ports command is used to define the ports that are members of this vlan. vlan_id - This value specifies the VLAN to be modified. vlan_name - This value uses the assigned VLAN name to identify the VLAN to be modified. port-id - This value specifies the port to be included in this vlan.
3. Commands Configure VLAN Modify Proxy-ARP configure vlan modify {vlan_id | vlan_name} proxy-arp (enabled | disabled} Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure vlan modify proxy-arp command specifies if the proxy-arp function will be used on the selected VLAN. vlan_id - This value specifies the VLAN to be modified. vlan_name - This value uses the assigned VLAN name to identify the VLAN to be modified. enabled – The proxy ARP function will be enabled for the selected VLAN.
3. Commands Configure VLAN Reserved Block Start configure vlan reserved-block-start vlan_id Minimum Access Level: Administrator The configure vlan reserved-block-start command is used to configure the reserved block of vlans. The vlan id is the first reserved vlan in the contiguous reserved block of 16. vlan_id - This value specifies the first reserved vlan in the reserved block of 16. The default is 4080.
3. Commands Copy (Configuration) The copy function is used for saving and restoring configurations. The command is designed so that a file is copied from the first specified configuration to the second specified configuration or FTP (meaning FTP server file system). The prototype for the command is: copy {source}[options]{destination}[options] There is a restriction when FTP is used as either the source or the destination. In this case the other parameter must be "startup-config".
3. Commands Copy Running Configuration to Startup Configuration (Save) copy running-config startup-config Minimum Access Level: Administrator The copy running-config startup-config command copies the configuration of the volatile running configuration to the non-volatile start-up configuration. This is the same function as the save command. running-config - Specifies the running configuration (volatile memory) is the source file.
3. Commands Copy Startup Configuration to Running Configuration (Reload) copy startup-config running-config Minimum Access Level: Administrator The copy startup-config running-config command loads the startup configuration file to running configuration. startup-config – Specifies that the source file is the configuration in non-volatile memory. running-config - Specifies the running configuration (volatile memory) is the source file.
3. Commands Exit exit Minimum Access Level: User The exit command terminates the CLI session. If the CLI session is by telnet, the connection is dropped. Example: PDYN# exit Firmware To download or apply new firmware to the product.
3. Commands Firmware Download firmware download {ip_address} {user_name} {password} {filename} [no | yes] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The firmware download command downloads new firmware to the BitStorm 4800, and optionally applies it immediately. ip_address – Specifies the network address of the FTP server containing the FW file. user_name – Specifies a user name accepted by the FTP server. password – Specifies the password associated with the user name.
3. Commands Firmware Download Status firmware download-status Minimum Access Level: Administrator The firmware download-status command displays the status of the active or last firmware download. Example: PDYN# firmware download-status File name: sample_filename FTP Server Address xxx.xxx.xxx.
3. Commands Firmware Switch firmware switch Minimum Access Level: Administrator The firmware switch command loads and executes the alternative firmware file. This also resets the unit. Example: PDYN# firmware switch Switch from firmware revision 01.02.03 to firmware revision 01.02.04? (yes/no) yes Firmware switched, system rebooting PDYN# Paging paging {disabled | enabled} Minimum Access Level: User The paging command determines how a full screen of output is displayed.
3. Commands Password This command allows a user to change the login password. If this command is executed while in the privilege mode, it will change the privilege password. If the command is executed while in the user mode, it will change only the user password. password Minimum Access Level: User The password command changes the user or administrator (privilege) password, depending on which level is active.
3. Commands Ping ping {ip_address} Minimum Access Level: User The ping command sends a ICMP echo message to the selected IP address. Example: PDYN>ping 135.90.1.2 135.90.1.2 is alive PDYN> PDYN>ping 135.90.1.2 no response from 135.90.1.2 PDYN> Privilege privilege Minimum Access Level: User The privilege command causes the user to be prompted for an administrator password. When the password is entered correctly, the user is placed in Administrator (privileged) mode.
3. Commands Restart restart Minimum Access Level: Administrator The restart command restarts the unit, causing it to reload the startup configuration and retrain the DSL ports. Example: PDYN# restart Save save Minimum Access Level: Administrator The save command copies the running configuration, which is in volatile memory, to the startup configuration file, which is in nonvolatile memory. The PDYN# prompt changes to PDYN# ! when the configuration has been changed and has not yet been saved.
