Cisco IOS Quality of Service Solutions Command Reference
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show ip rsvp hello client lsp summary through show lane qos database
show ip rsvp hello client lsp summary
To display summary information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) client hellos for label-switched
paths (LSPs), use theshowiprsvphelloclientlspsummarycommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphelloclientlspsummary
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SB
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphelloclientlspsummarycommand to display information about the LSPs, including IP addresses and identification numbers.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphelloclientlspsummarycommand:
Router# show ip rsvp hello client lsp summary
Local Remote tun_id lsp_id FLAGS
10.1.1.1 172.16.1.1 14 31 0x32
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 1. show ip rsvp hello client lsp summary Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Local
IP address of the tunnel sender.
Remote
IP address of the tunnel destination.
tun_id
Identification number of the tunnel.
lsp_id
Identification number of the LSP.
FLAGS
Database information.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
show ip rsvp hello client nbr detail
To display detailed information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) client hellos for neighbors,
use theshowiprsvphelloclientnbrdetailcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Specifies filters to limit the display of output.
destination
(Optional) Displays the filters configured on the destination (tunnel tail).
hostname
(Optional) IP address or name of destination (tunnel tail).
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(33)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was integrated in Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphelloclientnbrdetailcommand to display information about the neighbors (nbr).
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphelloclientnbrdetailcommand:
Router# show ip rsvp hello client nbr detail
Hello Client Neighbors
Remote addr 10.0.0.1, Local addr 10.0.0.3
Nbr State: Normal Type: Reroute
Nbr Hello State: Up
LSPs protecting: 1
I/F: Et1/3
Remote addr 172.16.1.1, Local addr 192.168.1.1
Nbr State: Normal Type: Graceful Restart
Nbr Hello State: Lost
LSPs protecting: 1
The table below describes the fields shown in the display
Table 2. show ip rsvp hello client nbr detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Remote addr
IP address of the remote neighbor. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for fast reroute and hello state
timer (reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
Local addr
IP address of the local neighbor. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for fast reroute and hello state
timer (reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
Nbr state
State of the neighbor; values can be the following:
Normal--Neighbor is functioning normally.
Restarting--Neighbor is restarting.
Recover Nodal--Neighbor is recovering from node failure.
HST_GR_LOST--HST (hello state timer for reroute) is lost; waiting to see if GR (graceful restart) is also lost.
WAIT PathTear--PathTear message is delayed to allow traffic in the pipeline to be transmitted.
Type
Type of client: graceful restart (GR), reroute RR (hello state timer), or fast reroute (FRR).
Nbr Hello State
State of hello instances for the neighbor. Values are as follows:
Up--Node is communicating with its neighbor.
Lost--Communication has been lost.
Init--Communication is being established.
LSPs protecting
Number of LSPs being protected.
I/F
Interface name and number associated with the hello instance.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
showiprsvphelloclientneighborsummary
Displays summary information about RSVP TE client hellos for neighbors.
show ip rsvp hello client neighbor detail
To display detailed information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) client hellos for neighbors,
use theshowiprsvphelloclientneighbordetailcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphelloclientneighbordetail
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(29)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphelloclientneighbordetailcommand to display information about the hello neighbors, including their state and type.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphelloclientneighbordetailcommand:
Router# show ip rsvp hello client neighbor detail
Hello Client Neighbors
Remote addr 10.0.0.1, Local addr 10.0.0.3
Nbr State: Normal Type: Reroute
Nbr Hello State: Up
LSPs protecting: 1
I/F: Et1/3
Remote addr 172.16.1.1, Local addr 192.168.1.1
Nbr State: Normal Type: Graceful Restart
Nbr Hello State: Lost
LSPs protecting: 1
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display. The fields provide information that uniquely identifies
the neighbors. Clients can include graceful restart, reroute (hello state timer), and fast reroute.
Table 3. show ip rsvp hello client neighbor detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Remote addr
IP address of the remote neighbor. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for fast reroute and hello state
timer (reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
Local addr
IP address of the local neighbor. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for fast reroute and hello state
timer (reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
Nbr State
State of the neighbor; values can be the following:
Normal = neighbor is functioning normally.
Restarting = neighbor is restarting.
Recover Nodal = neighbor is recovering from node failure.
HST_GR_LOST = HST (hello state timer for reroute) is lost; waiting to see if graceful restart (GR) is also lost.
WAIT PathTear = PathTear message is delayed to allow traffic in the pipeline to be transmitted.
Type
Type of client; graceful restart, Reroute (hello state timer), or Fast Reroute.
Nbr Hello State
State of hellos for the neighbor. Values are as follows:
Up--Node is communicating with its neighbor.
Lost--Communication has been lost.
Init--Communication is being established.
LSPs protecting
Number of LSPs being protected.
I/F
Interface name and number associated with the hello instance.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
show ip rsvp hello client neighbor summary
To display summary information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) client hellos for neighbors,
use theshowiprsvphelloclientneighborsummarycommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphelloclientneighborsummary
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(29)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphelloclientneighborsummarycommand to display information about the neighbors, including state, type, and hello instance status.
Examples
The following is sample output from theshowiprsvphelloclientneighborsummarycommand:
Router# show ip rsvp hello client neighbor summary
Local Remote Type NBR_STATE HI_STATE LSPs
10.0.0.1 10.0.0.3 RR Normal Up 1
172.16.1.1 192.168.1.1 GR Normal Lost 1
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 4. show ip rsvp hello client neighbor summary Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Local
IP address of the tunnel sender.
Remote
IP address of the tunnel destination.
Type
Type of client; graceful restart (GR), reroute (RR (hello state timer)), or fast reroute (FRR).
NBR_STATE
State of the neighbor; values can be the following:
Normal--Neighbor is functioning normally.
Restarting--Neighbor is restarting.
Recover Nodal--Neighbor is recovering from node failure.
HST_GR_LOST--HST (hello state timer for reroute) is lost; waiting to see if graceful restart (GR) is also lost.
WAIT PathTear--PathTear message is delayed to allow traffic in the pipeline to be transmitted.
HI_STATE
State of hello instances for the neighbor. Values are as follows:
Up--Node is communicating with its neighbor.
Lost--Communication has been lost.
Init--Communication is being established.
LSPs
Number of LSPs going to or coming from the neighbor.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
show ip rsvp hello graceful-restart
To display information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) graceful restart hellos, use theshowiprsvphellograceful-restart command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphellograceful-restart
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(29)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRA
The command output was modified to show whether graceful restart is configured and full mode was added.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphellograceful-restart command to display the status of graceful restart and related statistics.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphellograceful-restartcommand:
Router# show ip rsvp hello graceful-restart
Graceful Restart: Enabled (full mode)
Refresh interval: 10000 msecs
Refresh misses: 4
DSCP: 0x30
Advertised restart time: 30000 msecs
Advertised recovery time: 120000 msecs
Maximum wait for recovery: 3600000 msecs
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 5. show ip rsvp hello graceful-restart Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Graceful Restart
Restart capability:
Enabled--Restart capability is activated for a router (full mode) or its neighbor (help-neighbor).
Disabled--Restart capability is not activated.
Refresh interval
Frequency in milliseconds (ms) with which a node sends a hello message to its neighbor.
Refresh misses
Number of missed hello messages that trigger a neighbor down event upon which stateful switchover (SSO) procedures are started.
DSCP
The differentiated services code point (DSCP) value in the IP header of the hello messages.
Advertised restart time
The time, in ms, that is required for the sender to restart the RSVP-TE component and exchange hello messages after a failure.
Advertised recovery time
The time, in ms, within which a recovering node wants its neighbor router to resynchronize the RSVP or Multiprotocol Label
Switching (MPLS) forwarding state after SSO.
Note
A zero value indicates that the RSVP or MPLS forwarding state is not preserved after SSO.
Maximum wait for recovery
The maximum amount of time, in ms, that the router waits for a neighbor to recover.
Related Commands
Command
Description
cleariprsvphigh-availabilitycounters
Clears (sets to zero) the RSVP-TE HA counters that are being maintained by an RP.
iprsvpsignallinghellograceful-restartmode
Enables RSVP-TE graceful restart support capability on an RP.
iprsvpsignallinghellograceful-restartneighbor
Enables RSVP-TE graceful restart support capability on a neighboring router.
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
show ip rsvp hello instance detail
To display detailed information about a hello instance, use the
showiprsvphelloinstancedetailcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
The command output was modified to include graceful restart, hello state timer (reroute), and fast reroute information.
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphelloinstancedetail command to display information about the processes (clients) currently configured.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphelloinstancedetail command:
Router# show ip rsvp hello instance detail
Neighbor 10.0.0.3 Source 10.0.0.2
Type: Active (sending requests)
I/F: Serial2/0
State: Up (for 2d19h2d19h)
Clients: ReRoute
LSPs protecting: 1
Missed acks: 4, IP DSCP: 0x30
Refresh Interval (msec)
Configured: 6000
Statistics: (from 40722 samples)
Min: 6000
Max: 6064
Average: 6000
Waverage: 6000 (Weight = 0.8)
Current: 6000
Last sent Src_instance: 0xE617C847
Last recv nbr's Src_instance: 0xFEC28E95
Counters:
Communication with neighbor lost:
Num times: 0
Reasons:
Missed acks: 0
Bad Src_Inst received: 0
Bad Dst_Inst received: 0
I/F went down: 0
Neighbor disabled Hello: 0
Msgs Received: 55590
Sent: 55854
Suppressed: 521
Neighbor 10.0.0.8 Source 10.0.0.7
Type: Passive (responding to requests)
I/F: Serial2/1
Last sent Src_instance: 0xF7A80A52
Last recv nbr's Src_instance: 0xD2F1B7F7
Counters:
Msgs Received: 199442
Sent: 199442
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 6. show ip rsvp hello instance detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Neighbor
IP address of the adjacent node.
Source
IP address of the node that is sending the hello message.
Type
Values are Active (node is sending a request) and Passive (node is responding to a request).
I/F
Interface from which hellos are sent for this instance. Any means that the hellos can be sent out any interface.
State
Status of communication. Values are as follows:
Up--Node is communicating with its neighbor.
Lost--Communication has been lost.
Init--Communication is being established.
Clients
Clients that created this hello instance; they include graceful restart, ReRoute (hello state timer), and Fast Reroute.
LSPs protecting
Number of LSPs that are being protected by this hello instance.
Missed acks
Number of times that communication was lost due to missed acknowledgments (ACKs).
IP DSCP
IP differentiated services code point (DSCP) value used in the hello IP header.
Refresh Interval (msec)
The frequency (in milliseconds) with which a node generates a hello message containing a Hello Request object for each neighbor
whose status is being tracked.
Configured
Configured refresh interval.
Statistics
Refresh interval statistics from a specified number of samples (packets).
Min
Minimum refresh interval.
Max
Maximum refresh interval.
Average
Average refresh interval.
Waverage
Weighted average refresh interval.
Current
Current refresh interval.
Last sent Src_instance
The last source instance sent to a neighbor.
Last recv nbr’s Src_instance
The last source instance field value received from a neighbor.
(0 means none received.)
Counters
Incremental information relating to communication with a neighbor.
Num times
Total number of times that communication with a neighbor was lost.
Reasons
Subsequent fields designate why communication with a neighbor was lost.
Missed acks
Number of times that communication was lost due to missed ACKs.
Bad Src_Inst received
Number of times that communication was lost due to bad source instance fields.
Bad Dst_Inst received
Number of times that communication was lost due to bad destination instance fields.
I/F went down
Number of times that the interface became unoperational.
Neighbor disabled Hello
Number of times that a neighbor disabled hello messages.
Msgs Received
Number of messages that were received.
Sent
Number of messages that were sent.
