- Table of Contents
-
- H3C S3600 Series Ethernet Switches Command Manual-Release 1510(V1.04)
- 00-1Cover
- 01-CLI Command
- 02-Login Command
- 03-Configuration File Management Command
- 04-VLAN Command
- 05-IP Address and Performance Configuration Command
- 06-Management VLAN Command
- 07-Voice VLAN Command
- 08-GVRP Command
- 09-Port Basic Configuration Command
- 10-Link Aggregation Command
- 11-Port Isolation Command
- 12-Port Security-Port Binding Command
- 13-DLDP Command
- 14-MAC Address Table Command
- 15-Auto Detect Command
- 16-MSTP Command
- 17-Routing Protocol Command
- 18-Multicast Command
- 19-802.1x Command
- 20-AAA-RADIUS-HWTACACS-EAD Command
- 21-VRRP Command
- 22-Centralized MAC Address Authentication Command
- 23-ARP Command
- 24-DHCP Command
- 25-ACL Command
- 26-QoS-QoS Profile Command
- 27-Web Cache Redirection Command
- 28-Mirroring Command
- 29-IRF Fabric Command
- 30-Cluster Command
- 31-PoE-PoE Profile Command
- 32-UDP Helper Command
- 33-SNMP-RMON Command
- 34-NTP Command
- 35-SSH Terminal Service Command
- 36-File System Management Command
- 37-FTP and TFTP Command
- 38-Information Center Command
- 39-System Maintenance and Debugging Command
- 40-VLAN-VPN Command
- 41-HWPing Command
- 42-DNS Command
- 43-Access Management Command
- 44-Appendix
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
05-IP Address and Performance Configuration Command | 163 KB |
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 IP Address Configuration Commands
1.1 IP Address Configuration Commands
Chapter 2 IP Performance Configuration Commands
2.1 IP Performance Configuration Commands
Chapter 1 IP Address Configuration Commands
1.1 IP Address Configuration Commands
1.1.1 display ip interface
Syntax
display ip interface [ brief [ interface-type [ interface-number ] ] | [ interface-type interface-number ] ]
View
Any view
Parameter
interface-type interface-number: interface-type indicates a port type and interface-number indicates a port number. For details, see the description of the interface command in Port Basic Configuration part of this manual.
brief: Displays the basic interface configuration information.
Description
Use the display ip interface command to display information about one specific or all interfaces.
Example
# Display information about Vlan-interface1.
<H3C> display ip interface Vlan-interface 1
Vlan-interface1 current state :UP
Line protocol current state :UP
Internet Address is 192.168.0.39/24 Primary
Broadcast address : 192.168.0.255
The Maximum Transmit Unit : 1500 bytes
IP packets input number: 9678, bytes: 475001, multicasts: 7
IP packets output number: 8622, bytes: 391084, multicasts: 0
TTL invalid packet number: 0
ICMP packet input number: 0
Echo reply: 0
Unreachable: 0
Source quench: 0
Routing redirect: 0
Echo request: 0
Router advert: 0
Router solicit: 0
Time exceed: 0
IP header bad: 0
Timestamp request: 0
Timestamp reply: 0
Information request: 0
Information reply: 0
Netmask request: 0
Netmask reply: 0
Unknown type: 0
Table 1-1 Description on the fields of the display ip interface command
Field |
Description |
Vlan-interface1 current state |
Current state of VLAN interface 1 |
Line protocol current state |
Current state of the Line protocol |
Internet Address |
IP address |
Broadcast address |
Broadcast address |
The Maximum Transmit Unit |
Max transmit unit |
IP packets input number: 9678, bytes: 475001, multicasts: 7 IP packets output number: 8622, bytes: 391084, multicasts: 0 |
Number of input/output unicast packets, bytes, and multicast packets |
TTL invalid packet number |
Number of received invalid TTL packets |
ICMP packet input number: 0 Echo reply: 0 Unreachable: 0 Source quench: 0 Routing redirect: 0 Echo request: 0 Router advert: 0 Router solicit: 0 Time exceed: 0 IP header bad: 0 Timestamp request: 0 Timestamp reply: 0 Information request: 0 Information reply: 0 Netmask request: 0 Netmask reply: 0 Unknown type: 0 |
Total number of received ICMP packets, including: Echo reply packet, unreachable packet, source quench packet, routing redirect packet, Echo request packet, router advert packet, router solicit packet, time exceed packet, IP header bad packet, timestamp request packet, timestamp reply packet, information request packet, information reply packet, netmask request packet, netmask reply packet, and unknown types of packets. |
1.1.2 ip address
Syntax
ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length } [ sub ]
undo ip address [ ip-address { mask | mask-length } [ sub ] ]
View
VLAN interface view, loopback interface view
Parameter
Ip-address: IP address, in dotted decimal notation.