3. Commands Show Bridge show bridge [port_id] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show bridge command displays the MAC table. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to entries for a single port.
3. Commands Show Bridge Timeout This command will display bridge table entry timeout value in seconds. The timeout is a value in seconds that specifies the time interval after which entry in bridge table will be removed. show bridge timeout Minimum Access Level: User The show bridge timeout command displays the bridge table entry timeout value in seconds. Example: PDYN# show bridge timeout 300 sec PDYN# Display results: timeout – The bridge table entry timeout value.
3. Commands Show Filter show filter [filter_name] Minimum Access Level: User The show filter command displays configured data filters. filter_name – Specifies that the display should be limited to a single filter.
3. Commands Show Filter-Binding show filter-binding [filter [ filter_name]] | [port [ port_id]] Minimum Access Level: User The show filter-binding command displays the bindings of filters to interfaces. filter – Specifies that output is sorted by filter name. filter_name – Specifies that the display should be limited to a single filter. port – Specifies that output is sorted by port number. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to a single port.
3. Commands Show Filter-Proto-Specific show filter-proto-specific Minimum Access Level: User The show filter-proto-specific command displays the settings for all protocol-specific filters Example: PDYN>show filter-proto-specific NetBIOS denied (dropped). PDYN>show filter-proto-specific NetBIOS permitted (forwarded). Show Filter-Rule show filter-rule [rule_name] Minimum Access Level: User The show filter-rule command displays configured filter rules.
3. Commands Show Interface Console show interface console Minimum Access Level: User The show interface console command displays the configuration of the Console port on the unit.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Configuration show interface dsl {port_id} configuration Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl configuration command displays information about all ADSL ports or a specified ADSL port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. If all is specified, information is displayed for all ports. configuration – Specifies that the port’s configuration should be displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Far End show interface dsl {port_id} far-end Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl far-end command displays endpoint information for the designated port. port_id – ADSL port id Example: PDYN# show interface dsl 1/2 far-end PDYN> Vendor ID 0255 Firmware Revision 01.00.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Profile Line show interface dsl-profile-line {profile_name } Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show interface dsl-profile-line command displays the configuration of the specified ADSL line profile. profile_name – Identifies the ADSL line profile to be displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Performance show interface dsl all performance Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl performance command displays performance information for all ADSL ports. all – This is the port id. All ports for a slot are displayed. The only valid choice is “all”. performance – Specifies that performance statistics for the specified port should be displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Rates show interface dsl {port_id} rates Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl rates command displays the data rate for all ADSL ports. port_id – Must be all all. rate – Specifies that the current rate of the specified port should be displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Statistics ATM Show interface dsl {port_id} statistics-atm [bucket_number] Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl statistics-atm command displays ATM statistics for the specified ADSL port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. If all is specified, information is displayed for all ports. bucket_number – Optional parameter to specify which statistic interval (1..96) to display.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Statistics Line Far End Show interface dsl {port_id} statistics-line-far-end [bucket_number] Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl statistics-line command displays statistics for the specified ADSL port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. bucket_number – Optional parameter to specify the maximum interval (1..96) to display. If no bucket number is specified then all intervals are displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Statistics Line Near End Show interface dsl {port_id} statistics-line-near-end [bucket_number] Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl statistics-line command displays statistics for the specified ADSL port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. bucket_number – Optional parameter to specify the maximum interval (1–96) to display. If no bucket number is specified then all intervals are displayed.
3. Commands Show Interface DSL Status show interface dsl {port_id} status Minimum Access Level: User The show interface dsl status command displays the status for the specified ADSL port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port.
3. Commands show interface dsl status, continued Display results: link status – The status of the link: – dormant – The link has not yet trained up. – down – The link is down. – notConnected – The link is training. – unknown – The link’s status cannot be determined. – up – The link is enabled and ready to send packets. link up time – The number of days, hours, minutes, and seconds the interface has been active. transmission mode – The line code used on the port: DMT, ANSI, or G.lite.
3. Commands Show Interface Ethernet Clear Statistics show interface ethernet {port_id} clear-statistics Minimum Access Level: User The show interface ethernet clear-statistics command resets statistics for all Ethernet ports or a specified port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. If all is specified, information is displayed for all Ethernet ports. clear-statistics – Resets to zero the statistics for this session.