Suppressed
Number of messages that were suppressed due to optimization.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpsignallinghello(configuration)
Enables hello globally on the router.
iprsvpsignallinghellostatistics
Enables hello statistics on the router.
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for Fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
showiprsvphelloinstancesummary
Displays summary information about a hello instance.
show ip rsvp hello instance summary
To display summary information about a hello instance, use the
showiprsvphelloinstancesummary command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphelloinstancesummary
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(22)S
This command was introduced.
12.0(29)S
The command output was modified to include graceful restart, reroute (hello state timer), and fast reroute information.
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphelloinstancesummary command:
Router# show ip rsvp hello instance summary
Active Instances:
Client Neighbor I/F State LostCnt LSPs Interval
RR 10.0.0.3 Se2/0 Up 0 1 6000
GR 10.1.1.1 Any Up 13 1 10000
GR 10.1.1.5 Any Lost 0 1 10000
GR 10.2.2.1 Any Init 1 0 5000
Passive Instances:
Neighbor I/F
10.0.0.1 Se2/1
Active = Actively tracking neighbor state on behalf of clients:
RR = ReRoute, FRR = Fast ReRoute, or GR = Graceful Restart
Passive = Responding to hello requests from neighbor
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 7. show ip rsvp hello instance summary Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Active Instances
Active nodes that are sending hello requests.
Client
Clients on behalf of which hellos are sent; they include GR (graceful restart), RR (reroute = hello state timer), and FRR
(Fast Reroute).
Neighbor
IP address of the adjacent node. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for Fast Reroute and hello state
timer (reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
I/F
Interface from which hellos are sent for this instance. Any means that the hellos can be sent out any interface.
State
Status of communication. Values are as follows:
Up--Node is communicating with its neighbor.
Lost--Communication has been lost.
Init--Communication is being established.
LostCnt
Number of times that communication was lost with the neighbor.
LSPs
Number of label-switched paths (LSPs) protected by this hello instance.
Interval
Hello refresh interval in milliseconds.
Passive Instances
Passive nodes that are responding to hello requests.
Neighbor
IP address of adjacent node. For graceful restart, this is the neighbor router’s ID; for Fast Reroute and hello state timer
(reroute), this is one of the neighbor’s interface addresses.
I/F
Interface from which hellos are sent for this instance. Any means that the hellos can be sent out any interface.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpsignallinghello(configuration)
Enables hello globally on the router.
iprsvpsignallinghellostatistics
Enables hello statistics on the router.
showiprsvphello
Displays hello status and statistics for fast reroute, reroute (hello state timer), and graceful restart.
showiprsvphelloinstancedetail
Displays detailed information about a hello instance.
show ip rsvp hello statistics
To display how long hello packets have been in the Hello input queue, use the
showiprsvphellostatisticscommand in privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphellostatistics
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Default
Information about how long hello packets have been in the Hello input queue is not displayed.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(22)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T
Usage Guidelines
You can use this command to determine if the Hello refresh interval is too small. If the interval is too small, communication
may falsely be declared as lost.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvphellostatistics command:
Router# show ip rsvp hello statistics
Status: Enabled
Packet arrival queue:
Wait times (msec)
Current:0
Average:0
Weighted Average:0 (weight = 0.8)
Max:4
Current length: 0 (max:500)
Number of samples taken: 2398525
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 8. show ip rsvp hello statistics Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Status
Indicator of whether Hello has been enabled globally on the router.
Current
Amount of time, in milliseconds, that the current hello packet has been in the Hello input queue.
Average
Average amount of time, in milliseconds, that hello packets are in the Hello input queue.
Max
Maximum amount of time, in milliseconds, that hello packets have been in the Hello input queue.
Current length
Current amount of time, in milliseconds, that hello packets have been in the Hello input queue.
Number of samples taken
Number of packets for which these statistics were compiled.
Related Commands
Command
Description
cleariprsvphelloinstancestatistics
Clears Hello statistics for an instance.
cleariprsvphellostatistics
Globally clears Hello statistics.
iprsvpsignallinghellorefreshinterval
Configures the Hello request interval.
iprsvpsignallinghellostatistics
Enables Hello statistics on the router.
show ip rsvp high-availability counters
To display all Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) high availability (HA) counters that are being
maintained by a Route Processor (RP), use the
show ip rsvp high-availability counters command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphigh-availabilitycounters
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SRA
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRB
Support for In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) was added.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
15.0(1)S
This command was modified. The output was updated to display information for point-to-point (P2P) and point-to-multipoint
traffic engineering (P2MP) counters.
15.2(2)S
This command was modified. The output was enhanced to show checkpoint information for MPLS traffic engineering autotunnel
and automesh stateful switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.6S
This command was modified. The output was enhanced to show checkpoint information for MPLS traffic engineering autotunnel
and automesh stateful switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
show ip rsvp high-availability counters command to display the HA counters, which include state, ISSU, checkpoint messages, resource failures, and errors.
The command output differs depending on whether the RP is active or standby. (See the “Examples” section for more information.)
Use the
clear ip rsvp high-availability counters command to clear all counters.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability counters command on the active RP:
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 9. show ip rsvp high-availability counters—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
State
The RP state:
Active—Active RP.
Bulk sync
The number of requests made by the standby RP to the active RP to resend all write database entries:
Initiated—The number of bulk sync operations initiated by the standby RP since reboot.
Send timer
The write database timer.
Checkpoint Messages (Items) Sent
The details of the bundle messages or items sent since booting.
Succeeded
The number of bundle messages or items sent from the active RP to the standby RP since booting. Values are the following:
Acks accepted—The number of bundle messages or items sent from the active RP to the standby RP.
Acks ignored—The number of bundle messages or items sent by the active RP, but rejected by the standby RP.
Nacks—The number of bundle messages or items given to the checkpointing facility (CF) on the active RP for transmitting to
the standby RP, but failed to transmit.
Failed
The number of bundle messages or items the active RP attempted to send the standby RP when the send timer updated, but received
an error back from CF.
Buffer alloc
Storage space allocated.
Buffer freed
Storage space available.
ISSU
In-Service Software Upgrade (ISSU) counters.
Checkpoint Messages Transformed
The details of the bundle messages or items transformed (upgraded or downgraded for compatibility) since booting so that
the active RP and the standby RP can interoperate.
On Send
The number of messages sent by the active RP that succeeded, failed, or were transformations.
On Recv
The number of messages received by the active RP that succeeded, failed, or were transformations.
Negotiation
The number of times that the active RP and the standby RP have negotiated their interoperability parameters.
Started
The number of negotiations started.
Finished
The number of negotiations finished.
Failed to Start
The number of negotiations that failed to start.
Messages
The number of negotiation messages sent and received. These messages can be succeeded or failed.
Send succeeded—Number of messages sent successfully.
Send failed—Number of messages sent unsuccessfully.
Buffer allocated—Storage space allowed.
Buffer freed—Storage space available.
Buffer alloc failed—No storage space available.
Init
The number of times the RSVP ISSU client has successfully and unsuccessfully (failed) initialized.
Session Registration
The number of session registrations, succeeded and failed, performed by the active RP whenever the standby RP reboots.
Session Unregistration
The number of session unregistrations, succeeded and failed, before the standby RP resets.
Errors
The details of errors or caveats.
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability counters command on the standby RP:
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 10. show ip rsvp high-availability counters—Standby RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
State
The RP state:
Standby—Standby (backup) RP.
Checkpoint Messages (Items) Received
The details of the messages or items received by the standby RP. Values are the following:
Valid—The number of valid messages or items received by the standby RP.
Invalid—The number of invalid messages or items received by the standby RP.
Buffer freed—Amount of storage space available.
ISSU
ISSU counters.
Note
For descriptions of the ISSU fields, see the table above.
Errors
The details of errors or caveats.
Related Commands
Command
Description
clear ip rsvp high-availability counters
Clears (sets to zero) the RSVP-TE HA counters that are being maintained by an RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability database
Displays the contents of the RSVP-TE HA read and write databases used in TE SSO.
show ip rsvp high-availability summary
Displays summary information for an RSVP-TE HA RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability database
To display contents of Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) high availability (HA) read and write databases used in traffic
engineering (TE), use the
show ip rsvp high-availability database command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
Displays information about hello entries in read and write databases.
if-autotun
Displays information about TE HA autotunnel interface entries in read and write databases.
link-management
Displays information about link-management entries in the read and write databases.
interfaces
Displays information about link-management interfaces in the read and write databases.
fixed
(Optional) Displays information about link-management fixed interfaces in the read and write databases.
variable
(Optional) Displays information about link-management variable interfaces in the read and write databases.
system
Displays information about the link-management system in the read and write databases.
lsp
Displays information about label switched path (LSP) entries in the read and write databases.
filter destinationip-address
(Optional) Displays filtered information on the IP address of the destination (tunnel tail).
filter lsp-idlsp-id
(Optional) Displays filtered information on a specific LSP ID designated by a number from 0 to 65535.
filter sourceip-address
(Optional) Displays filtered information on the IP address of the source (tunnel head).
filter tunnel-idtunnel-id
(Optional) Displays filtered information on a specific tunnel ID designated by a number from 0 to 65535.
lsp-head
Displays information about LSP-head entries in the read and write databases.
filternumber
(Optional) Displays filtered information on a specific LSP-head router designated by a number from 0 to 65535.
summary
Displays cumulative information about entries in read and write databases.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SRA
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRB
The command output was modified to display the result of a loose hop expansion performed on the router.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC. The command output was modified to include path protection
information specified by the
lsp-head keyword.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
15.0(1)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)S. The command output was modified to distinguish database-entry
information for point-to-point (P2P) tunnels from that for point-to-multipoint (P2MP) tunnels and to display error database
information.
12.2(50)SY
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(50)SY.
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.5S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 3.5S.
15.2(2)S
This command was modified. The
if-autotun keyword was added. The output for the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp, the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head, and the
show ip rsvp high-availability database summary commands was enhanced to display checkpoint information for MPLS TE autotunnel and automesh stateful switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.6S
This command was modified. The
if-autotun keyword was added. The output for the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp, the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head, and the
show ip rsvp high-availability database summary commands was enhanced to display checkpoint information for MPLS TE autotunnel and automesh stateful switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
show ip rsvp high-availability database command to display information about entries in the read and write databases.
Use the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp command to display loose hop information. A loose hop expansion can be performed on a router when the router processes the
explicit router object (ERO) for an incoming path message. After the router removes all local IP addresses from the incoming
ERO, it finds the next hop. If the ERO specifies that the next hop is loose instead of strict, the router consults the TE
topology database and routing to determine the next hop and output interface to forward the path message. The result of the
calculation is a list of hops; the list is placed in the outgoing ERO and checkpointed with the LSP data as the loose hop
information.
In Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)S and later releases, the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp command displays sub-LSP information. If any sub-LSP, whether P2MP or P2P, fails to recover after a stateful switchover (SSO),
the failure is noted in an error database for troubleshooting. You can use the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp command to display error database entries.
You can use the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head command only on a headend router; this command gives no information on other routers
Examples
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database hello command on an active Route Processor (RP):
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database hello
HELLO WRITE DB
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 1 Flags: 0x0
Data:
Last sent Src_instance: 0xDE435865
HELLO READ DB
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 11. show ip rsvp high-availability database hello—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
HELLO WRITE DB
Storage area for active RP hello data consisting of checkpointed RSVP-TE information that is sent to the standby RP when
it becomes the active RP and needs to recover LSPs. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This is a temporary action that takes place while the active RP awaits an acknowledgment
(ack) of the delete operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acknowledgments (acks) and negative acknowledgments (nacks)
to sent messages.
Flags
Attribute used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
Last sent Src_instance
Last sent source instance identifier.
