- Table of Contents
-
- 05-Network Connectivity
- 00-Preface
- 01-MAC address table commands
- 02-Ethernet link aggregation commands
- 03-VLAN commands
- 04-Loop detection commands
- 05-Spanning tree commands
- 06-LLDP commands
- 07-Layer 2 forwarding commands
- 08-L2TP commands
- 09-ARP commands
- 10-IP addressing commands
- 11-DHCP commands
- 12-DHCP snooping commands
- 13-DHCPv6 commands
- 14-DHCPv6 snooping commands
- 15-DNS commands
- 16-HTTP commands
- 17-IP forwarding basics commands
- 18-Fast forwarding commands
- 19-Adjacency table commands
- 20-IP performance optimization commands
- 21-IPv6 basics commands
- 22-IPv6 neighbor discovery commands
- 23-IPv6 fast forwarding commands
- 24-NAT commands
- 25-Basic IP routing commands
- 26-Static routing commands
- 27-RIP commands
- 28-OSPF commands
- 29-Policy-based routing commands
- 30-IPv6 policy-based routing commands
- 31-IPv6 static routing commands
- 32-RIPng commands
- 33-GRE commands
- 34-IGMP snooping commands
- 35-MLD snooping commands
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
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10-IP addressing commands | 62.67 KB |
IP addressing commands
display ip interface
Use display ip interface to display IP configuration and statistics for Layer 3 interfaces.
Syntax
display ip interface [ interface-type [ interface-number ] ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface-type: Specifies an interface by its type.
interface-number: Specifies an interface by its number.
Usage guidelines
Use the display ip interface command to display IP configuration and statistics for the specified Layer 3 interface. The statistics include the following information:
· The number of unicast packets, bytes, and multicast packets the interface has sent and received.
· The number of TTL-invalid packets and ICMP packets the interface has received.
The packet statistics helps you locate a possible attack on the network.
If you specify only the interface type, this command displays IP configuration and statistics for all interfaces of this interface type. If you do not specify any optional parameters, this command displays IP configuration and statistics for all Layer 3 interfaces.
Examples
# Display IP configuration and statistics for VLAN-interface 10.
<Sysname> display ip interface vlan-interface 10
Vlan-interface10 current state : DOWN
Line protocol current state : DOWN
Internet Address is 1.1.1.1/8 Primary
Broadcast address : 1.255.255.255
The Maximum Transmit Unit : 1500 bytes
input packets : 0, bytes : 0, multicasts : 0
output packets : 0, bytes : 0, multicasts : 0
TTL invalid packet 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 Command output
Field |
Description |
current state |
Physical link state of the interface: · Administrative 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 current state |
Data link layer state of the interface. · DOWN—The data link layer protocol is down. · UP—The data link layer protocol is up. · UP (spoofing)—The data link layer protocol is up, but the link is an on-demand link or does not exist. |
Internet Address |
IP address of an interface followed by: · Primary—A primary IP address. · Sub—A secondary IP address. · Unnumbered—An unnumbered IP address. · DHCP-Allocated—An IP address obtained through DHCP. · BOOTP-Allocated—An IP address obtained through BOOTP. · Mad—A MAD IP address. |
Broadcast address |
Broadcast address of the subnet attached to an interface. |
The Maximum Transmit Unit |
MTU of the interface, in bytes. |
input packets, bytes, multicasts output packets, bytes, multicasts |
All received and sent packets and bytes, and received and sent multicast packets on an interface (statistics start at the device startup). |
TTL invalid packet number |
Number of TTL-invalid packets received on the interface (statistics start at the device startup). |
ICMP packet input number: Echo reply: Unreachable: Source quench: Routing redirect: Echo request: Router advert: Router solicit: Time exceed: IP header bad: Timestamp request: Timestamp reply: Information request: Information reply: Netmask request: Netmask reply: Unknown type: |
Total number of ICMP packets received on the interface (statistics start at the device startup): · Echo reply packets. · Unreachable packets. · Source quench packets. · Routing redirect packets. · Echo request packets. · Router advertisement packets. · Router solicitation packets. · Time exceeded packets. · IP header bad packets. · Timestamp request packets. · Timestamp reply packets. · Information request packets. · Information reply packets. · Netmask request packets. · Netmask reply packets. · Unknown type packets. |
Related commands
display ip interface brief
ip address
display ip interface brief
Use display ip interface brief to display brief IP configuration for Layer 3 interfaces.