3. Commands Show Interface Ethernet Statistics show interface ethernet {port_id} statistics Minimum Access Level: User The show interface ethernet statistics command displays statistics for all Ethernet ports or a specified port. port_id – Specifies that the display should be limited to this specified port. If all is specified, information is displayed for all Ethernet ports. statistics – Specifies that the error statistics for the specified port should be displayed.
3. Commands Show Proxy ARP NHR show proxy-arp nhr Minimum Access Level: User The show proxy-arp nhr command displays the address of the default Next Hop Router in the user data domain. Example: PDYN# show proxy-arp nhr nhr address 10.10.11.1 PDYN#_ Display results: nhr address – The IP address of the default Next Hop Router in the user data domain. Show Management ARP Table show management arp Minimum Access Level: User The show management arp command displays the arp table for the management processor.
3. Commands Show Management Default Gateway Address show management default-gateway Minimum Access Level: User The show management default-gateway command displays the IP address of the next hop router for the management traffic. ip_address – Specifies the IP address of the default gateway for the management ports.. Example: PDYN# show management default-gateway Management default-gateway is 137.90.127.
3. Commands Show Management Out of Band show management out-of-band Minimum Access Level: User The show management out-of-band address command displays the settings for the out of band management port. Example: PDYN# show management out-of-band ip address 10.10.11.2 subnet mask 255.255.255.
3. Commands Show Management SNMP Configuration show management snmp configuration Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show management snmp configuration command displays the settings for SNMP access. Example: PDYN# show management snmp configuration state enabled access-validationenabled public-stringsomeaccess private-stringmostaccess nms-address10.10.10.1 10.10.2.2 nms-traps 10.10.2.210.10.10.1 135.90.1.1 PDYN#_ Display results: state – The availability of SNMP access (disabled or enabled).
3. Commands Show Management SNMP Statistics show management snmp statistics Minimum Access Level: User The show management snmp statistics command displays the settings for SNMP access. Example: PDYN# show management snmp statistics Total Packets received: Get Requests: Get Next Requests: Set Requests: xxxxxx Get Responses: xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx Bad Versions: Bad Community Names: Bad Community Users: ASN.
3. Commands Show Multicast show multicast statistics Minimum Access Level: User The show multicast statistics command displays various IGMP statistics for each port. The purpose of this command is to show that the multicast stream is being sent to the host on the DSL port. Example: PDYN>show multicast statistics Multicast IP Address DSL Port Multicast Packets Sent IGMP Leaves IGMP Reports IGMP Queries 224.0.0.5 224.0.0.5 224.0.0.
3. Commands Show Scheduled Backup show scheduled backup Minimum Access Level: User The show scheduled backup command displays the settings for the automatic (scheduled) backup. Example: PDYN# show scheduled backup state enabled server xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx filename file name mode fixed time Monday 3 am PDYN# Display results: state – The availability of the scheduler (disabled or enabled). server – The address of the FTP server used for automatic configuration backup. filename – The file containing the backup.
3. Commands Show Security IP show security ip [port_id] Minimum Access Level: User The show security ip command displays the settings for IP address security. port_id – Specifies the port to be displayed. The possible forms of the identifier are described in System Terminology in Chapter 2, Terminology and Conventions. If all is specified or the parameter is omitted, information for all ports is displayed.
3. Commands Show Security MAC show security mac [port_id] Minimum Access Level: User The show security mac command shows the settings for MAC address security feature. port_id – Specifies the port to be displayed. The possible forms of the identifier are described in System Terminology in Chapter 2, Terminology and Conventions. If all is specified or the parameter is omitted, information for all ports is displayed.
3. Commands Show SNTP show sntp Minimum Access Level: User The show sntp command displays the configuration parameters for SNTP. Example: PDYN>show sntp state enabled ip address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx interval 24 hours PDYN> Display results: state – Whether the unit makes SNTP requests: – disable – The unit does not make SNTP requests. – enable – The unit updates the date and time periodically by sending requests to an SNTP server. ip address – The address defined for the SNTP server.
3. Commands Show Syslog show syslog Minimum Access Level: User The show syslog command displays the configuration and contents of the system log.
3. Commands Show Syslog-Remote show syslog-remote Minimum Access Level: User The show syslog-remote command displays the configuration of the remote system log. Example: PDYN> show syslog-remote state enabled ip address 135.90.1.1 udp port 153 PDYN>_ Display results: state - Shows if the syslog-remote feature is enabled. IP Address – The IP address of the syslog-remote syslog server. UDP port – The UDP port of the syslog-remote syslog server.