HELLO READ DB
Storage area for standby RP hello data. This field is blank on an active RP, except when it is in recovery mode.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database hello on a standby RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database hello
HELLO WRITE DB
HELLO READ DB
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 1 Flags: 0x0
Data:
Last sent Src_instance: 0xDE435865
These fields are the same as those for the active RP described in the table except they are now in the read database for
the standby RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database if-autotun command on an active RP.
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 12. show ip rsvp high-availability database if-autotun—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
IF_AUTOTUN WRITE DB
Storage area for active RP autotunnel interface information. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are still waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This action appears temporarily while the active RP awaits an ack of the delete
operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acks and nacks to sent messages.
Flags
Attributes used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
Tunnel ID
Tunnel identifier.
if_handle
Internal number representing the autotunnel interface. For the same tunnel ID, this if_handle value should always be the same
for the record in the Standby READ DB as in the Active WRITE DB.
prot_if_handle
For autotunnel mesh tunnels, this value should always be zero. For autotunnel primary tunnels, this is an internal number
representing the egress interface of the autotunnel primary. For autotunnel backup tunnels, this is an internal number representing
the interface that the backup is protecting. In all three cases, for the same tunnel ID, this value should always be the same
for the record in the Standby READ DB as in the Active WRITE DB.
template_unit
For autotunnel mesh, this represents the auto-template interface number that the mesh tunnel was created from. For autotunnel
primary and backup, this should be "n/a."
dest
Destination IP address of the autotunnel.
flags
Encodings have these values:
0 = autotunnel primary
1 = autotunnel backup
2 = autotunnel mesh
IF_AUTOTUN READ DB
Storage area for standby RP autotunnel interface information. This field is blank on an active RP.
The fields for a standby RP are the same as those described in the table except that they are now in the interface autotunnel
read database instead of the interface autotunnel write database that is used by an active RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management interfaces
command on an active RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management interfaces
TE LINK WRITE DB
Flooding Protocol: ospf IGP Area ID: 0 Link ID: 0 (GigabitEthernet3/2)
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 4 Flags: 0x0
Data:
Ifnumber: 5 Link Valid Flags: 0x193B
Link Subnet Type: Broadcast
Local Intfc ID: 0 Neighbor Intf ID: 0
Link IP Address: 172.16.3.1
Neighbor IGP System ID: 172.16.3.2 Neighbor IP Address: 10.0.0.0
IGP Metric: 1 TE Metric: 1
Physical Bandwidth: 1000000 kbits/sec
Res. Global BW: 3000 kbits/sec
Res. Sub BW: 0 kbits/sec
Upstream::
Global Pool Sub Pool
----------- ----------
Reservable Bandwidth[0]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[1]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[2]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[3]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[4]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[5]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[6]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[7]: 0 0 kbits/sec
Downstream::
Global Pool Sub Pool
----------- ----------
Reservable Bandwidth[0]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[1]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[2]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[3]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[4]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[5]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[6]: 3000 0 kbits/sec
Reservable Bandwidth[7]: 2900 0 kbits/sec
Affinity Bits: 0x0
Protection Type: Capability 0, Working Priority 0
Number of TLVs: 0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 13. show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management interfaces—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
TE LINK WRITE DB
Storage area for active TE RP link data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Flooding Protocol
Protocol that is flooding information for this area. OSPF = Open Shortest Path First.
IGP Area ID
Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) identifier for the area being flooded.
Link ID
Link identifier and interface for the area being flooded.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This action appears temporarily while the active RP awaits an ack of the delete
operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acks and nacks to sent messages.
Flags
Attribute used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
Ifnumber
Interface number.
Link Valid Flags
Attributes used to identify or track links.
Link Subnet Type
Subnet type of the link. Values are as follows:
Broadcast—Data for multiple recipients.
Nonbroadcast Multiaccess--A network in which data is transmitted directly from one computer to another over a virtual circuit
or across a switching fabric.
Point-to-Multipoint—Unidirectional connection in which a single source end system (known as a root node) connects to multiple
destination end systems (known as leaves).
Point-to-Point—Unidirectional or bidirectional connection between two end systems.
Unknown subnet type—Subnet type not identified.
Local Intfc ID
Local interface identifier.
Neighbor Intf ID
Neighbor’s interface identifier.
Link IP Address
IP address of the link.
Neighbor IGP System ID
Neighbor system identifier configured using IGP.
Neighbor IP Address
Neighbor’s IP address.
IGP Metric
Metric value for the TE link configured using IGP.
TE Metric
Metric value for the TE link configured using Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) TE.
Physical Bandwidth
Link bandwidth capacity in kilobits per second (kb/s).
Res. Global BW
Amount of reservable global pool bandwidth (in kb/s) on this link.
Res. Sub BW
Amount of reservable subpool bandwidth (in kb/s) on this link.
Upstream
Header for the following section of bandwidth values.
Global Pool
Global pool bandwidth (in kb/s) on this link.
Sub Pool
Subpool bandwidth (in kb/s) on this link.
Reservable Bandwidth [1]
Amount of bandwidth (in kb/s) available for reservations in the global TE topology and subpools.
Downstream
Header for the following section of bandwidth values.
Affinity Bits
Link attributes required in tunnels.
Protection Type
LSPs protected by fast reroute (FRR).
Capability = LSPs capable of using FRR.
Working Priority = LSPs actually using FRR.
Number of TLVs
Number of type, length, values (TLVs).
The fields for a standby RP are the same as those described in the table except that they are now in the TE link read database
instead of the TE link write database that is used by an active RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management system command on an active RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management system
TE SYSTEM WRITE DB
Flooding Protocol: OSPF IGP Area ID: 0
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Modify
Seq #: 4 Flags: 0x0
Data:
LM Flood Data::
LSA Valid flags: 0x0 Node LSA flag: 0x0
IGP System ID: 172.16.3.1 MPLS TE Router ID: 10.0.0.3
Flooded links: 1 TLV length: 0 (bytes)
Fragment id: 0
TE SYSTEM READ DB
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 14. show ip rsvp high-availability database link-management system—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
TE SYSTEM WRITE DB
Storage area for active TE RP system data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Flooding Protocol
Protocol that is flooding information for this area. OSPF = Open Shortest Path First.
IGP Area ID
IGP identifier for the area being flooded.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This action appears temporarily while the active RP awaits an ack of the delete
operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acks and nacks to messages sent.
Flags
Attribute used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
LM Flood Data
Link management (LM) flood data.
LSA Valid flags
Link-state advertisement (LSA) attributes.
Node LSA flag
LSA attributes used by a router.
IGP System ID
Identification (IP address) that IGP flooding uses in this area to identify this node.
MPLS TE Router ID
MPLS TE router identifier (IP address).
Flooded links
Number of flooded links.
TLV length
TLV length in bytes.
Fragment id
Fragment identifier for this link.
TE SYSTEM READ DB
Storage area for standby TE RP system data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
The fields for a standby RP are the same as those described in the table except that they are now in the TE system read database
instead of the TE system write database that is used by an active RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp command on an active RP for a P2P tunnel:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp
Tun ID: 0 LSP ID: 10 (P2P)
SubGrp ID: -
SubGrp Orig: -
Dest: 10.3.0.1
Sender: 10.1.0.1 Ext. Tun ID: 10.1.0.1
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 2 Flags: 0x0
Data:
PathSet ID: -
Lspvif if_num: -
InLabel: -
Out I/F: Se2/0
Next-Hop: 10.1.3.2
OutLabel: 16
Loose hop info: None (0)
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp
command on an active RP for a P2MP tunnel:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 127 (P2MP)
SubGrp ID: 1
SubGrp Orig: 10.1.0.1
Dest: 10.2.0.1
Sender: 10.1.0.1 Ext. Tun ID: 10.1.0.1
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 30 Flags: 0x0
Data:
PathSet ID: 0x1A000003
Lspvif if_num: 35 (Lspvif0)
InLabel: 19
Out I/F: None
Next-Hop: -
OutLabel: -
Loose hop info: None (0)
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 15. show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
P2P/P2MP
Tunnel type.
Subgrp ID
Subgroup identifier (valid only for P2MP TE LSPs).
Subgrp Orig
Subgroup origin IP address (valid only for P2MP TE LSPs).
Lspvif if_num
Interface number of the LSPVIF (valid only for P2MP TE tailends).
PathSet ID
Path set identifier (valid only for P2MP TE LSPs)
LSP WRITE DB
Storage area for active RP LSP data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Tun ID
Tunnel identifier.
LSP ID
LSP identifier.
Dest
Tunnel destination IP address.
Sender
Tunnel sender IP address.
Ext. Tun ID
Extended tunnel identifier; usually set to 0 or the sender’s IP address.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent, but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This action appears temporarily while the active RP awaits an ack of the delete
operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acks and nacks to messages sent.
Flags
Attribute used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
InLabel
Incoming label identifier.
Out I/F
Outgoing interface.
Next-Hop
Next hop IP address.
OutLabel
Outgoing label identifier.
Loose hop info
Lists the loose hop expansions performed on the router, or specifies None.
LSP READ DB
Storage area for standby RP LSP data. This field is blank on an active RP.
The fields for a standby RP are the same as those described in the table except that they are now in the LSP read database
instead of the LSP write database that is used by an active RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head command on an active RP for a P2P tunnel:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head
LSP_HEAD WRITE DB
Tun ID: 0 (P2P)
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 2 Flags: 0x0
Data:
lsp_id: 10, bandwidth: 5, thead_flags: 0x1, popt: 1
feature flags: none
output_if_num: 11, output_nhop: 10.1.3.2
RRR path setup info
Destination: 10.3.0.1, Id: 10.3.0.1 Router Node (ospf) flag:0x0
IGP: ospf, IGP area: 0, Number of hops: 3, metric: 128
Hop 0: 10.1.3.2, Id: 10.2.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
Hop 1: 10.2.3.3, Id: 10.3.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
Hop 2: 10.3.0.1, Id: 10.3.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head
command on an active RP for a P2MP tunnel:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head
LSP_HEAD WRITE DB
Tun ID: 1 (P2MP)
Destination: 10.2.0.1
Header:
State: Checkpointed Action: Add
Seq #: 3 Flags: 0x0
Data:
lsp_id: 11, bandwidth: 100, thead_flags: 0x1, popt: 1
Subgrp_id: 1
feature flags: none
output_if_num: 3, output_nhop: 10.1.2.2
RRR path setup info
Destination: 10.2.0.1, Id: 10.2.0.1 Router Node (ospf) flag:0x0
IGP: ospf, IGP area: 0, Number of hops: 3, metric: 10
Hop 0: 10.1.2.1, Id: 10.1.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
Hop 1: 10.1.2.2, Id: 10.2.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
Hop 2: 10.2.0.1, Id: 10.2.0.1 Router Node (ospf), flag:0x0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 16. show ip rsvp high-availability database lsp-head—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
LSP_HEAD WRITE DB
Storage area for active RP LSP-head data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
P2P/P2MP
Tunnel type.
Tun ID
Tunnel identifier.
Header
Header information.
State
Status of an entry. Values are as follows:
Ack-Pending—Entries have been sent, but not acknowledged.
Checkpointed—Entries have been sent and acknowledged by the standby RP.
Send-Pending—Entries are waiting to be sent.
Action
Action taken. Values are as follows:
Add—Adding an item to the standby RP.
Delete—Deleting an item from the standby RP. This is a temporary action that takes place while the active RP awaits an ack
of the delete operation.
Modify—Modifying an item on the standby RP.
Remove—Removing an item from the standby RP.
Seq #
Number used by the active and standby RPs to synchronize message acks and nacks to messages sent.
Flags
Attribute used to identify or track data.
