03-Interface Command Reference

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03-WAN interface commands
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WAN interface commands

Common WAN interface commands

default

Use default to restore the default settings for an interface.

Syntax

default

Views

CE1 interface

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

CAUTION

CAUTION:

The default command might interrupt ongoing network services. Make sure you are fully aware of the impact of this command when you use it on a live network.

 

This command might fail to restore the default settings for some commands for reasons such as command dependencies and system restrictions. You can use the display this command in interface view to check for these commands, and use their undo forms or follow the command reference to restore their respective default settings. If your restoration attempt still fails, follow the error message instructions to resolve the problem.

Examples

# Restore the default settings of Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] default

description

Use description to configure the description of an interface.

Use undo description to restore the default.

Syntax

description text

undo description

Default

The interface description uses the interface name Interface format, for example, Serial5/1/1:1 Interface.

Views

CE1 interface view

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

text: Specifies the description, a case-sensitive string of 1 to 255 characters.

Examples

# Configure the description of Serial 5/1/1:1 as router-interface.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] description router-interface

shutdown

Use shutdown to shut down an interface.

Use undo shutdown to restore the default.

Syntax

shutdown

undo shutdown

Default

A WAN interface is up.

Views

CE1 interface view

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Examples

# Shut down Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] shutdown

Serial interface commands

bandwidth

Use bandwidth to configure the expected bandwidth of an interface.

Use undo bandwidth to restore the default.

Syntax

bandwidth bandwidth-value

undo bandwidth

Default

The expected bandwidth (in kbps) is the interface baud rate divided by 1000.

Views

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

bandwidth-value: Specifies the expected bandwidth in the range of 1 to 400000000 kbps.

Usage guidelines

The expected bandwidth is an informational parameter used only by higher-layer protocols for calculation. You cannot adjust the actual bandwidth of an interface by using this command.

Examples

# Set the expected bandwidth to 50 kbps for Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] bandwidth 50

crc

Use crc to set the CRC mode for a synchronous serial interface.

Use undo crc to restore the default.

Syntax

crc { 16 | 32 | none }

undo crc

Default

16-bit CRC is used.

Views

Synchronous serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

16: Specifies 16-bit CRC.

32: Specifies 32-bit CRC.

none: Disables CRC.

Examples

# Configure Serial 5/1/1:1 to use 32-bit CRC.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] crc 32

display interface serial

Use display interface serial to display information about serial interfaces.

Syntax

display interface [ serial [ interface-number ] ] [ brief [ description | down ] ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

serial [ interface-number ]: Specifies a serial interface by its number. If you do not specify the serial keyword, this command displays information about all interfaces. If you specify the serial keyword without specifying an interface, this command displays information about all serial interfaces.

brief: Displays brief interface information. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays detailed interface information.

description: Displays complete interface descriptions. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays only the first 27 characters of interface descriptions.

down: Displays physically down interfaces and their down causes. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays information about interfaces in all states.

Examples

# Display detailed information about Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> display interface Serial 5/1/1:1

Serial5/1/1:1

Current state: DOWN

Line protocol state: DOWN

Description: Serial5/1/1:1 Interface

Bandwidth: 1000 kbps

Maximum transmission unit: 1500

Hold timer: 10 seconds, retry times: 5

Derived from E1 5/1/1, Timeslot(s) Used: 1, Baudrate is 64000 bps

Internet protocol processing: Disabled

Link layer protocol: PPP

LCP: initial

Port priority: 0

Last clearing of counters: Never

CRC type is none

Last 50 seconds input:  0 packets/sec,  0 bytes/sec

Last 50 seconds output:  0 packets/sec,  0 bytes/sec

Input(total):  0 packets,  0 bytes

Input(Bad):  0 Abort,  0 FCS-Error,  0 FIFO-Abort,  0 Giant,  0 Runt

Output(total):  0 packets,  0 bytes

Output(Bad):  0 Abort

Peak value of input: 0 bytes/sec, at 2017-12-22 08:02:01

Peak value of output: 0 bytes/sec, at 2017-12-22 08:02:01

# Display brief information about Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> display interface Serial 5/1/1:1 brief

Brief information on interfaces in route mode:

Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby

Protocol: (s) - spoofing

Interface            Link Protocol Primary IP         Description

Ser5/1/1:1           UP   UP(s)    --

# Display brief information about all serial interfaces in down state and the causes.

<Sysname> display interface serial brief down

Brief information on interfaces in route mode:

Link: ADM - administratively down; Stby - standby

Interface            Link Cause

Ser5/1/1:1           ADM  Administratively

Table 1 Command output

Field

Description

Current state

Physical link state of the interface:

·         Administratively DOWN—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command.