3. Commands Show System Options show system options Minimum Access Level: User The show system options command shows the system configuration. Example: PDYN> show system options test-time-out date-display-format inactivity-time-out spectrum management 5 minutes dd/mm/yy 5 minutes enabled PDYN> Display results: test-time-out – The amount of time a disruptive test is allowed to run. date-display-format – The format of dates displayed and accepted by the system: – dd/mm/yy – Day, month, year.
3. Commands Show System Self-Test show system self-test Minimum Access Level: User The show system self-test command shows the self-test results for the unit.
3. Commands Show System Status show system status Minimum Access Level: User The show system status command shows the state of alarms throughout the system. Example (24-port model): PDYN>show system status Status Up Name xxxxxxxxxxx Location xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Contact xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Up Time ddd:hh:mm selftest fan 1 fan 2 pass alarm alarm internal temperature Ethernet Ports DSL Links Status 1 D alarm (99 C) eth1 up 2 . 3 U eth2 up 4 . 5 U 6 U 7 U 8 U 9 .
3. Commands Show Technical-Support show technical-support Minimum Access Level: User The show technical-support command shows contact information similar to that in Warranty, Sales, Service, and Training Information at the beginning of the user’s manual. Example: PDYN> show technical-support Warranty, Sales, Service, and Training Information Contact your local sales representative, service representative, or distributor directly for any help needed.
3. Commands Show Uplink-Tag show uplink-tag Minimum Access Level: User The show uplink-tag command shows the VLAN tag associated with each DSL port if uplink tagging is used. Example: PDYN> show uplink-tag Base vlan tag number 16 Index 1 PORT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 VLAN 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 PORT 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 VLAN PDYN> Display results: Base vlan tag number – The base value used to set VLANs.
3. Commands Show User Accounts show user-account Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show user-accounts command shows user names configured in the system. Example: PDYN# show user-accounts User NamePrivilege Level admin admin user1 user user2 user PDYN#_ Display results: User Name – The name used for logging in. Passwords are not displayed. Privilege Level – The access level assigned to this user name: – admin – The user name has administrator privileges. – user – The user name has user privileges.
3. Commands Show Users show users Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show users command shows users currently logged on the system. Example: PDYN# show user-accounts User Port admin console user1 telnet user2 web Location 135.90.1.1. 135.90.1.1 PDYN#_ Display results: User – User name. Port – Mode of access: – console – Console port. – telnet – Telnet session. – web – Web interface. Location – For Telnet and Web interface sessions, the IP address of the user.
3. Commands Show VLAN Configuration show vlan configuration [vlan_id | all ] Minimum Access Level: Administrator The show vlans command shows all the configuration parameters for all the VLANs in the system. vlan_id – this field specifies the vlan id or the vlan name all - this selection will display all the vlans in the system.
3. Commands Test Test LEDs Start test leds start Minimum Access Level: User The test leds start command causes all Light-Emitting Diodes (LEDs) on the front panel of the unit to turn on. See the Installation Guide for the locations of all LEDs. Verify that all LEDs are lit. If an LED does not light up during the LED test, notify your service representative. Example: PDYN# test leds start Test LEDs Stop test leds stop Minimum Access Level: User The test leds stop command causes stops the led test.
Reference Tables A Time Zones The following values are used by the configure date-timezone command. Table A-1. 4821-A2-GB21-00 Time Zone Offsets from UTC (1 of 3) Time Zone Name Offset and Description gmt Greenwich Mean Time (UTC), No Daylight Savings Time us-eastern UTC – 5, Subject to U.S. Daylight Savings Time Rules us-indiana UTC – 6, No Daylight Savings Time us-central UTC – 6, Subject to U.S. Daylight Savings Time Rules us-mountain UTC – 7, Subject to U.S.
A. Reference Tables Table A-1. A-2 Time Zone Offsets from UTC (2 of 3) Time Zone Name Offset and Description canada-pacific UTC – 8, Subject to Canadian Daylight Savings Time Rules canada-yukon UTC – 9, Subject to Canadian Daylight Savings Time Rules mexico-bajanorte UTC – 8, Subject to U.S.
A. Reference Tables Table A-1. 4821-A2-GB21-00 Time Zone Offsets from UTC (3 of 3) Time Zone Name Offset and Description turkey UTC + 3, Subject to Turkish Daylight Savings Time Rules egypt UTC + 2, Subject to Egyptian Daylight Savings Time Rules iran UTC + 3.