Data
Information about the last transmission.
lsp_id
LSP identifier.
bandwidth
Bandwidth on the LSP (in kb/s).
thead_flags
Tunnel head attribute used to identify or track data.
popt
Parsing option number.
feature_flags
Indicates whether the LSP being used to forward traffic is the secondary LSP using the path protection path option. Valid
values are as follows:
none
path protection active
output_if_num
Output interface number.
output_nhop
Output next hop IP address.
RRR path setup info
Routing with Resource Reservation (RRR) path information.
Destination
Destination IP address.
Id
IP address and protocol of the routing node. Values are as follows:
ISIS = Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System
OSPF = Open Shortest Path First
flag
Attribute used to track data.
IGP
Interior Gateway Protocol. OSPF = Open Shortest Path First.
IGP area
IGP area identifier.
Number of hops
Number of connections or routers.
metric
Routing cost.
Hop
Hop’s number and IP address.
LSP_HEAD READ DB
Storage area for standby RP LSP-head data. This field is blank on an active RP.
The fields for a standby RP are the same as those described in the table except that they are now in the LSP_head read database
instead of the LSP_head write database that is used by an active RP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database summary command on an active RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database summary
Write DB:
Send-Pending: 0
Ack-Pending : 0
Checkpointed: 10
Total : 10
Read DB:
Total : 0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 17. show ip rsvp high-availability database summary—Active RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Write DB
Storage area for active RP summary data. This field is blank on a standby RP.
Send-Pending
Entries are waiting to be sent.
Ack-Pending
Entries have been sent, but are waiting to be acknowledged.
Checkpointed
Entries have been sent and acknowledged.
Total
Total number of entries in the write database.
Total
Total number of entries in the read database.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability database summary command on a standby RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability database summary
Write DB:
Send-Pending: 0
Ack-Pending : 0
Checkpointed: 0
Total : 0
Read DB:
Total : 10
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 18. show ip rsvp high-availability database summary—Standby RP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Write DB
Storage area for active RP summary data.
Send-Pending
Entries are waiting to be sent.
Ack-Pending
Entries have been sent but are waiting to be acknowledged.
Checkpointed
Entries have been sent and acknowledged.
Total
Total number of entries in the write database.
Total
Total number of entries in the read database.
Related Commands
Command
Description
show ip rsvp high-availability counters
Displays all RSVP HA counters that are being maintained by an RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability summary
Displays summary information for an RSVP HA RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability summary
To display summary information for a Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) traffic engineering (TE) high availability (HA)
Route Processor (RP), use the
show ip rsvp high-availability summary command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvphigh-availabilitysummary
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SRA
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
15.2(2)S
This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display checkpoint information for MPLS TE autotunnel and automesh stateful
switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Cisco IOS XE Release 3.6S
This command was modified. The output was enhanced to display checkpoint information for MPLS TE autotunnel and automesh stateful
switchover (SSO) tunnels.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
show ip rsvp high-availability summarycommand to display information about the HA parameters currently configured on an RP.
The command output differs depending on whether the RP is active or standby.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability summary command on an active RP:
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability summary
State:
Graceful-Restart: Enabled, mode: full
HA state: Active
Checkpointing: Allowed
Messages:
Send timer: not running (Interval: 1000 msec)
Items sent per Interval: 200
CF buffer size used: 2000
Note
On a standby RP, only the first three lines of the output are displayed. On an active RP, all lines are displayed.
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 19. show ip rsvp high-availability summary—Field Descriptions
Field
Description
State
Status of graceful restart and HA.
Graceful Restart
Restart capability:
Enabled—Restart capability is activated for a router (full mode) or its neighbor (help-neighbor).
Disabled—Restart capability is not activated.
HA state
The RP state, which is the following:
Active—Active RP.
Standby—Standby (backup) RP.
Recovering—The active RP is in recovery period.
Checkpointing
The function that copies state information (write database entries) from the active RP to the standby RP. Values are the
following:
Allowed—Functioning normally.
Not Allowed—Checkpointing is not allowed. Reasons may be that the RP is not present or not ready.
Messages
The checkpointed messages that the active RP sends to the standby RP during a specified interval.
Send timer
The write database timer. Values are the following:
running—Entries are in the write database in the send-pending state and checkpointing is allowed.
not running—Checkpointing is not allowed or the write database is empty.
Note
Entries in the write database can be in the following states:
Send-Pending—The entry has not been sent to the standby RP yet.
Ack-Pending—The entry was sent to the standby RP, but no acknowledgment was received from the standby RP yet.
Checkpointed—The checkpointing facility (CF) message has been acknowledged by the standby RP, which notifies the active RP.
Interval
Time, in milliseconds (ms), when the active RP sends messages to the standby RP.
Items sent per Interval
The number of database entries (data that has been taken from the write database and packed into bundle message for transmitting
to the standby RP), which the active RP sends to the standby RP each time the write database timer activates.
CF buffer size used
Amount of storage space, in bytes, used by the checkpointing facility.
In some cases, the checkpointing field displays Not Allowed. Here is an excerpt from sample output:
Checkpointing: Not Allowed
Peer RP Present : No
RF Comm. Up : No
Flow Control On : No
CF Comm. Up : No
RF Ready to Recv: No
Note
If checkpointing is allowed, the attributes displayed in the sample output do not appear. Refer to the
show ip rsvp high-availability summary command output on an active RP for more details.
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 20. show ip rsvp high-availability summary—Checkpointing Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Peer RP Present : No
The active RP cannot communicate with any peer RP.
Note
This can happen if the standby RP is removed, or if it is temporarily unavailable, such as during a restart.
RF Comm. Up : No
The redundant facility (RF) on the active RP is unable to communicate with the RF on the standby RP.
Flow Control On : No
The active RP cannot send Internet Protocol communications (IPC) messages (using checkpointing) to the standby RP because
flow control is off.
CF Comm. Up : No
The TE CF client on the active RP is unable to communicate with the TE CF client on the standby RP.
RF Ready to Recv : No
The RF on the standby RP is not ready to receive checkpoint messages.
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp high-availability summary command after a stateful switchover (SSO) has occurred.
Router# show ip rsvp high-availability summary
State:
Graceful-Restart: Enabled
HA state: active
Checkpointing: Allowed
Recovery Time (msec)
Advertised: 120000 msec
Last recorded: 75012 msec
Messages:
Send timer: not running (Interval:1000)
Items sent per Interval: 200
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display
Table 21. show ip rsvp high-availability summary—After an SSO Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Advertised
The advertised recovery time, in milliseconds.
Last recorded
The last recorded recovery time, in milliseconds.
Related Commands
Command
Description
clear ip rsvp high-availability counters
Clears (sets to zero) the RSVP-TE HA counters that are being maintained by an RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability counters
Displays the RSVP-TE HA counters that are being maintained by an RP.
show ip rsvp high-availability database
Displays the contents of the RSVP-TE HA read and write databases used in TE SSO.
show ip rsvp host
To display specific information for a Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) host, use the
showiprsvphost command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
RSVP-related sender information currently in the database.
receivers
RSVP-related receiver information currently in the database.
hostname
(Optional) Hostname of the source or destination.
group-address
(Optional) IP address of the source or destination.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(3)T
This command was introduced.
12.4(6)T
This command was modified. The command output was modified to display RSVP identity information when configured.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphost command to display static RSVP senders and receivers. If a router has any local host receivers or senders that have RSVP
identities configured, the application IDs that they use are also displayed.
Examples
In the following example from theshowiprsvphostsenderscommand, no RSVP identities are configured for the local sender:
Router# show ip rsvp host senders
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS
192.168.104.3 192.168.104.1 UDP 1 1 10K
Mode(s): Host CLI
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 22. show ip rsvp host senders (No RSVP Identities Configured) Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code. IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
DPort
Destination port number. Code 1 indicates an IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Sport
Source port number. Code 1 indicates an IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Prev Hop
IP address of the previous hop. Blank means no previous hop.
I/F
Interface of the previous hop.
BPS
Reservation rate, in bits per second (bps).
Mode(s)
Any of the following strings:
Host--The router is acting as the host system or RSVP endpoint for this reservation.
LSP-Tunnel--The reservation is for a traffic engineering (TE) tunnel.
MIB--The reservation was created via an Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) SET directive from a remote management
station.
CLI--The reservation was created via a local RSVP command.
Host CLI--A combination of the host and command line interface (CLI) strings meaning that the static sender being displayed
was created by the
iprsvpsender-host command.
In the following example from theshowiprsvphostsenderscommand, an RSVP identity is configured for the local sender:
Router# show ip rsvp host senders
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS
192.168.104.3 192.168.104.1 UDP 1 1 10K
Mode(s): Host CLI
Identity: voice100
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=100.0
ID Type: Application
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 23. show ip rsvp host senders (RSVP Identity Configured) Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code. IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
DPort
Destination port number. Code 1 indicates IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Sport
Source port number. Code 1 indicates IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Prev Hop
IP address of the previous hop. Blank means no previous hop.
I/F
Interface of the previous hop.
BPS
Reservation rate in bits per second (bps).
Mode(s)
Any of the following strings:
CLI--The reservation was created via a local RSVP command.
Host--The router is acting as the host system or RSVP endpoint for this reservation.
Host CLI--A combination of the host and CLI strings meaning that the static sender being displayed was created by the
iprsvpsender-host command.
LSP-Tunnel--The reservation is for a Traffic Engineering (TE) tunnel.
MIB--The reservation was created via an SNMP SET directive from a remote management station.
Identity
The alias string for the RSVP application ID.
Locator
The application ID that is being signaled in the RSVP PATH message for this statically-configured sender.
ID Type
Types of identities. RSVP defines two types: application IDs (Application) and user IDs (User). Cisco IOS software and Cisco
IOS XE software support application IDs only.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpsender-host
Enables a router to simulate a host generating an RSVP PATH message.
show ip rsvp host vrf
To display specific information for a Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) host configured with a virtual routing and forwarding
(VRF) instance, use the
showiprsvphostvrf command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
Displays RSVP-related receiver information currently in the database.
senders
Displays RSVP-related sender information currently in the database.
group-name
(Optional) Hostname of the source or destination.
group-address
(Optional) IP address of the source or destination.
Command Modes
User EXEC (<) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.0(1)M
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvphostvrfcommand to display VRFs and static RSVP senders and receivers.
Examples
In the following example from theshowiprsvphostvrf*senderscommand, VRFs are displayed for the local senders:
Router# show ip rsvp host vrf * senders
VRF: vrf2
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS
192.168.104.4 198.168.104.12 UDP 10 10 none none 10K
Mode(s): Host CLI
VRF: vrf1
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS
192.168.105.4 198.168.105.12 UDP 10 10 none none 10K
Mode(s): Host CLI
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 24. show ip rsvp host vrf senders Field Descriptions
Field
Description
VRF
Name of the VRF.
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code. IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
DPort
Destination port number. Code 1 indicates an IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Sport
Source port number. Code 1 indicates an IP protocol such as TCP or UDP.
Prev Hop
IP address of the previous hop. Blank means no previous hop.
I/F
Interface of the previous hop.
BPS
Reservation rate in bits per second (bps).
Mode(s)
Any of the following strings:
Host--The router is acting as the host system or RSVP endpoint for this reservation.
LSP-Tunnel--The reservation is for a Traffic Engineering (TE) tunnel.
MIB--The reservation was created via an SNMP SET directive from a remote management station.
CLI--The reservation was created via a local RSVP CLI command.
Host CLI--A combination of the host and CLI strings meaning that the static sender being displayed was created by the
iprsvpsender-host CLI command.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvphost
Displays specific information for an RSVP host.
show ip rsvp ingress
To display information about the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) ingress bandwidth configured on interfaces, use the
showiprsvpingress command in privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvpingressinterface [detail] [typenumber]
Syntax Description
interface
Specifies the interface.
typenumber
(Optional) Interface type and interface or subinterface number.
detail
(Optional) Displays detailed information on the ingress bandwidth.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.1(3)T
This command was introduced.