·         DOWN—The interface is administratively up, but its physical state is down (possibly because no physical link exists or the link has failed).

·         UP—The interface is both administratively and physically up.

Line protocol state

Data link layer state of the interface. The state is determined through automatic parameter negotiation at the data link layer.

·         UP—The data link layer protocol is up.

·         DOWN—The data link layer protocol is down.

Description

Description of the interface.

Bandwidth

Expected bandwidth of the interface.

Maximum transmission unit

MTU of the interface.

Hold timer

Interval at which the interface sends keepalive packets.

retry times

Keepalive retry limit.

The interface determines that the remote end is down if it does not receive a keepalive response after the keepalive retry limit has been made.

Internet protocol processing: Disabled

The interface is not assigned an IP address and cannot process IP packets.

Internet Address

IP address of the interface. The primary attribute indicates that the address is the primary IP address.

Link layer protocol

Link layer protocol of the interface.

LCP

LCP status.

Last clearing of counters

The most recent time that the reset counters interface serial command was executed. This field displays Never if this command has not been executed since the device startup.

Last 50 seconds input:  0 packets/sec,  0 bytes/sec

Average input rates (in Bps, bps, and pps) for the last 50 seconds.

Last 50 seconds output:  0 packets/sec,  0 bytes/sec

Average output rates (in Bps, bps, and pps) for the last 50 seconds.

Input(total):  0 packets,  0 bytes

Total number and size (in bytes) of correct packets received by the interface.

Input(Bad):  0 Abort,  0 FCS-Error,  0 FIFO-Abort,  0 Giant,  0 Runt

Incoming error traffic statistics for the interface:

·         Abort—Number of anomalous errors.

·         FCS-Error—Number of incoming normal-size packets with CRC or FCS errors.

·         FIFO-Abort—Number of incoming FIFO overflow errors.

·         Giant—Number of incoming oversized packets.

·         Runt—Number of incoming undersized packets.

Output(total):  0 packets,  0 bytes

Outgoing traffic statistics for the interface.

Output(Bad):  0 Abort

Total number of packets that fail to be forwarded for any reasons (for example, packet collisions were detected during transmission).

Peak value of input

·         Peak rate (in bytes/sec) for incoming traffic on the interface.

Time when the peak rate occurred.

Peak value of output

·         Peak rate (in bytes/sec) for outgoing traffic on the interface.

Time when the peak rate occurred.

Brief information on interfaces in route mode:

Brief information about Layer 3 interfaces.

Interface

Abbreviated interface name.

Link

Physical link state of the interface:

·         UP—The interface is physically up.

·         DOWN—The interface is physically down.

·         ADM—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command. To restore the physical state of the interface, use the undo shutdown command.

·         Stby—The interface is a backup interface in standby state.

Protocol

Data link layer protocol state of the interface:

·         UP—The data link layer protocol of the interface is up.

·         DOWN—The data link layer protocol of the interface is down.

·         UP(s)—The data link layer protocol of the interface is up, but the link is an on-demand link or does not exist. The (s) attribute represents the spoofing flag.

Primary IP

Primary IP address of the interface. This field displays two hyphens (--) if the interface does not have an IP address.

Description

Description of the interface.

Cause

Cause for the physical link state of an interface to be DOWN:

·         Administratively—The interface has been manually shut down by using the shutdown command. To restore the physical state of the interface, use the undo shutdown command.

·         Not connected—No physical connection exists (possibly because the network cable is disconnected or faulty).

 

Related commands

reset counters interface serial

interface serial

Use interface serial to enter serial interface view.

Syntax

interface serial interface-number

Default

No serial subinterfaces exist.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

interface-number: Specifies a serial interface by its number.

Examples

# Enter the view of Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface Serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1]

link-protocol

Use link-protocol to configure the data link layer protocol for an interface.

Syntax

link-protocol { hdlc | ppp }

Default

A serial interface uses PPP as the data link layer protocol.