mask: Subnet mask, in dotted decimal notation.
mask-length: Length of a subnet mask.
sub: Specifies a secondary IP address of a VLAN or loopback interface.
Description
Use the ip address command to specify an IP address and mask for a VLAN or loopback interface.
Use the undo ip address command to remove an IP address and mask of a VLAN or loopback interface.
By default, a VLAN or loopback interface has no IP address.
Generally, it is enough to configure one IP address for an interface. However, you can configure up to five IP addresses for an interface so that it can be connected to several subnets. Among these IP addresses, one is the primary IP address and all the others are secondary ones. The relationship between the primary address and the secondary addresses is as follows:
l When you configure a primary IP address for an interface which already has a primary IP address, the new address will replace the old one.
l If you execute the undo ip address command without any parameter, the switch deletes both primary and secondary IP addresses of the interface. The undo ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length } command is used to delete the primary IP address. The undo ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length } sub command is used to delete secondary IP addresses.
Note that a VLAN interface cannot be configured with a secondary IP address if the interface has been configured to obtain an IP address through BOOTP or DHCP.
Related command: display ip interface.
Example
# Specify the IP address and subnet mask of Vlan-interface1 to 129.12.0.1 and 255.255.255.0 respectively.
<H3C> system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[H3C] interface Vlan-interface 1
[H3C-Vlan-interface1] ip address 129.12.0.1 255.255.255.0
Chapter 2 IP Performance Configuration Commands
2.1 IP Performance Configuration Commands
2.1.1 display fib
display fib
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display fib command to view the summary of the forwarding information base (FIB). Each line indicates an FIB entry. The information includes: destination address/mask length, next hop, current flag, timestamp, and output interface.
Example
# View the FIB summary.
<H3C> display fib
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
10.153.17.0/24 10.153.17.99 U t[0] Vlan-interface1
10.153.18.88/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[0] InLoopBack0
10.153.18.0/24 10.153.18.88 U t[0] LoopBack0
10.153.17.99/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[0] InLoopBack0
127.0.0.0/8 127.0.0.1 U t[0] InLoopBack0
Table 2-1 Description on the fields of the display fib command
Field |
Description |
Destination/Mask |
Destination address/mask length |
Nexthop |
Next hop address |
Flag |
Flags: U: A route is up and available. G: Gateway route H: Local host route B: Blackhole route D: Dynamic route S: Static route R: Rejected route E: Multi-path equal-cost route L: Route generated by ARP or ESIS |
TimeStamp |
Timestamp |
Interface |
Forwarding interface |
2.1.2 display fib ip-address
Syntax
display fib ip-address1 [ { mask1 | mask-length1 } [ ip-address2 { mask2 | mask-length2 } | longer ] | longer ]
View
Any view
Parameter
ip-address1, ip-address2: Destination IP addresses, in dotted decimal notation. ip-address1 and ip-address2 together define an address range. The FIB entries in this address range will be displayed.
mask1, mask2: IP address masks, in dotted decimal notation.
mask-length1, mask-length2: Integers in the range of 0 to 32, representing the mask length.
longer: Displays the FIB entries matching specific network/mask.