Syntax
display ip interface [ interface-type [ interface-number ] ] brief [ description ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
network-operator
Parameters
interface-type: Specifies an interface type. If you do not specify an interface type, this command displays brief IP configuration for all Layer 3 interfaces except VA interfaces.
interface-number: Specifies an interface number. If you do not specify an interface number, this command displays brief IP configuration for all Layer 3 interfaces of the specified type.
description: Displays complete interface descriptions. If you do not specify this keyword, the command displays a maximum of 16 characters for each interface description. If the description is longer than 16 characters, the first 14 characters are displayed, followed by an ellipsis (...).
Usage guidelines
Information displayed by the command includes the state of the physical and link layer protocols, IP address, and interface descriptions.
Examples
# Display brief IP configuration for VLAN interfaces.
<Sysname> display ip interface vlan-interface brief
*down: administratively down
(s): spoofing (l): loopback
Interface Physical Protocol IP Address Description
Vlan10 down down 6.6.6.1 Link to CoreRo...
Vlan2 down down 7.7.7.1 --
<Sysname> display ip interface vlan-interface brief description
*down: administratively down
(s): spoofing (l): loopback
Interface Physical Protocol IP Address Description
Vlan10 down down 6.6.6.1 Link to CoreRouter
Vlan2 down down 7.7.7.1 --
Table 2 Command output
Field |
Description |
*down: administratively down |
The interface is administratively shut down by using the shutdown command. |
(s) : spoofing |
Spoofing attribute of the interface. The link protocol state of the interface is up, but the link is temporarily established on demand or does not exist. |
Interface |
Interface name. |
Physical |
Physical state of the interface: · *down—The interface is administratively shut down by using the shutdown command. · down—The interface is administratively up but its physical state is down, possibly because of a connection or link failure. · up—Both the administrative and physical states of the interface are up. |
Protocol |
Link layer protocol state of the interface: · down—The protocol state of the interface is down. · down(l)—The protocol state of the interface is down (loopback). · up—The protocol state of the interface is up. · up(l)—The protocol state of the interface is up (loopback). · up(s)—The protocol state of the interface is up (spoofing). |
IP Address |
IP address of the interface. If no IP address is configured, this field displays hyphens (--). |
Description |
Description of the interface. If no description is configured, this field displays hyphens (--). |
Related commands
display ip interface
ip address
ip address
Use ip address to assign an IP address to the interface.
Use undo ip address to remove the IP address from the interface.
Syntax
ip address ip-address { mask-length | mask } [ sub ]
undo ip address [ ip-address { mask-length | mask } [ sub ] ]
Default
No IP address is assigned to an interface.
Views
Interface view
Predefined user roles
Parameters
ip-address: Specifies the IP address of the interface, in dotted decimal notation.
mask-length: Specifies the subnet mask length in the range of 1 to 31. For a loopback interface, the value range is 1 to 32.
mask: Specifies the subnet mask in dotted decimal notation.
sub: Assigns a secondary IP address to the interface.
Usage guidelines
Use the command to assign a primary or secondary IP address to an interface.
An interface can have only one primary IP address. If you execute this command multiple times to specify different primary IP addresses, the most recent configuration takes effect. If the interface connects to multiple subnets, configure primary and secondary IP addresses on the interface so the subnets can communicate with each other through the interface.
You cannot assign secondary IP addresses to an interface that obtains an IP address through BOOTP, IP unnumbered, or DHCP.
If you do not specify any parameters, the undo ip address command removes all IP addresses from the interface. The undo ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length } command removes the primary IP address. The undo ip address ip-address { mask | mask-length } sub command removes a secondary IP address.
The primary and secondary IP addresses assigned to the interface can be located on the same network segment. Different interfaces on your device must reside on different network segments.
Examples
# Assign VLAN-interface 10 a primary IP address 129.12.0.1 and a secondary IP address 202.38.160.1, with subnet masks both 255.255.255.0.
<Sysname> system-view
[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 10
[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] ip address 129.12.0.1 255.255.255.0
[Sysname-Vlan-interface10] ip address 202.38.160.1 255.255.255.0 sub
Related commands
display ip interface
display ip interface brief