Views

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

hdlc: Specifies the HDLC data link layer protocol.

ppp: Specifies the PPP data link layer protocol.

Examples

# Specify HDLC as the data link layer protocol of Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] link-protocol hdlc

mtu

Use mtu to set the MTU for an interface.

Use undo mtu to restore the default.

Syntax

mtu size

undo mtu

Default

The MTU of an interface is 1500 bytes.

Views

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

size: Sets the maximum transmission unit (MTU) in bytes. The value range for this argument varies by card model.

Usage guidelines

The MTU setting affects IP packet assembly and fragmentation on the interface.

After configuring the MTU for a WAN interface, you must use the shutdown command and then the undo shutdown command on the interface for the modification to take effect.

Follow these guidelines when you set the MTU for an interface:

·          IP packets received by an incoming interface cannot be fragmented based on the MTU set for the outgoing interface if the incoming interface is on one of the following cards:

¡  CSPC (except CSPC-GE16XP4L-E, CSPC-GE24L-E, and CSPC-GP24GE8XP2L-E).

¡  CMPE-1104.

·          IP packets are fragmented to each fragment of 1280 bytes when the following conditions are met:

¡  An interface on a CSPC-GE16XP4L-E, CSPC-GE24L-E, CSPC-GP24GE8XP2L-E, CSPEX, or CEPC card acts as the incoming interface.

¡  The configured MTU value for the outgoing interface is less than 1280.

If the device is installed with the above cards, as a best practice, set the outgoing interface MTU to a value greater than 1280.

Examples

# Set the MTU to 1430 bytes for Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] mtu 1430

reset counters interface serial

Use reset counters interface serial to clear serial interface statistics.

Syntax

reset counters interface [ serial [ interface-number ] ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

serial [ interface-number ]: Specifies a serial interface by its number. If you do not specify the serial keyword, this command clears statistics for all interfaces. If you specify the serial keyword without specifying an interface, this command clears statistics for all serial interfaces.

Usage guidelines

Use this command to clear history statistics before you collect traffic statistics for a time period.

Examples

# Clear statistics for Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> reset counters interface serial 5/1/1:1

Related commands

display interface serial

timer-hold

Use timer-hold to set the keepalive interval.

Use undo timer-hold to restore the default.

Syntax

timer-hold seconds

undo timer-hold

Default

The keepalive interval is 10 seconds.

Views

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

seconds: Specifies the interval at which an interface sends keepalive packets. The value range is 0 to 32767 seconds.

Usage guidelines

On an interface encapsulated with PPP or HDLC, the data link layer sends keepalive packets at keepalive intervals to detect the availability of the remote end. The data link layer determines that the peer end is down if it does not receive a response after the keepalive retry limit has been made. The data link layer then reports the link down event to the upper-layer protocols.

To set the keepalive retry limit, use the timer-hold retry command.

On a slow link, increase the keepalive interval to prevent false shutdown of the interface. This situation might occur when keepalive packets are delayed because a large packet is being transmitted on the link.

Examples

# Set the keepalive interval to 15 seconds for Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] timer-hold 15

Related commands

timer-hold retry

timer-hold retry

Use timer-hold retry to set the keepalive retry limit.

Use undo timer-hold retry to restore the default.

Syntax

timer-hold retry retries

undo timer-hold retry

Default

The keepalive retry limit is 5.

Views

Serial interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

retries: Specifies the keepalive retry limit, in the range of 1 to 255.

Usage guidelines

The interface determines that the remote end is down if it does not receive a response after the keepalive retry limit has been made.

This command applies to interfaces encapsulated with PPP or HDLC. To set the keepalive interval, use the timer-hold command.

On a slow link, increase the keepalive retry limit to prevent false shutdown of the interface. This situation might occur when keepalive packets are delayed because a large packet is being transmitted on the link.

Examples

# Set the keepalive retry limit to 10 for Serial 5/1/1:1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface serial 5/1/1:1

[Sysname-Serial5/1/1:1] timer-hold retry 10

Related commands

timer-hold

CE1 interface commands

cable

Use cable to set the cable type for a CE1 interface.

Use undo cable to restore the default.

Syntax

cable { long | short }

undo cable

Default

The long keyword applies.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

long: Specifies the attenuation of the receiver as –43 dB.

short: Specifies the attenuation of the receiver as –10 dB.

