00-1Cover

 

 

 

 

Comware V3

Command Manual

 

 

 

Hangzhou H3C Technologies Co., Ltd.

http://www.h3c.com

 

Manual Version: T2-08192H-20080114-C-3.07

 


 

Copyright © 2003-2008, Hangzhou H3C Technologies Co., Ltd. and its licensors

 

All Rights Reserved

No part of this manual may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written consent of Hangzhou H3C Technologies Co., Ltd.

Trademarks

H3C, Adobe Systems, Aolynk, , H3Care, , TOP G, , IRF, NetPilot, Neocean, NeoVTL, SecPro, SecPoint, SecEngine, SecPath, Comware, Secware, Storware, NQA, VVG, V2G, VnG, PSPT, XGbus, N-Bus, TiGem, InnoVision and HUASAN are trademarks of Hangzhou H3C Technologies Co., Ltd.

All other trademarks that may be mentioned in this manual are the property of their respective owners.

Notice

The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Every effort has been made in the preparation of this document to ensure accuracy of the contents, but all statements, information, and recommendations in this document do not constitute the warranty of any kind, express or implied.

To obtain the latest information, please access:

http://www.h3c.com

Technical Support

customer_service@h3c.com

http://www.h3c.com


About This Manual

Related Documentation

In addition to this manual, each related documentation set includes the following:

Manual

Description

Comware V3 Operation Manual

The manual is a guide for the user to perform the operations correctly. It is organized into the parts of getting started, system management, interface, link layer protocol, network protocol, routing protocol, multicast protocol, security, VPN, reliability, QoS, MPLS, dial-up and Non-IP Architecture, as well as acronyms used in the manual.

Low-End and Mid-Range Series Routers Terminal Access  User Manual

The manual gives the user a guide and related commands to operate terminal access.

 

Organization

Comware V3 Command Manual is organized as follows:

Part

Contents

1. Getting Started

introduces Comware V3 user interface configuration commands.

2. System Management

introduces the configuration commands of system maintenance management, file management, user interface configuration, NTP configuration, SNMP configuration and terminal services.

3. Interface

introduces the configuration commands of LAN interface, synchronous/asynchronous serial interface, CE1 interface, subinterface, virtual interface template and virtual Ethernet interface.

4. Link Layer Protocol

introduces the configuration commands of PPP, MP, PPPoE, SLIP, ISDN, VLAN, HDLC, Frame Relay, ATM, LAPB and X.25.

5. Network Protocol

introduces the configuration commands IP address, static address resolution, domain name resolution, IP performance, IP unicast policy routing, IP multicast policy routing and DLSw.

6. Routing Protocol

introduces the configuration commands of static routing, RIP, OSPF, IS-IS, BGP, MBGP, IP routing policy and IP route capacity.

7. Multicast Protocol

introduces the configuration commands of common multicast, IGMP, PIM DM, PIM SM, MSDP, MBGP and multicast static routing.

8. MPLS

introduces MPLS configuration commands.

9. Security

introduces the configuration commands of AAA, RADIUS, firewall, NAT, IPSec and IKE.

10. VPN

introduces the configuration commands of L2TP, GRE, BGP/MPLS VPN and MPLS L2VPN.

11. QoS

introduces the configuration commands of traffic classification, traffic policing, traffic shaping, congestion management and congestion avoidance.

12. Reliability

introduces the configuration commands of standby center and VRRP.

13. Dial-up

introduces the configuration commands of DCC and modem.

14. Voice

introduces the configuration commands for implementing voice and fax services on IP networks, such as VoIP, E1/T1, fax, voice RADIUS, GK client, and SIP client.

15. Non-IP Architecture

introduces the configuration commands of OSI, IPX and DLSw.

16. Command Index

lists all the commands that appear in the manuals.

 

Conventions

The manual uses the following conventions:

I. Command conventions

Convention

Description

Boldface

The keywords of a command line are in Boldface.

italic

Command arguments are in italic.

[ ]

Items (keywords or arguments) in square brackets [ ] are optional.

{ x | y | ... }

Alternative items are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars. One is selected.

[ x | y | ... ]

Optional alternative items are grouped in square brackets and separated by vertical bars. One or none is selected.

{ x | y | ... } *

Alternative items are grouped in braces and separated by vertical bars. A minimum of one or a maximum of all can be selected.

[ x | y | ... ] *

Optional alternative items are grouped in square brackets and separated by vertical bars. Many or none can be selected.

&<1-n>

The argument(s) before the ampersand (&) sign can be entered 1 to n times.

#

A line starting with the # sign is comments.

 

II. GUI conventions

Convention

Description

< >

Button names are inside angle brackets. For example, click <OK>.

[ ]

Window names, menu items, data table and field names are inside square brackets. For example, pop up the [New User] window.

/

Multi-level menus are separated by forward slashes. For example, [File/Create/Folder].

 

III. Symbols

Convention

Description

  Warning

Means reader be extremely careful. Improper operation may cause bodily injury.

  Caution

Means reader be careful. Improper operation may cause data loss or damage to equipment.

&  Note

Means a complementary description.