Description
Use the display fib ip-address command to view the FIB entries matching the specified destination IP address. Each line indicates an FIB entry. The information includes: destination address/mask length, next hop, current flag, timestamp, and outbound interface.
Example
# View the FIB entries whose destination addresses match 12.158.10.0 in the natural mask range.
<H3C> display fib 12.158.10.0
Route Entry Count: 1
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
12.158.10.0/24 12.158.10.1 U t[85391] Vlan-interface10
# Display the FIB entries whose destination addresses are in the range of 12.158.10.0/24 to 12.158.10.6/24.
<H3C> display fib 12.158.10.0 255.255.255.0 12.158.10.6 255.255.255.0
Route Entry Count: 1
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
12.158.10.0/24 12.158.10.1 U t[85391] Vlan-interface10
For details about the displayed information, see Table 2-1.
2.1.3 display fib acl
Syntax
display fib acl number
View
Any view
Parameter
number: ACL in the number form, in the range of 2000 to 2999.
Description
Use the display fib acl command to view the FIB entries matching a specific ACL. For ACL, refer to the ACL part of this manual.
Example
# View all the FIB entries.
<H3C> display fib
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
211.71.75.0/24 1.1.1.2 GSU t[250763] Vlan-interface2
1.1.2.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
127.0.0.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
127.0.0.0/8 127.0.0.1 U t[37] InLoopBack0
1.1.1.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
1.1.1.0/24 1.1.1.1 U t[37] Vlan-interface2
# View ACL 2001.
<H3C>display acl 2001
Basic ACL 2001, 1 rule
Acl's step is 1
rule 0 permit source 211.71.75.0 0.0.0.255
# View the FIB entries filtered by ACL 2001.
<H3C> display fib acl 2001
Route Entry matched by access-list 2001
Summary Counts :1
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
211.71.75.0/24 1.1.1.2 GSU t[250763] Vlan-interface2
For details about the displayed information, see Table 2-1.
2.1.4 display fib |
Syntax
display fib | { begin | exclude | include } text
View
Any view
Parameter
begin: Displays the FIB entries from the first one containing the string identified by the argument text.
exclude: Displays only those FIB entries excluding the character string text.
include: Display only those FIB entries containing the character string text.
text: Character string.
Description
Use the display fib | command to output the FIB entries related to the specific character string from the buffer according to the regular expression For the format of the regular expression, refer to the Configuration File Management part of this manual.
Example
# View the lines starting from the first one containing the string 169.254.0.0.
<H3C> display fib | begin 169.254.0.0
169.254.0.0/16 2.1.1.1 U t[0] Vlan-interface1
2.0.0.0/16 2.1.1.1 U t[0] Vlan-interface1
For details about the displayed information, see Table 2-1.
2.1.5 display fib ip-prefix
Syntax
display fib ip-prefix listname
View
Any view
Parameter
listname: Prefix list name, a string of 1 to 19 characters.
Description
Use the display fib ip-prefix command to view the FIB entries matching a specific prefix list. For the prefix list, refer to the IP Routing Policy Configuration in the Routing Protocol part of the manual.
Example
# View the prefix list abc.
<H3C> display ip ip-prefix abc
name index conditions ip-prefix / mask GE LE
abc 10 permit 211.71.75.0/24 -- --
# View all the FIB entries.
<H3C> display fib
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
211.71.75.0/24 1.1.1.2 GSU t[250763] Vlan-interface2
1.1.2.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
127.0.0.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
127.0.0.0/8 127.0.0.1 U t[37] InLoopBack0
1.1.1.1/32 127.0.0.1 GHU t[37] InLoopBack0
1.1.1.0/24 1.1.1.1 U t[37] Vlan-interface2
# View the FIB entries matching prefix list abc.
<H3C> display fib ip-prefix abc
Route Entry matched by prefix-list abc
Summary Counts :1
Flag:
U:Usable G:Gateway H:Host B:Blackhole D:Dynamic S:Static
R:Reject E:Equal cost multi-path L:Generated by ARP or ESIS
Destination/Mask Nexthop Flag TimeStamp Interface
211.71.75.0/24 1.1.1.2 GSU t[250763] Vlan-interface2
For details about the displayed information, see Table 2-1.