Examples

# Set the cable type on E1 5/2/1 to short.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] cable short

channel-set

Use channel-set to bundle timeslots on a CE1 interface into a channel set.

Use undo channel-set to cancel the bundling.

Syntax

channel-set set-number timeslot-list list

undo channel-set [ set-number ]

Default

No channel sets exist on a CE1 interface.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

set-number: Specifies the number of the channel set for the timeslot bundle. The value range is 0 to 30.

timeslot-list list: Specifies a comma-separated list of timeslot items. An item can be an individual timeslot or a timeslot range. Use a hyphen (-) to separate the start and end timeslot numbers of a range. The value range for the timeslot number is 1 to 31.

Usage guidelines

A CE1 interface in CE1 mode is physically divided into 32 timeslots numbered 0 through 31. All the timeslots except timeslot 0 can be bundled into multiple channel sets. For each channel set, the system automatically creates a serial interface that has the same logical features as a standard synchronous serial interface.

The serial interface name uses the serial interface-number:set-number format. The interface-number argument specifies the CE1 interface number. The set-number argument specifies the channel set number.

Examples

# Bundle timeslots 1, 2, 5, 10 through 15, and 18 into channel set 0 on E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] channel-set 0 timeslot-list 1,2,5,10-15,18

clock

Use clock to set the clock mode of a CE1 interface.

Use undo clock to restore the default.

Syntax

clock { master | slave }

undo clock

Default

The clock mode of a CE1 interface is slave.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

master: Sets the clock mode to master.

slave: Sets the clock mode to slave.

Usage guidelines

When the clock mode of a CE1 interface is master, it uses the internal clock source. When the clock mode of a CE1 interface is slave, it uses the line clock source.

Examples

# Set the clock mode to master for CE1 interface E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] clock master

clock-change auto

Use clock-change auto to enable automatic clock mode switchover on an interface.

Use undo clock-change auto to disable automatic clock mode switchover.

Syntax

clock-change auto

undo clock-change auto

Default

Automatic clock mode switchover is disabled on an interface.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Usage guidelines

When automatic clock mode switchover is enabled, the interface automatically switches to the master clock mode when both of the following conditions exist:

·          The interface uses the slave clock mode.

·          The interface receives an alarm indication signal (AIS), loss of signal (LOS), or loss of frame (LOF) alarm.

After the alarm is cleared, the interface automatically switches back to the slave mode.

When automatic clock mode switchover is disabled, the interface uses the user-configured clock mode.

Examples

# Enable automatic clock mode switchover for E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] clock-change auto

Related commands

clock

controller e1

Use controller e1 to enter CE1 interface view.

Syntax

controller e1 interface-number

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

interface-number: Specifies a CE1 interface by its number.

Examples

# Enter E1 5/2/1 interface view.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1]

display controller e1

Use display controller e1 to display information about CE1 interfaces.

Syntax

display controller [ e1 [ interface-number ] ]

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

e1 [ interface-number ]: Specifies a CE1 interface by its number. If you do not specify the e1 keyword, the command displays information about all CE1 interfaces and CPOS interfaces. If you specify the e1 keyword without specifying an interface, the command displays information about all CE1 interfaces.

Examples

# Display information about E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> display controller e1 5/2/1

E1 5/2/1                                                                       

Current state: DOWN                                                            

Description: E1 5/2/1 Interface                                                

Last clearing of counters: Never                                               

Current system time:2013-02-23 09:44:34                                        

Last time when physical state changed to up:-                                  

Last time when physical state changed to down:2013-02-20 15:58:54              

Basic Configuration:                                                           

  Work mode is E1 framed, frame-format is no-crc4.                             

  Resistance type is 120 Ohm balanced.                                         

  Cable type is no connector.                                                  

  Line code is hdb3, source clock is master.                                   

  Itf type is 7e, itf number is 4.                                              

  Cable loss type is long, auto clock change is enabled.                       

  Loopback is not set.                                                         

Alarm State:                                                                    

  LFA LOS                                                                      

Error Statistic:                                                               

  Line Code Error: 0, Path Code Error: 0.

Table 2 Command output

Field

Description

Current state

Physical link state of the interface:

·         Administratively DOWN—The interface has been shut down by using the shutdown command.

·         DOWN—The interface is administratively up, but its physical state is down (possibly because no physical link exists or the link has failed).