15.1(1)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)S.
15.1(1)SY
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)SY.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvpingress command to display information on the RSVP ingress bandwidth configured on a specific interface or all interfaces. If you
do not specify the optional keyword or arguments, the command displays information about the RSVP ingress bandwidth configured
on all interfaces. Use the
detail keyword to display the detailed information on ingress bandwidth for a specific interface or for all interfaces.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpingressdetailethernet1/0 command:
Device# show ip rsvp ingress interface detail ethernet 1/0
interface rsvp in-allocated in-i/f max in-flow max VRF
Et1/0 ena 0 7500K 7500K 0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 25. show ip rsvp ingress Field Descriptions
Field
Description
interface
Displays the interface on which the ingress bandwidth is configured.
rsvp
The state of RSVP. Values are enabled (activated) or disabled (deactivated).
Note
This field is disabled only if an internal error occurs when registering with Routing Information Base (RIB).
in-allocated
Amount of bandwidth, in bits per second, currently allocated.
in-i/f max
Ingress reservable bandwidth, in Kb/s.
in-flow max
Percentage of interface bandwidth configured as RSVP ingress bandwidth.
VRF
VRF name.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpbandwidth
Enables RSVP for IP on an interface.
maximumbandwidthingress
Configures the bandwidth parameters for the ingress policy pool.
show ip rsvp installed
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP)-related installed filters and corresponding bandwidth information, use the
showiprsvpinstalled command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays all the configured virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances.
vrfvrf-name
(Optional) Name of a specified VRF.
interface-type
(Optional) Type of the interface.
interface-number
(Optional) Number of the interface.
detail
(Optional) Displays additional information about interfaces and their reservations.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.2(2)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(2)T.
12.2(14)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(14)S.
12.2(15)T
This command was modified. The command output was modified to display the resources required for a traffic control state
block (TCSB) after compression has been taken into account.
12.2(18)SXF2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXF2.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was modified. The command output was modified to display RSVP aggregation information.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Note
The syntax of the command depends on your platform and release. The
vrfvrf-namekeyword and argument combination is not supported on Cisco ASR 1000 series routers.
The
showiprsvpinstalledcommand displays information about interfaces and their reservations. Enter the optional
detail keyword for additional information, including the reservation’s traffic parameters, downstream hop, compression, VRFs, and
resources used by RSVP to ensure quality of service (QoS) for this reservation.
Examples
This section provides sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalled commands. Depending upon the interface or platform in use and the options enabled, the output that you see may vary slightly
from the examples shown below:
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalledcommand:
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 26. show ip rsvp installed Field Descriptions
Field
Description
kbps
Reserved rate in kilobits per second.
To
IP address of the source device.
From
IP address of the destination device.
Protocol
Protocol code. Code indicates IP protocol such as TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP).
DPort
Destination port number.
Sport
Source port number.
Weight
Weight used in Weighted Fair Queueing (WFQ).
Conversation
WFQ conversation number.
Note
If WFQ is not configured on the interface, weight and conversation will be zero.
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalled detail command shows the compression parameters, including the compression method, the compression context ID, and the bytes
saved per packet, on serial interface 3/0 in effect:
Router# show ip rsvp installed detail
RSVP:Ethernet2/1 has no installed reservations
RSVP:Serial3/0 has the following installed reservations
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 10.1.1.2. Source is 10.1.1.1,
Protocol is UDP, Destination port is 18054, Source port is 19156
Compression:(method rtp, context ID = 1, 37.98 bytes-saved/pkt avg)
Admitted flowspec:
Reserved bandwidth:65600 bits/sec, Maximum burst:328 bytes, Peak rate:80K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit:164 bytes, Max Pkt Size:164 bytes
Admitted flowspec (as required if compression were not applied):
Reserved bandwidth:80K bits/sec, Maximum burst:400 bytes, Peak rate:80K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit:200 bytes, Max Pkt Size:200 bytes
Resource provider for this flow:
WFQ on FR PVC dlci 101 on Se3/0: PRIORITY queue 24. Weight:0, BW 66 kbps
Conversation supports 1 reservations [0x1000405]
Data given reserved service:3963 packets (642085 bytes)
Data given best-effort service:0 packets (0 bytes)
Reserved traffic classified for 80 seconds
Long-term average bitrate (bits/sec):64901 reserved, 0 best-effort
Policy:INSTALL. Policy source(s):Default
The following sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalled detail command shows that compression is not predicted on the serial3/0 interface because no compression context IDs are
available:
Router# show ip rsvp installed detail
RSVP:Ethernet2/1 has no installed reservations
RSVP:Serial3/0 has the following installed reservations
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 10.1.1.2. Source is 10.1.1.1,
Protocol is UDP, Destination port is 18116, Source port is 16594
Compression:(rtp compression not predicted:no contexts available)
Admitted flowspec:
Reserved bandwidth:80K bits/sec, Maximum burst:400 bytes, Peak rate:80K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit:200 bytes, Max Pkt Size:200 bytes
Resource provider for this flow:
WFQ on FR PVC dlci 101 on Se3/0: PRIORITY queue 24. Weight:0, BW 80 kbps
Conversation supports 1 reservations [0x2000420]
Data given reserved service:11306 packets (2261200 bytes)
Data given best-effort service:0 packets (0 bytes)
Reserved traffic classified for 226 seconds
Long-term average bitrate (bits/sec):79951 reserved, 0 best-effort
Policy:INSTALL. Policy source(s):Default
Note
When no compression context IDs are available, use the
iprtpcompression-connectionsnumber command to increase the pool of compression context IDs.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalled command when RSVP aggregation is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp installed
RSVP: Ethernet0/0 has no installed reservations
RSVP: Serial1/0
BPS To From Protoc DPort Sport
300K 192.168.50.1 192.168.40.1 0 46 0
RSVP: RSVP 3175 AggResv 192.168.40.1->192.168.50.1_ef(46)
BPS To From Protoc DPort Sport
80K 192.168.5.1 192.168.2.1 TCP 222 222
80K 192.168.6.1 192.168.2.1 TCP 223 223
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 27. show ip rsvp installed Field Descriptions with RSVP Aggregation
Field
Description
RSVP
Reservation information for a specified interface.
BPS
Reserved rate in bits per second (BPS).
To
IP address of the source device.
From
IP address of the destination device.
Protoc
Protocol code.
Code indicates IP protocol such as TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP) for end-to-end (E2E) reservations.
Code is 0 for aggregate reservations.
DPort
Destination port number.
Number indicates protocol destination port for E2E reservations.
Number indicates differentiated services code point (DSCP) for aggregate reservations.
Sport
Source port number.
Number indicates protocol source port for E2E reservations.
Number is 0 for aggregate reservations.
RSVP
Individual E2E reservations mapped onto an aggregate. Information includes the following:
IP address of the aggregate source.
IP address of the aggregate destination.
Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpinstalleddetail command when RSVP aggregation is configured and one E2E reservation that is mapped across an aggregate reservation as seen
at the aggregator exists:
Router# show ip rsvp installed detail
RSVP: Ethernet0/0 has no installed reservations
RSVP: Serial1/0 has the following installed reservations
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.50.1. Source is 192.168.40.1,
Protocol is 0 , Destination port is 46, Source port is 0
Traffic Control ID handle: 35000403
Created: 20:27:14 EST Thu Nov 29 2007
Admitted flowspec:
Reserved bandwidth: 300K bits/sec, Maximum burst: 300K bytes, Peak rate: 300K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit: 20 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Resource provider for this flow: None
Conversation supports 1 reservations [0x3000408]
Data given reserved service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Data given best-effort service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Reserved traffic classified for 24558 seconds
Long-term average bitrate (bits/sec): 0 reserved, 0 best-effort
Policy: INSTALL. Policy source(s): Default
RSVP: RSVP 3175 AggResv 192.168.40.1->192.168.50.1_ef(46) has the following installed reservations
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.5.1. Source is 192.168.2.1,
Protocol is TCP, Destination port is 222, Source port is 222
Traffic Control ID handle: 0500040B
Created: 20:27:14 EST Thu Nov 29 2007
Admitted flowspec:
Reserved bandwidth: 80K bits/sec, Maximum burst: 5K bytes, Peak rate: 80K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Resource provider for this flow:
QBM
Conversation supports 1 reservations [0x600040A]
Data given reserved service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Data given best-effort service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Reserved traffic classified for 24558 seconds
Long-term average bitrate (bits/sec): 0 reserved, 0 best-effort
Policy: INSTALL. Policy source(s):
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 28. show ip rsvp installed detail Field Descriptions with RSVP Aggregation
Field
Description
RSVP
Reservation information for a specified interface.
RSVP Reservation
Reservation information for the serial 1/0 interface that includes the following:
Destination IP address.
Deaggregator for aggregate reservations.
Source IP address.
Aggregator for aggregate reservations.
Protocol used.
0 for aggregate reservations.
TCP/UDP or protocol for E2E reservations.
Destination port.
Differentiated services code (DSCP) for aggregate reservations.
Protocol port number for E2E reservations.
Source port.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Protocol port number for E2E reservations.
Traffic control identifier assigned by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Creation date.
Flowspec information that includes bandwidth, maximum burst, peak rate, policed unit size, and maximum packet size.
Resource provider information.
None for aggregate reservations.
QoS bandwidth manager (BM) for E2E reservations.
Type of service provided--reserved and best effort (always 0 packets in an RSVP/DiffServ node).
Length of time traffic is classified.
Bitrate (always 0 on an RSVP/DiffServ node)
Policies.
RSVP
Aggregate information that includes the following:
IP address of the aggregate source.
IP address of the aggregate destination.
DSCP.
Note
The remaining fields describe the aggregate’s E2E reservations with values explained in preceding fields.
Examples
The following is sample output when a specific VRF is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp installed vrf myvrf detail
RSVP: FastEthernet2/0 has the following installed reservations
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 10.10.10.10. Source is 10.10.10.12,
Protocol is UDP, Destination port is 10, Source port is 10
Traffic Control ID handle: C8000407
Created: 22:51:26 UTC Sun Feb 17 2008
Admitted flowspec:
Reserved bandwidth: 10K bits/sec, Maximum burst: 10K bytes, Peak rate: 10K bits/sec
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Resource provider for this flow: None
Conversation supports 1 reservations [0xBF000406]
Data given reserved service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Data given best-effort service: 0 packets (0 bytes)
Reserved traffic classified for 12783 seconds
Long-term average bitrate (bits/sec): 0 reserved, 0 best-effort
Policy: INSTALL. Policy source(s): Default
VRF : myvrf
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 29. show ip rsvp installed detail Field Descriptions with VRFs
Field
Description
RSVP
Reservation information for a specified interface.
RSVP Reservation
Reservation information for the serial 1/0 interface that includes the following:
Destination IP address.
Deaggregator for aggregate reservations.
Source IP address.
Aggregator for aggregate reservations.
Protocol used.
0 for aggregate reservations.
TCP/UDP or protocol for E2E reservations.
Destination port.
Differentiated services code (DSCP) for aggregate reservations.
Protocol port number for E2E reservations.
Source port.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Protocol port number for E2E reservations.
Traffic control identifier assigned by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Creation date.
Flowspec information that includes bandwidth, maximum burst, peak rate, policed unit size, and maximum packet size.
Resource provider information.
None for aggregate reservations.
QoS bandwidth manager (BM) for E2E reservations.
Type of service provided--reserved and best effort (always 0 packets in an RSVP/DiffServ node).