2.1.6 display fib statistics
Syntax
display fib statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display fib statistics command to view the total number of FIB entries.
Example
# View the total number of FIB entries.
Route Entry Count : 30
2.1.7 display icmp statistics
Syntax
display icmp statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display icmp statistics command to view the statistics about ICMP packets.
Related command: display ip interface and reset ip statistics.
Example
# View the statistics about ICMP packets.
<H3C> display icmp statistics
Input: bad formats 0 bad checksum 0
echo 5 destination unreachable 0
source quench 0 redirects 0
echo reply 10 parameter problem 0
timestamp 0 information request 0
mask requests 0 mask replies 0
time exceeded 0
Output:echo 10 destination unreachable 0
source quench 0 redirects 0
echo reply 5 parameter problem 0
timestamp 0 information reply 0
mask requests 0 mask replies 0
time exceeded 0
Table 2-2 Description on the fields of the display icmp statistics command
Field |
Description |
bad formats |
Number of input packets in bad formats |
bad checksum |
Number of input packets with bad checksum |
echo |
Number of input/output echo request packets |
destination unreachable |
Number of input/output packets with unreachable destination |
source quench |
Number of input/output source quench packets |
redirects |
Number of input/output redirected packets |
echo reply |
Number of input/output echo reply packets |
parameter problem |
Number of input/output packets with parameter problem |
timestamp |
Number of input/output timestamp packets |
information request |
Number of input information request packets |
mask requests |
Number of input/output mask request packets |
mask replies |
Number of input/output mask reply packets |
information reply |
Number of output information reply packets |
time exceeded |
Number of timeout packets |
2.1.8 display ip socket
Syntax
display ip socket [ socktype sock-type ] [ task-id socket-id ]
View
Any view
Parameter
sock-type: Type of a socket, ranging from 1 to 3. These values correspond to SOCK_STREAM (TCP socket), SOCK_DGRAM (UDP socket or socket based on the link layer), and SOCK_RAW (RAW IP socket).
task-id: ID of a task, with the value ranging from 1 to 100.
socket-id: ID of a socket, with the value ranging from 0 to 3072.
Description
Use the display ip socket command to display the information of the current socket.
Example
# Display the information about the socket of the TCP type.
<H3C> display ip socket socktype 1
SOCK_STREAM:
Task = VTYD(18), socketid = 1, Proto = 6,
LA = 0.0.0.0:23, FA = 0.0.0.0:0,
sndbuf = 8192, rcvbuf = 8192, sb_cc = 0, rb_cc = 0,
socket option = SO_ACCEPTCONN SO_KEEPALIVE SO_SENDVPNID SO_SETKEEPALIVE,
socket state = SS_PRIV SS_ASYNC
Task = VTYD(18), socketid = 2, Proto = 6,
LA = 10.153.17.99:23, FA = 10.153.17.56:1161,
sndbuf = 8192, rcvbuf = 8192, sb_cc = 0, rb_cc = 0,
socket option = SO_KEEPALIVE SO_OOBINLINE SO_SENDVPNID SO_SETKEEPALIVE,
socket state = SS_ISCONNECTED SS_PRIV SS_ASYNC
Task = VTYD(18), socketid = 3, Proto = 6,
LA = 10.153.17.99:23, FA = 10.153.17.82:1121,
sndbuf = 8192, rcvbuf = 8192, sb_cc = 0, rb_cc = 0,
socket option = SO_KEEPALIVE SO_OOBINLINE SO_SENDVPNID SO_SETKEEPALIVE,
socket state = SS_ISCONNECTED SS_PRIV SS_ASYNC
Table 2-3 Description on the fields of the display ip socket command
Field |
Description |
SOCK_STREAM |
Type of a socket. Three types are available: SOCK_STREAM (TCP socket), SOCK_DGRAM (UDP socket or socket supporting link layer access), and SOCK_RAW (RAW IP socket). |
Task |
Task ID |
socketid |
Socket ID |
Proto |
Protocol number used by the socket |
sndbuf |
Sending buffer size of the socket |
rcvbuf |
Receiving buffer size of the socket |
sb_cc |
Current data size in the sending buffer. The value makes sense only for the socket of TCP type, because only TCP is able to cache data. |
rb_cc |
Current data size in the receiving buffer |
socket option |
Option of a socket |
socket state |
State of a socket |
2.1.9 display ip statistics
Syntax
display ip statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display ip statistics command to view the statistics about IP packets.