A. Reference Tables Ether Types The following values are used by the configure filter-rule command. Table A-2. A-4 Ether Types (1 of 6) Ether Type Description 0000-05DC IEEE 802.3 Length Field 0101-01FF Experimental 0200 XEROX PUP (see 0A00) 0201 PUP Addr Trans (see 0A01) 0400 Nixdorf 0600 XEROX NS IDP 0660 DLOG 0661 DLOG 0800 Internet IP (IPv4) 0801 X.75 Internet 0802 NBS Internet 0803 ECMA Internet 0804 Chaosnet 0805 X.
A. Reference Tables Table A-2.
A. Reference Tables Table A-2. A-6 Ether Types (3 of 6) Ether Type Description 803F DEC LAN Traffic Monitor 8040-8042 DEC Unassigned 8044 Planning Research Corp. 8046 AT&T 8047 AT&T 8049 ExperData 805B Stanford V Kernel exp. 805C Stanford V Kernel prod. 805D Evans & Sutherland 8060 Little Machines 8062 Counterpoint Computers 8065 Univ. of Mass. @ Amherst 8066 Univ. of Mass. @ Amherst 8067 Veeco Integrated Auto.
A. Reference Tables Table A-2.
A. Reference Tables Table A-2.
A. Reference Tables Table A-2.
A.
Command Summary B clear bridge clear management snmp nms-address {ip-address_1} … [ip-address_8] clear management snmp nms-traps {ip-address_1} … [ip-address_8] clear syslog configure bridge clear configure bridge mode {mux | switch | sms | uplink-tag} configure bridge timeout {time} configure date [ mm/dd/yy | dd/mm/yy] [ hh:mm] configure date-timezone {time-zone} configure factory configure filter create filter_name {forward | discard} [ rule_name_1]...
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Index A ARP Table, 3-116 automatic command completion, 2-3 logout, 2-5 B Back, 2-3, 3-1 Backup, 3-64 C Clear Bridge, 3-2 Clear Management, 3-2 Clear Syslog, 3-3 Command Line Interface (CLI) automatic command completion, 2-3 automatic logout, 2-5 help, 2-4 keyboard definitions, 2-5 number of sessions supported, 2-1 prompts, 2-2 syntax error, 2-5 command summary, B-1 Commands Tree, 2-3 commands, 3-1 automatic completion, 2-3 history buffer, 2-4 Configure, 3-3 using CLI, 2-6 Configure Bridge, 3-3 Configure
Index Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Init Failure, 3-35 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Frame Seconds, 3-32 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Link Seconds, 3-33 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Power Seconds, 3-33 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Loss of Signal Seconds, 3-34 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Severely Errored Seconds, 3-34 Configure Interface DSL Profile Alarm Upstream Unavailable Se
Index Configure Syslog, 3-73 Configure Syslog Rate Limiting, 3-73 Configure Syslog Remote Create, 3-75 Configure Syslog Remote Enable, 3-74 Configure Syslog Threshold, 3-74 Configure System Contact, 3-76 Configure System Location, 3-75 Configure System Name, 3-76 Configure System Options Alarm Threshold Temperature Intake Low, 3-78 Configure System Options Date Display Format, 3-77 Configure System Options Inactivity Time Out, 3-77 Configure System Options Spectrum Management, 3-78 Configure System Options
Index P Paging, 3-94 paging command, 2-4 Password, 3-95 Default, 2-2 Ping, 3-96 priority groups DSL ports, 1-4 use downstream, 1-5 use upstream, 1-4 Privilege, 3-96 Profile Alarm Activate, 3-24 Profile Alarm Create, 3-25 Profile Alarm Delete, 3-26 Prompts, CLI, 2-2 Proxy ARP, 3-86 Proxy ARP NHR, 3-64 Q Quick Query Wait Time, 1-6 R Range of VLAN tags, 3-79 Rate Console, 3-17 DSL, 3-41 Ethernet, 3-54 Reload, 3-97 Restart, 3-97 RFC 1700, A-4 S Save, 3-97 Scheduled Configuration Backups, 3-64 Security, 3-67
Index User Accounts, 3-81 Access Levels, 2-1 UTC offsets, A-1 4821-A2-GB21-00 V VLAN Configuration, 3-82 Ingress Filtering, 3-57 Priority, 3-56 tag range, 3-79 July 2004 IN-5
Index IN-6 July 2004 4821-A2-GB21-00