Length of time traffic is classified.
Bitrate (always 0 on an RSVP/DiffServ node)
Policies.
RSVP
Aggregate information that includes the following:
IP address of the aggregate source.
IP address of the aggregate destination.
DSCP.
Note
The remaining fields describe the aggregate’s E2E reservations with values explained in preceding fields.
VRF
Name of the VRF.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprtpcompression-connections
Specifies the total number of RTP header compression connections that can exist on an interface.
showiprsvpinterface
Displays RSVP-related information.
showqueueinginterface
Displays interface queueing statistics for dataplane information.
show ip rsvp interface
To display information related to Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP), use the
show
ip rsvp
interface command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays all the configured virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances.
vrfvrf-name
(Optional) Displays the specified VRF.
detail
(Optional) Displays additional information about interfaces.
interface-type
(Optional) Type of the interface.
interface-number
(Optional) Number of the interface.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.2(2)T
This command was modified. The
detail keyword was added.
12.2(4)T
This command was modified. This command was implemented on the Cisco 7500 series and the ATM permanent virtual circuit (PVC)
interface.
12.2(14)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(14)S.
12.2(13)T
This command was modified. The following changes were made to this command:
Rate-limiting and refresh-reduction information was added to the output display.
RSVP global settings display when no keywords or arguments are entered.
12.2(15)T
This command was modified. The following modifications were made to this command:
The effects of compression on admission control and the RSVP bandwidth limit counter were added to the display.
Cryptographic authentication parameters were added to the display.
12.2(18)SFX2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SFX2.
12.2(28)SB
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(28)SB.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(33)SRB
This command was modified. The command output was enhanced to display fast local repair (FLR) information.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was modified. The command output was enhanced to display RSVP aggregation information.
12.4(20)T
This command was modified. The command output was enhanced to display the RSVP source address configured on a specified interface.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrf and
*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
15.1(3)S1
This command was modified. The
show ip rsvp interface command output was enhanced to display the RSVP status configured on all the interfaces.
Usage Guidelines
Use theshow ip rsvp interface command to display information about interfaces on which RSVP is enabled, including the current allocation budget and maximum
available bandwidth. Enter the optional
detailkeyword for additional information, including bandwidth and signaling parameters and blockade state.
Use the
show ip rsvp interface detail command to display information about the RSVP parameters associated with an interface. These parameters include the following:
Total RSVP bandwidth.
RSVP bandwidth allocated to existing flows.
Maximum RSVP bandwidth that can be allocated to a single flow.
The type of admission control supported (header compression methods).
The compression methods supported by RSVP compression prediction.
RSVP aggregation.
The RSVP source address.
VRFs.
Examples
This section provides sample output from
show ip rsvp interfacecommands. Depending upon the interface or platform in use and the options enabled, the output that you see may vary slightly
from the examples shown below.
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface command shows information for each interface on which RSVP is enabled:
Router# show ip rsvp interface
interface rsvp allocated i/f max flow max sub max VRF
Et0/0 ena 300K 1M 1M 0
Et0/1 ena 100K 1M 1M 0
Et1/0 ena 200K 1M 1M 0
Et1/1 ena 0 1M 1M 0
Et1/2 ena 0 1M 1M 0
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 30. show ip rsvp interface Field Descriptions
Field
Description
interface
Interface name.
rsvp
Status of RSVP. Indicates if enabled or disabled.
allocated
Current allocation budget.
i/f max
Maximum allocatable bandwidth.
flow max
Largest single flow allocatable on this interface.
sub max
Largest subpool value allowed on this interface.
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interfacedetail command shows detailed RSVP information for each interface on which RSVP is enabled:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail
PO0/0:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):200M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):200M bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
PO1/0:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
PO1/1:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
PO1/2:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):50M bits/secMax. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
PO1/3:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):50M bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
Lo0:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):200M bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):200M bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs:0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state:4
Number of missed refresh messages:4
Refresh interval:30
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the detailed display for PO interface 0/0. The fields for the other
interfaces are similar.
Table 31. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--Detailed RSVP Information Example
Field
Description
PO0/0
Interface name.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for label switched path (LSP) tunnels,
in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Signalling
The RSVP signalling parameters in effect are as follows:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs--Differentiated services code point (DSCP) used in RSVP messages.
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state--How long, in milliseconds, before the blockade takes effect.
Number of missed refresh messages--How many refresh messages until the router state expires.
Refresh interval--How long, in milliseconds, until a refresh message is sent.
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface detail command shows the RSVP compression method prediction configuration for each interface on which RSVP is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail
Et2/1:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):1158K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):128K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Admission Control:
Header Compression methods supported:
rtp (36 bytes-saved), udp (20 bytes-saved)
Neighbors:
Using IP encap:0. Using UDP encap:0
Signalling:
Refresh reduction:disabled
Authentication:disabled
Se3/0:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated:0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total):1158K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow):128K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools:0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Admission Control:
Header Compression methods supported:
rtp (36 bytes-saved), udp (20 bytes-saved)
Neighbors:
Using IP encap:1. Using UDP encap:0
Signalling:
Refresh reduction:disabled
Authentication:disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display for Ethernet interface 2/1. The fields for serial interface
3/0 are similar.
Table 32. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--RSVP Compression Method Prediction Example
Field
Description
Et2/1
Interface name and number.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Admission Control
The type of admission control in effect is as follows:
Header Compression methods supported:
Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) or User Data Protocol (UDP) compression schemes and the number of bytes saved per packet.
Neighbors
The number of neighbors using IP and UDP encapsulation.
Signalling
The type of signaling in effect; refresh reduction is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface detailcommand displays detailed information, including the cryptographic authentication parameters, for all RSVP-configured interfaces
on the router:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail
Et0/0:
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 7500K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 7500K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools: 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total):0 bits/sec
Neighbors:
Using IP encap: 0. Using UDP encap: 0
Signalling:
Refresh reduction: disabled
Authentication: enabled
Key: 11223344
Type: sha-1
Window size: 2
Challenge: enabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 33. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--Cryptographic Authentication Example
Field
Description
Et0/0
Interface name and number.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Neighbors
The number of neighbors using IP and UDP encapsulation.
Signalling
The type of signaling in effect; Refresh reduction is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive). The parameters are as follows:
Key--The key (string) for the RSVP authentication algorithm displayed in clear text (for example, 11223344) or <encrypted>.
Type--The algorithm to generate cryptographic signatures in RSVP messages; possible values are md5 and sha-1.
Window size--Maximum number of RSVP authenticated messages that can be received out of order.
Challenge--The challenge-response handshake performed with any new RSVP neighbors that are discovered on a network; possible
values are enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface detail command displays detailed information for the Ethernet 1/0 interface on which FLR is enabled:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail ethernet1/0
Et1/0:
RSVP: Enabled
Interface State: Up
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 9K bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 300K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 300K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools (pool 1): 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total): 0 bits/sec
Traffic Control:
RSVP Data Packet Classification is ON via CEF callbacks
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs: 0x30
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state: 4
FLR Wait Time (IPv4 flows):
Repair is delayed by 500 msec.
Authentication: disabled
Key chain: <none>
Type: md5
Window size: 1
Challenge: disabled
Hello Extension:
State: Disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 34. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--FLR Example
Field
Description
Et1/0
Interface name and number.
RSVP
Enabled means active; disabled means inactive.
Interface State
Up means that the interface is configured; down means that the interface is not configured.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Traffic Control
RSVP Data Packet Classification is ON via CEF callbacks means that RSVP is not processing every packet; therefore, excess
overhead is avoided and network performance is improved.
Signalling
The signaling parameters in effect are as follows:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs--Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value used in RSVP messages.
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state--How long, in milliseconds, before the blockade takes effect.
FLR Wait Time (IPv4 flows)
Repair is delayed by 500 msec represents the amount of time, in milliseconds, before the FLR procedure begins on the specified
interface.
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive). The parameters are as follows:
Key chain--The key (string) for the RSVP authentication algorithm displayed in clear text (for example, 11223344) or <encrypted>.
Type--The algorithm to generate cryptographic signatures in RSVP messages; possible values are md5 and sha-1.
Window size--Maximum number of RSVP authenticated messages that can be received out of order.
Challenge--The challenge-response handshake performed with any new RSVP neighbors that are discovered on a network; possible
values are enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Hello Extension
Enables RSVP nodes to detect when a neighboring node is not reachable. The state is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface detail command displays the aggregation parameters for each interface on which RSVP is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail
Se1/0:
RSVP: Enabled
Interface State: Up
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 300K bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 400K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 400K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools (pool 1): 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total): 0 bits/sec
Traffic Control:
RSVP Data Packet Classification is OFF
RSVP resource provider is: none
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs: 0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state: 4
Authentication: disabled
Key chain: <none>
Type: md5
Window size: 1
Challenge: disabled
FRR Extension:
Backup Path: Not Configured
BFD Extension:
State: Disabled
Interval: Not Configured
RSVP Hello Extension:
State: Disabled
RFC 3175 Aggregation: Enabled
Role: interior
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 35. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--RSVP Aggregation Example
Field
Description
Se1/0
Interface name and number.
RSVP
Enabled means active; disabled means inactive.
Interface State
Up means that the interface is configured; down means that the interface is not configured.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Traffic Control
RSVP Data Packet Classification Is OFF--Disabling data packet classification instructs RSVP not to process every packet,
but to perform admission control only.
RSVP Resource Provider is None--Setting the resource provider to
none instructs RSVP to not associate any resources, such as weighted fair queueing (WFQ) queues or bandwidth, with a reservation.
These settings are necessary because RSVP aggregation uses RSVP Scalability Enhancements for control plane aggregation only.
Traffic control is performed by Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing (CBWFQ).
Signalling
The signaling parameters in effect are as follows:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs--Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value used in RSVP messages IP headers.
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state--How long, in milliseconds, before the blockade takes effect.
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive). The parameters are as follows:
Key chain--The key (string) for the RSVP authentication algorithm displayed in clear text (for example, 11223344) or <encrypted>.
Type--The algorithm to generate cryptographic signatures in RSVP messages; possible values are md5 and sha-1.
Window size--Maximum number of RSVP authenticated messages that can be received out of order.
Challenge--The challenge-response handshake performed with any new RSVP neighbors that are discovered on a network; possible
values are enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
FRR Extension
Fast Reroute backup path is configured or not configured.
BFD Extension
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection; values are the following:
State--Enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Interval--Configured with a value or Not Configured.
RSVP Hello Extension
Enables RSVP nodes to detect when a neighboring node is not reachable. The state is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
RFC 3175 Aggregation
The state of aggregation as defined in RFC 3175,
AggregationofRSVPforIPv4andIPv6Reservations; values are the following:
Enabled--Active.
Disabled--Inactive.
Role
Interior--Interface is facing an aggregation region.
Exterior--Interface is facing a classic RSVP region.
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvpinterfacedetailethernet1/0 command displays the source address configured for that interface:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail ethernet1/0
Et1/0:
RSVP: Enabled
Interface State: Up
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 0 bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 7500K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 7500K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools (pool 1): 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total): 0 bits/sec
Traffic Control:
RSVP Data Packet Classification is ON via CEF callbacks
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs: 0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state: 4
Ip address used in RSVP objects: 10.1.3.13 <----------source address for Ethernet 0/1
Authentication: disabled
Key chain: <none>
Type: md5
Window size: 1
Challenge: disabled
Hello Extension:
State: Disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 36. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--RSVP Source Address Example
Field
Description
Et1/0
Interface name and number.
RSVP
Enabled means active; disabled means inactive.