·         UP—The interface is both administratively and physically up.

Description

Description of the interface.

Last clearing of counters

Time when the reset counters interface command was last used to clear the interface statistics. This field displays Never if the reset counters interface command has never been used on the interface since device startup.

Current system time

Current system time in the YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS format. If the time zone is configured, this field is in the YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS UTC±HH:MM:SS format.

Last time when physical state changed to up

Last time when physical state of the interface changed to up.

A hyphen (-) indicates that the physical state of the interface has not changed to up.

Last time when physical state changed to down

Last time when physical state of the interface changed to down.

A hyphen (-) indicates that the physical state of the interface has not changed to down.

Work mode

Operating mode of the interface: E1 or CE1.

Cable type

Cable type of the interface.

source clock

Clock source used by the interface: master or slave.

Line code

Line code: AMI or HDB3.

Itf type

Interframe filling tag: 7e or ff. This field is not supported in the current software version.

itf number

Number of interframe filling tags between two successive frames. This field is not supported in the current software version.

Cable loss type

Cable type of the interface.

auto clock change

Auto clock change state on the interface.

Loopback

Loopback state.

Line Code Error

Error statistics for line code (AMI or HDB3).

The AMI line code is not supported in the current software version.

Path Code Error

Bit error statistics for frame alignment.

 

Related commands

reset counters controller e1

frame-format

Use frame-format to set the framing format for a CE1 interface.

Use undo frame-format to restore the default.

Syntax

frame-format { crc4 | no-crc4 }

undo frame-format

Default

The framing format on a CE1 interface is no-CRC4.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

crc4: Sets the framing format to CRC4.

no-crc4: Sets the framing format to no-CRC4.

Usage guidelines

A CE1 interface in CE1 mode supports both CRC4 and no-CRC4 framing formats. Only CRC4 supports four-bit CRC on physical frames.

Examples

# Set the framing format to CRC4 on E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] frame-format crc4

loopback

Use loopback to enable loopback and set the loopback mode on a CE1 interface.

Use undo loopback to disable loopback on a CE1 interface.

Syntax

loopback { local | payload | remote }

undo loopback

Default

Loopback is disabled on a CE1 interface.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

local: Sets the interface to operate in local loopback mode.

payload: Sets the interface to operate in external payload loopback mode.

remote: Sets the interface to operate in external loopback mode.

Usage guidelines

Loopback is intended for testing only. Disable the feature when the interface is operating correctly.

You can bundle timeslots on the CE1 interface to form a serial interface and encapsulate it with PPP. After you enable loopback on this serial interface, it is normal that the state of the link layer protocol is reported as down.

Examples

# Set E1 5/2/1 to operate in internal loopback mode.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] loopback local

reset counters controller e1

Use reset counters controller e1 to clear CE1 interface statistics.

Syntax

reset counters controller e1 [ interface-number ]

Views

User view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

interface-number: Specifies a CE1 interface by its number. If you do not specify this argument, the command clears statistics for all CE1 interfaces.

Usage guidelines

The reset counters interface command clears statistics for all interfaces.

To display CE1 interface statistics, use the display controller e1 command.

Examples

# Clear statistics for CE1 interface E1 5/2/1.

<Sysname> reset counters controller e1 5/2/1

Related commands

display controller e1

using

Use using to set the operating mode of a CE1 interface.

Use undo using to restore the default.

Syntax

using { ce1 | e1 }

undo using

Default

A CE1 interface operates in channelized mode.

Views

CE1 interface view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

ce1: Sets the interface to operate in channelized mode.

e1: Sets the interface to operate in E1 mode.

Usage guidelines

A CE1 interface can operate in channelized or unchannelized mode.

·          Channelized mode is also called CE1 mode. In CE1 mode, the CE1 interface is physically divided into 32 timeslots numbered 0 through 31. Timeslot 0 is used for FSC.

·          Unchannelized mode is also called E1 mode. For a CE1 interface in E1 mode, the system automatically creates a 2.048 Mbps serial interface. The interface name uses the serial interface-number:0 format. The interface-number argument specifies the CE1 interface number. This interface has the same logical features as a standard synchronous serial interface.

Examples

# Set E1 5/2/1 to operate in E1 mode.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] controller e1 5/2/1

[Sysname-E1 5/2/1] using e1

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