Related command: display ip interface and reset ip statistics.
Example
# View the statistics about IP packets.
<H3C> display ip statistics
Input: sum 7120 local 112
bad protocol 0 bad format 0
bad checksum 0 bad options 0
Output: forwarding 0 local 27
dropped 0 no route 2
compress fails 0
Fragment:input 0 output 0
dropped 0
fragmented 0 couldn't fragment 0
Reassembling:sum 0 timeouts 0
Table 2-4 Description on the fields of the display ip statistics command
Field |
Description |
|
Input: |
sum |
Sum of input packets |
Local |
Number of input packets whose destination address is the local device |
|
bad protocol |
Number of packets with wrong protocol number |
|
bad format |
Number of packets in bad format |
|
bad checksum |
Number of packets with bad checksum |
|
bad options |
Number of packets with wrong options |
|
Output: |
forwarding |
Number of forwarded packets |
local |
Number of packets sent by the local device |
|
dropped |
Number of dropped packets during transmission |
|
no route |
Number of packets that cannot be routed |
|
compress fails |
Number of packets that cannot be compressed |
|
Fragment: |
input |
Number of input fragments |
output |
Number of output fragments |
|
dropped |
Number of dropped fragments |
|
fragmented |
Number of packets that are fragmented |
|
couldn't fragment |
Number of packets that cannot be fragmented |
|
Reassembling: |
sum |
Number of reassembled packets |
timeouts |
Number of timeout fragment packets |
2.1.10 display tcp statistics
Syntax
display tcp statistics
View
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display tcp statistics command to view the statistics about TCP packets.
Related command: display tcp status and reset tcp statistics.
Example
# View the statistics about TCP packets.
<H3C> display tcp statistics
Received packets:
Total: 753
packets in sequence: 412 (11032 bytes)
window probe packets: 0, window update packets: 0
checksum error: 0, offset error: 0, short error: 0
duplicate packets: 4 (88 bytes), partially duplicate packets: 5 (7 bytes)
out-of-order packets: 0 (0 bytes)
packets of data after window: 0 (0 bytes)
packets received after close: 0
ACK packets: 481 (8776 bytes)
duplicate ACK packets: 7, too much ACK packets: 0
Sent packets:
Total: 665
urgent packets: 0
control packets: 5 (including 1 RST)
window probe packets: 0, window update packets: 2
data packets: 618 (8770 bytes) data packets retransmitted: 0 (0 bytes)
ACK-only packets: 40 (28 delayed)
Retransmitted timeout: 0, connections dropped in retransmitted timeout: 0
Keepalive timeout: 0, keepalive probe: 0, Keepalive timeout, so connections disconnected : 0
Initiated connections: 0, accepted connections: 0, established connections: 0
Closed connections: 0 (dropped: 0, initiated dropped: 0)
Packets dropped with MD5 authentication: 0
Packets permitted with MD5 authentication: 0
Table 2-5 Description on the fields of the display tcp statistics command
Field |
Description |
|
Received packets |
Total |
Total number of received packets |
packets in sequence |
Number of packets in sequence |
|
window probe packets/ window update packets |
Number of window probe packets/number of window update packets |
|
checksum error/ offset error/ short error |
Number of checksum errors/number of offset errors/number of packet too short errors |
|
duplicate packets/ partially duplicate packets |
Number of duplicate packets/number of partially duplicate packets |
|
out-of-order packets |
Number of out-of-order packets |
|
packets of data after window |
Number of packets out of window |
|
packets received after close |
Number of received packets after close |
|
ACK packets |
Number of ACK packets |
|
duplicate ACK packets/ too much ACK packets |
Number of duplicate ACK packets/number of ACK packets for data not sent. |
|
Sent packets |
Total |
Total number of sent packets |
urgent packets |
Number of urgent packets |
|
control packets (including 1 RST) |
Number of control packets, including one retransmitted packet |
|