Interface State
Up means that the interface is configured; down means that the interface is not configured.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Traffic Control
RSVP Data Packet Classification is ON via CEF callbacks means that RSVP is not processing every packet; therefore, excess
overhead is avoided and network performance is improved.
Signalling
The signaling parameters in effect are as follows:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs--Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value used in IP headers of RSVP messages.
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state--How long, in milliseconds, before the blockade takes effect.
IP address used in RSVP objects--The RSVP source address for the specified interface.
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive). The parameters are as follows:
Key chain--The key (string) for the RSVP authentication algorithm displayed in clear text (for example, 11223344) or <encrypted>.
Type--The algorithm to generate cryptographic signatures in RSVP messages; possible values are md5 and sha-1.
Window size--Maximum number of RSVP authenticated messages that can be received out of order.
Challenge--The challenge-response handshake performed with any new RSVP neighbors that are discovered on a network; possible
values are enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Hello Extension
Enables RSVP nodes to detect when a neighboring node is not reachable. The state is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Examples
The following sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface vrf my vrf detail command displays information for all the interfaces associated with the VRF named myvrf:
Router# show ip rsvp interface vrf myvrf detail
Se1/0:
RSVP: Enabled
Interface State: Up
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 300K bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 400K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 400K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools (pool 1): 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total): 0 bits/sec
Traffic Control:
RSVP Data Packet Classification is OFF
RSVP resource provider is: none
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs: 0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state: 4
Authentication: disabled
Key chain: <none>
Type: md5
Window size: 1
Challenge: disabled
FRR Extension:
Backup Path: Not Configured
BFD Extension:
State: Disabled
Interval: Not Configured
RSVP Hello Extension:
State: Disabled
RFC 3175 Aggregation: Enabled
Role: interior
VRF: myvrf
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 37. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions--RSVP VRF Example
Field
Description
Se1/0
Interface name and number.
RSVP
Enabled means active; disabled means inactive.
Interface State
Up means that the interface is configured; down means that the interface is not configured.
Bandwidth
The RSVP bandwidth parameters in effect are as follows:
Curr allocated--Amount of bandwidth currently allocated, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (total)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed, in bits per second.
Max. allowed (per flow)--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed per flow, in bits per second.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools--Maximum amount of bandwidth allowed for LSP tunnels, in bits per second.
Set aside by policy (total)--The amount of bandwidth set aside by the local policy, in bits per second.
Traffic Control
RSVP Data Packet Classification Is OFF--Disabling data packet classification instructs RSVP not to process every packet,
but to perform admission control only.
RSVP Resource Provider is None--Setting the resource provider to
none instructs RSVP to not associate any resources, such as weighted fair queueing (WFQ) queues or bandwidth, with a reservation.
These settings are necessary because RSVP aggregation uses RSVP Scalability Enhancements for control plane aggregation only.
Traffic control is performed by Class-Based Weighted Fair Queuing (CBWFQ).
Signalling
The signaling parameters in effect are as follows:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs--Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value used in RSVP messages IP headers.
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state--How long, in milliseconds, before the blockade takes effect.
Authentication
Authentication is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive). The parameters are as follows:
Key chain--The key (string) for the RSVP authentication algorithm displayed in clear text (for example, 11223344) or <encrypted>.
Type--The algorithm to generate cryptographic signatures in RSVP messages; possible values are md5 and sha-1.
Window size--Maximum number of RSVP authenticated messages that can be received out of order.
Challenge--The challenge-response handshake performed with any new RSVP neighbors that are discovered on a network; possible
values are enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
FRR Extension
Fast Reroute backup path is configured or not configured.
BFD Extension
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection; values are the following:
State--Enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
Interval--Configured with a value or Not Configured.
RSVP Hello Extension
Enables RSVP nodes to detect when a neighboring node is not reachable. The state is either enabled (active) or disabled (inactive).
RFC 3175 Aggregation
The state of aggregation as defined in RFC 3175,
AggregationofRSVPforIPv4andIPv6Reservations; values are the following:
Enabled--Active.
Disabled--Inactive.
Role
Interior--Interface is facing an aggregation region.
Exterior--Interface is facing a classic RSVP region.
VRF
Name of the VRF.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvpinstalled
Displays RSVP-related installed filters and corresponding bandwidth information.
showiprsvpneighbor
Displays current RSVP neighbors.
show ip rsvp interface detail
To display the hello configuration for all interface types, use the
show ip rsvp interface detailcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
show ip rsvp interface detail [typenumber]
Syntax Description
typenumber
(Optional) The type and number of the interface for which you want to display the hello configuration.
Command Default
The hello configuration for all interfaces is displayed.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(22)S
This command was introduced.
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
12.2(33)SRE
This command was modified. The output was updated to display the source address used in the PHOP address field.
15.1(2)T
This command was modified. The output was updated to display the overhead percent.
15.1(1)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)S.
15.2(2)SNG
This command was implemented on the Cisco ASR 901 Series Aggregation Services Routers.
15.1(1)SY
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)SY.
Usage Guidelines
To display the hello configuration for a specific interface, use the
show ip rsvp interface detail command with the
type and
number arguments.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
show ip rsvp interface detail command:
Router# show ip rsvp interface detail GigabitEthernet 9/47
Tu0:
RSVP: Enabled
Interface State: Up
Bandwidth:
Curr allocated: 10K bits/sec
Max. allowed (total): 75K bits/sec
Max. allowed (per flow): 75K bits/sec
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools: 0 bits/sec
Set aside by policy (total): 0 bits/sec
Admission Control:
Header Compression methods supported:
rtp (36 bytes-saved), udp (20 bytes-saved)
Tunnel IP Overhead percent:
4
Tunnel Bandwidth considered:
Yes
Traffic Control:
RSVP Data Packet Classification is ON via CEF callbacks
Signalling:
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs: 0x3F
Number of refresh intervals to enforce blockade state: 4
Authentication: disabled
Key chain: <none>
Type: md5
Window size: 1
Challenge: disabled
Hello Extension:
State: Disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 38. show ip rsvp interface detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
RSVP
Status of the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) (Enabled or Disabled).
Interface State
Status of the interface (Up or Down).
Curr allocated
Amount of bandwidth (in bits per second [b/s]) currently allocated.
Max. allowed (total)
Total maximum amount of bandwidth (in b/s) allowed.
Max. allowed (per flow)
Maximum amount of bandwidth (in b/s) allowed per flow.
Max. allowed for LSP tunnels using sub-pools
Maximum amount of bandwidth permitted for the label switched path (LSP) tunnels that obtain their bandwidth from subpools.
Tunnel IP Overhead percent
Overhead percent to override the RSVP bandwidth manually.
Tunnel Bandwidth considered
Indicates if the tunnel bandwidth is considered.
DSCP value used in RSVP msgs
Differentiated services code point (DSCP) value in the RSVP messages.
show ip rsvp listeners
To display the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) listeners for a specified port or protocol, use the
showiprsvplisteners command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvplisteners [ip-address | any | vrf {* | vrf-name}] [udp | tcp | any | protocol] [dst-port | any]
Syntax Description
ip-address
(Optional) A particular IP address for an RSVP message.
any
(Optional) Any IP address destination for an RSVP message.
vrf *
(Optional) Displays all the configured virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances.
vrfvrf-name
(Optional) Displays information about a specified VRF.
udp
(Optional) User Datagram Protocol (UDP) to be used on the receiving interface and the UDP source port number.
tcp
(Optional) TCP to be used on the receiving interface and the TCP source port number.
any
(Optional) Any protocol to be used on the receiving interface and the UDP or TCP source port number.
protocol
(Optional) The protocol to be used on the receiving interface and the UDP or TCP source port number.
Note
If you select the
protocol
argument, the range is from 0 to 255 and the protocol used is IP.
dst-port
(Optional) A particular destination port from 0 to 65535 for an RSVP message.
any
(Optional) Any destination for an RSVP message.
Command Default
If you enter the
showiprsvplistenerscommand without a keyword or an argument, the command displays all the listeners that were sent and received for each interface
on which RSVP is configured.
Command Modes
User EXEC (<) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Note
The syntax of the command depends on your platform and release. The
vrfand
* keywords and
vrf-nameargument are not supported on ASR 1000 Series Aggregation Services Routers.
Use the
showiprsvplistenerscommand to display the number of listeners that were sent and received for each interface on which RSVP is configured.
Examples
The following example shows the listeners for the VRF named myvrf1:
Router# show ip rsvp listeners vrf myvrf1
VRF : myvrf1
To Protocol DPort Description Action OutIf
10.0.2.1 any any RSVP Proxy reply
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 39. show ip rsvp listeners Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
VRF
Name of the VRF for which the listeners are displayed.
To
IP address of the receiving interface.
Protocol
Protocol used.
DPort
Destination port on the receiving router.
Description
Cisco IOS component that requested RSVP to do the listening; for example, RSVP proxy and label switched path (LSP) tunnel
signaling.
Action
Action taken when a flow arrives at its destination. The values are:
announce--The arrival of the flow is announced.
reply--After the flow arrives at its destination, the sender receives a reply.
OutIf
Outbound interface on the receiving router.
Note
If this field is blank, it means that the listener was configured in global configuration mode and is not attached to any
particular interface. If an interface name appears, then the listener was configured in interface configuration mode and is
attached to that interface.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvplisteneroutbound
Configures an RSVP router to listen for PATH messages sent through a specific interface.
show ip rsvp neighbor
To display current Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) neighbors, use the
showiprsvpneighborcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays additional information about RSVP neighbors.
inactive
(Optional) Displays RSVP neighbors that have had no activity for more than an hour.
detail
(Optional) Displays additional information about the inactive RSVP neighbors.
vrf *
(Optional) Displays all the configured virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances.
vrfvrf-name
(Optional) Name of a specified VRF.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.2(13)T
The
interface-typeinterface-number arguments were deleted. The detail keyword was added to the command, and rate-limiting and refresh-reduction information
was added to the output.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvpneighbor command to show the IP addresses for the current RSVP neighbors. Enter the
detailkeyword to display rate-limiting, refresh-reduction, and VRF information for the RSVP neighbors.
Examples
Examples
The following command shows the current RSVP neighbors:
Router# show ip rsvp neighbor
10.0.0.1 RSVP
10.0.0.2 RSVP
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 40. show ip rsvp neighbor Field Descriptions
Field
Description
10.0.0.1
IP address of neighboring router.
RSVP
Type of encapsulation being used.
Examples
The following command shows the rate-limiting and refresh-reduction parameters for the current RSVP neighbors:
Router# show ip rsvp neighbor detail
Neighbor:10.0.0.1
Encapsulation:RSVP
Rate-Limiting:
Dropped messages:0
Refresh Reduction:
Remote epoch:0x1BFEA5
Out of order messages:0
Retransmitted messages:0
Highest rcvd message id:1059
Last rcvd message:00:00:04
Neighbor:10.0.0.2
Encapsulation:RSVP
Rate-Limiting:
Dropped messages:0
Refresh Reduction:
Remote epoch:0xB26B1
Out of order messages:0
Retransmitted messages:0
Highest rcvd message id:945
Last rcvd message:00:00:05
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 41. show ip rsvp neighbor detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Neighbor
IP address of the neighboring router.
Encapsulation
Type of encapsulation being used.
Note
Unknown displays if an RSVP message has been sent to an IP address, but no RSVP message has been received from that IP address.
This is not an error condition; it simply means that the router does not yet know what RSVP encapsulation (IP or User Data
Protocol (UDP)) is preferred and should be used to send RSVP messages.
Rate-Limiting
The rate-limiting parameters in effect are as follows:
Dropped messages = number of messages dropped by the neighbor.
Refresh Reduction
The refresh-reduction parameters in effect are as follows:
Remote epoch = the RSVP message number space identifier (ID); randomly generated whenever the node reboots or the RSVP process
restarts.