window probe packets/ window update packets |
Number of window probe packets/number of window update packets |
|
data packets/ data packets retransmitted |
Number of data packets/number of retransmitted packets |
|
ACK-only packets |
Number of ACK packets (28 delay ACK packets) |
|
Retransmitted timeout/ connections dropped in retransmitted timeout |
Times of retransmission timer timeout/number of dropped connections due to retransmission times exceeding the limit |
|
Keepalive timeout/ keepalive probe/ Keepalive timeout, so connections disconnected |
Times of keepalive timer timeout/number of transmitted keepalive probe packets/number of dropped connections due to keepalive probe failure |
|
Initiated connections/ accepted connections/ established connections |
Number of initiated connections/number of accepted connections/number of established connections |
|
Closed connections (dropped:\ initiated dropped: ) |
Number of closed connections (number of dropped connections\number of failed connection attempts) |
|
Packets dropped with MD5 authentication |
Number of dropped packets with MD5 authentication |
|
Packets permitted with MD5 authentication |
Number of permitted packets with MD5 authentication |
2.1.11 display tcp status
Syntax
display tcp status
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display tcp status command to view the state of all the TCP connections so that you can monitor TCP connections in real time.
Example
# View the state of all the TCP connections.
<H3C> display tcp status
*: TCP MD5 Connection
TCPCB Local Add:port Foreign Add:port State
03e37dc4 0.0.0.0:4001 0.0.0.0:0 Listening
04217174 100.0.0.204:23 100.0.0.253:65508 Established
Table 2-6 Description on the fields of the display tcp status command
Field |
Description |
* |
If there is an asterisk before a connection, it means that the TCP connection is authenticated through the MD5 algorithm |
TCPCB |
Address of the TCP control block |
Local Add:port |
Local IP address; port number |
Foreign Add:port |
Remote IP address; port number |
State |
TCP connection state |
2.1.12 display udp statistics
Syntax
display udp statistics
View
Any view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the display udp statistics command to view the statistics about UDP packets.
Related command: reset udp statistics.
Example
# View the statistics about UDP packets.
<H3C> display udp statistics
Received packets:
Total: 26320
checksum error: 0
shorter than header: 0, data length larger than packet: 0
no socket on port: 0
total broadcast or multicast packets : 25006
no socket broadcast or multicast packets: 24989
not delivered, input socket full: 0
input packets missing pcb cache: 1314
Sent packets:
Total: 7187
Table 2-7 Description on the fields of the display udp statistics command
Field |
Description |
|
Received packets: |
Total |
Total number of received UDP packets |
checksum error |
Number of packets with checksum errors |
|
shorter than header, |
Number of packets whose lengths are shorter than their headers |
|
data length larger than packet |
Number of packets whose data lengths are larger than the packets lengths (specified in the headers) |
|
no socket on port |
Number of packets dropped because the socket corresponding to the port number is not found |
|
total broadcast or multicast packets |
Total number of transmitted broadcast or multicast packets |
|
no socket broadcast or multicast packets |
Total number of transmitted broadcast or multicast packets whose sockets are not found |
|
not delivered, input socket full |
Number of not delivered packets because the socket cache is full |
|
input packets missing pcb cache |
Number of packets missing pcb cache |
|
Sent packets: |
Total |
Total number of transmitted UDP packets |
2.1.13 ip forward-broadcast
Syntax
ip forward-broadcast
undo ip forward-broadcast
View
System view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the ip forward-broadcast command to permit to receive subnet-directed broadcast packets.
Use the undo ip forward-broadcast command to suppress subnet-directed broadcast packets.
By default, the subnet-directed broadcast packets are suppressed.
Example
# Permit to receive the subnet-directed broadcast packets.
<H3C> system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[H3C] ip forward-broadcast
2.1.14 reset ip statistics
Syntax
reset ip statistics
View
User view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the reset ip statistics command to clear the statistics about IP packets.
Related command: display ip interface and display ip statistics.
Example
# Clear the statistics about IP packets.
<H3C> reset ip statistics
2.1.15 reset tcp statistics
Syntax
reset tcp statistics
View
User view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the reset tcp statistics command to clear the statistics about TCP packets.
Related command: display tcp statistics.
Example
# Clear the statistics about TCP packets.
<H3C> reset tcp statistics
2.1.16 reset udp statistics
Syntax
reset udp statistics
View
User view
Parameter
None
Description
Use the reset udp statistics command to clear the statistics about UDP packets.
Example
# Clear the statistics about UDP packets.
<H3C> reset udp statistics
2.1.17 tcp timer fin-timeout
Syntax
tcp timer fin-timeout time-value
undo tcp timer fin-timeout
View
System view
Parameter
time-value: TCP finwait timer value, in seconds, with the value ranging from 76 to 3600.
Description
Use the tcp timer fin-timeout command to configure the TCP finwait timer.
Use the undo tcp timer fin-timeout command to restore the default value of the TCP finwait timer.
By default, the value of the TCP finwait timer is 675 seconds.
When the TCP connection state changes from FIN_WAIT_1 to FIN_WAIT_2, the finwait timer is enabled. If the switch does not receive FIN packets before finwait timer times out, the TCP connection will be terminated.
Related command: tcp timer syn-timeout and tcp window.
Example
# Configure the default value of the TCP finwait timer to 800 seconds.
<H3C> system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[H3C] tcp timer fin-timeout 800
2.1.18 tcp timer syn-timeout
Syntax
tcp timer syn-timeout time-value
undo tcp timer syn-timeout
View
System view
Parameter
time-value: TCP synwait timer value, in seconds, with the value ranging from 2 to 600.
Description
Use the tcp timer syn-timeout command to configure the TCP synwait timer.
Use the undo tcp timer syn-timeout command to restore the default value of the TCP synwait timer.
By default, the value of the TCP synwait timer is 75 seconds.
When sending the SYN packet, TCP starts the synwait timer. If the response packet is not received before synwait times out, the TCP connection will be terminated.
Related command: tcp timer fin-timeout and tcp window.
Example
# Configure the default value of the TCP synwait timer to 80 seconds.
<H3C> system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[H3C] tcp timer syn-timeout 80
2.1.19 tcp window
Syntax
tcp window window-size
undo tcp window
View
System view
Parameter
window-size: Size of the transmission and receiving buffers of the connection-oriented socket, measured in kilobytes (KB), in the range of 1 to 32.
Description
Use the tcp window command to configure the size of the transmission and receiving buffers of the connection-oriented socket.
Use the undo tcp window command to restore the default size of the transmission and receiving buffers of the connection-oriented socket.
By default, the size of the transmission and receiving buffers is 8 KB.
Related command: tcp timer fin-timeout and tcp timer syn-timeout.
Example
# Configure the size of the transmission and receiving buffers of the connection-oriented socket to 3KB.
<H3C> system-view
System View: return to User View with Ctrl+Z.
[H3C] tcp window 3