Out of order messages = messages that were dropped because they are out of sequential order.
Retransmitted messages = number of messages retransmitted to the neighbor.
Highest rcvd message id = highest message ID number sent by the neighbor.
Last rcvd message= time delta in hours, minutes, and seconds when last message was received by the neighbor.
Examples
The following command shows the VRF named myvrf:
Router# show ip rsvp neighbor vrf myvrf
VRF: myvrf
Neighbor Encapsulation Time since msg rcvd/sent
10.10.15.3 Raw IP 00:00:14 00:00:06
10.10.16.2 Raw IP 00:00:29 00:00:15
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 42. show ip rsvp neighbor vrf Field Descriptions
Field
Description
VRF
Name of the VRF.
Neighbor
IP address of neighboring router.
Encapsulation
Type of encapsulation being used.
Time since msg rcvd/sent
Time in hh:mm:ss since a message has been received by or sent to the neighbor.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvpinterface
Displays RSVP-related interface information.
show ip rsvp p2mp counters
To display any errors associated with the configuration and operation of Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traffic engineering
(TE) point-to-multipoint (P2MP) sublabel switched paths (sub-LSPs), use the
showiprsvpp2mpcounterscommand in in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvpp2mpcounters
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SRE
This command was introduced.
Examples
The following example shows the error counters for MPLS TE P2MP sub-LSPs:
Router# show ip rsvp p2mp counters
RSVP P2MP Error counters
Missing S2L_SUB_LSP object: 1
Multiple S2L_SUB_LSP objects: 1
Session's required bits are not zero: 1
Signalling attributes inconsistent: 1
IP header's destination is different from S2L_SUB_LSP destination: 1
Failed to enqueue S2L_SUB_LSP object into tmb: 1
Illegal Resv style: 1
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 43. show ip rsvp p2mp counters Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Missing S2L_SUB_LSP object
The S2L_SUB_LSP object includes the sub-LSP destination. If the S2L_SUB_LSP object is not available, it causes an error,
which is counted in this field.
Multiple S2L_SUB_LSP objects
The S2L_SUB_LSP object includes the sub-LSP destination. If there are multiple S2L_SUB_LSP objects, it causes an error, which
is counted in this field.
Session’s required bits are not zero
Session object protocol field should be zero. If it is not, it causes an error, which is counted in this field.
Signalling attributes inconsistent
When a router signals a P2MP LSP, all sub-LSPs should signal the same attributes. If they do not, it causes an error, which
is counted in this field.
IP header's destination is different from S2L_SUB_LSP destination
When a path has an IP header destination address that is different from the S2L_SUB_LSP object address, the destination address
in the IP header is ignored, and the destination address in the S2L_SUB_LSP object is used. If the destination address in
the path is one of its own addresses, Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) terminates the path. The event is counted in this
field.
Failed to enqueue S2L_SUB_LSP object into tmb
If the sub-LSP is not sent to the Timer Management block (TMB), it causes an error, which is counted in this field.
Illegal Resv style
The reservation style in all P2MP Resv messages is shared explicit (SE). If a different reservation is used, it causes an
error, which is counted in this field.
Related Commands
Command
Description
showmplstraffic-engforwardingstatistics
Displays informtion about MPLS TE P2MP paths and sub-LSPs.
show ip rsvp policy
To display the policies currently configured, use the
showiprsvppolicy command in user EXEC or privileged mode.
showiprsvppolicy [cops | local [acl] ]
Syntax Description
cops |
local
(Optional) Displays either the configured Common Open Policy Service (COPS) servers or the local policies.
acl
(Optional) Displays the access control lists (ACLs) whose sessions are governed by COPS servers or the local policies.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.1(1)T
This command was introduced as
showiprsvppolicycops.
12.2(13)T
This command was modified to include the
localkeyword. This command replaces the
showiprsvppolicycops command.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvppolicycommand to display current local policies, configured COPS servers, default policies, and the preemption parameter (disabled
or enabled).
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvppolicycommand :
Router# show ip rsvp policy
Local policy:
A=Accept F=Forward
Path:-- Resv:-- PathErr:-- ResvErr:-- ACL:104
Path:-- Resv:-- PathErr:-- ResvErr:-- ACL:None [Default policy]
COPS:
Generic policy settings:
Default policy: Accept all
Preemption: Disabled
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 44. show ip rsvp policy Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Local policy
The local policy currently configured.
A = Accept the message.
F = Forward the message.
Blank (--) means messages of the specified type are neither accepted or forwarded.
COPS
The COPS servers currently in effect.
Generic policy settings
Policy settings that are not specific to COPS or the local policy.
Default policy: Accept all means all RSVP messages are accepted and forwarded. Reject all means all RSVP messages are rejected.
Preemption: Disabled means that RSVP should not implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote
policy. Enabled means that RSVP should implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote policy.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpsignallinginitial-retransmit-delay
Creates a local procedure that determines the use of RSVP resources in a network.
show ip rsvp policy cops
The showiprsvppolicycops command is replaced by the showiprsvppolicycommand. See the showiprsvppolicy command for more information.
show ip rsvp policy identity
To display selected Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) identities in a router configuration, use the
showiprsvppolicyidentitycommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvppolicyidentity [regular-expression]
Syntax Description
regular-expression
(Optional) String of text that allows pattern matching on the alias strings of the RSVP identities to be displayed.
Command Default
All configured RSVP identities are displayed.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.4(6)T
This command was introduced.
12.2(33)SRB
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRB.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Use theshowiprsvppolicyidentity command with the optional
regular-expression argument to perform pattern matching on the alias strings of the RSVP identities to be displayed. Use this filtering capability
to search for a small subset of RSVP identities in a configuration with a large number of identities.
Omit the
regular-expression argument to display all the configured identities.
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicyidentity command displays all the configured identities:
Router# show ip rsvp policy identity
Alias: voice1
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=1.0
Alias: voice10
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=10.0
Alias: voice100
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=100.0
Alias: voice1000
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=1000.0
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 45. show ip rsvp policy identity Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Alias
Name of the alias string. The string can have as many as 64 printable characters (in the range 0x20 to 0x7E).
The string has no maximum length and must contain printable characters (in the range 0x20 to 0x7E).
Note
If you use the “ ” or ? character as part of the string itself, you must type the CTRL-V key sequence before entering the
embedded “ ” or ? character. The alias is never transmitted to other routers.
Type
Types of identities. RSVP defines two types: application IDs (Application) and user IDs (User). Cisco IOS software and Cisco
IOS XE software support application IDs only.
Locator
Information used by a router to find the correct policy to apply to RSVP messages that contain application IDs.
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicyidentitycommand displays all the identities whose aliases contain voice100:
Router# show ip rsvp policy identity voice100
Alias: voice100
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=100.0
Alias: voice1000
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=1000.0
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicyidentitycommand displays all the identities whose aliases contain an exact match on voice100:
Router# show ip rsvp policy identity ^voice100$
Alias: voice100
Type: Application ID
Locator: GUID=www.cisco.com,APP=voice,VER=100.0
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvplistener
Configures an RSVP router to listen for PATH messages.
iprsvppolicyidentity
Defines RSVP application IDs.
iprsvppolicylocal
Determines how to perform authorization on RSVP requests.
iprsvpreservation
Enables a router to simulate receiving RSVP RESV messages.
iprsvpsender
Enables a router to simulate receiving RSVP PATH messages.
show ip rsvp policy local
To display the local policies that are currently configured, use the
showiprsvppolicylocal command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays additional information about the configured local policies including preempt-priority and local-override.
interface
typenumber
(Optional) Specifies an interface.
aclacl-number
(Optional) Specifies an Access Control List (ACL). Range is from 1 to 199.
dscp-ipvalue
(Optional) Specifies a differentiated services code point (DSCP) for aggregate reservations. Values can be the following:
0 to 63--Numerical DSCP values. The default value is 0.
af11 to af43--Assured forwarding (AF) DSCP values.
cs1 to cs7--Type of service (ToS) precedence values.
default--Default DSCP value.
ef--Expedited forwarding (EF) DSCP values.
default
(Optional) Displays information about the default policy.
identityalias
(Optional) Specifies an application identity (ID) alias.
origin-as
as
(Optional) Specifies an autonomous system. Values are 1 to 65535.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
12.0(29)S
This command was modified. The
origin-asas keyword and argument combination was added, and the
acl-numberargument became optional.
12.4(6)T
This command was modified. The
identityaliasand the
interfacetypenumberkeyword and argument combinations were added, and the output was modified to include application ID information.
12.2(33)SRB
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRB.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was modified. The
dscp-ipvaluekeyword and argument combination was added, and the output was modified to include RSVP aggregation information.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvppolicylocal command to display information about the selected local policies that are currently configured. You can use the
default keyword or the
interfacetypenumber keyword and argument combination with one or more of the match criteria.
If you omit
aclacl-number,theorigin-asas,theidentityalias,orthedscp-ipvaluekeyword and argument combinations, all local policies currently configured appear.
You can specify only one of the ACL, the autonomous system, the application ID, or the DSCP options as a match criterion.
However, that parameter can be any ACL, autonomous system, application ID, or DSCP of any local policy that you have created.
If you have multiple local policies with a common match criterion, using that parameter displays all local policies that meet
the match criterion. If you have created local policies each with multiple ACLs, autonomous systems, application IDs, or DSCPs
as the match criteria, you cannot use that parameter to show only a specific policy. You must omit the match criteria and
show all the local policies.
Examples
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicylocalcommanddisplaysglobal and per-interface local policies based on RSVP identities (application IDs) that have been configured :
Types of RSVP messages being accepted and forwarded and the match criteria for the local policies configured. Blank (--)
means that messages of the specified type are neither accepted nor forwarded.
Serial2/0/0 Serial2/0/1
Local policy configured for a specific interface on the router.
Path, Resv, PathErr, ResvErr, ACL(s), AS(es), ID
Types of RSVP messages being accepted and forwarded and the types of local policies configured. Blank (--) means that messages
of the specified type are neither accepted nor forwarded.
Generic policy settings
Policy settings that are not specific to any local or remote policy.
Default policy: ‘Accept all’ means that all RSVP messages are accepted and forwarded. ‘Reject all’ means that all RSVP messages
are rejected.
Preemption: ‘Disabled’ means that RSVP should not implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote
policy. ‘Enabled’ means that RSVP should implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote policy.
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicylocalcommanddisplaysaglobal local policy based on a DSCP EF that has been configured :
Router# show ip rsvp policy local dscp-ip ef
A=Accept F=Forward
Global:
Path:AF Resv:AF PathErr:AF ResvErr:AF DSCP(s): ef
Generic policy settings:
Default policy: Accept all
Preemption: Enabled
See the table below for a description of the fields.
Examples
The following sample output from the
showiprsvppolicylocaldetailcommandshowsthe location of the local policy (such as whether the policy is configured globally or for a specific interface) and the settings
for preemption scope and maximum bandwidth. Preemption priorities and sender and receiver limits also appear even if they
are set to their defaults.
Router# show ip rsvp policy local detail
Global:
Policy for ID: voice
Preemption Scope: Unrestricted.
Local Override: Disabled.
Fast ReRoute: Accept.
Handle: 02000409.
Accept Forward
Path: Yes Yes
Resv: Yes Yes
PathError: Yes Yes
ResvError: Yes Yes
Setup Priority Hold Priority
TE: N/A N/A
Non-TE: N/A N/A
Current Limit
Senders: 0 40
Receivers: 0 N/A
Conversations: 0 N/A
Group bandwidth (bps): 0 200K
Per-flow b/w (bps): N/A 10M
Policy for ID: video
Preemption Scope: Unrestricted.
Local Override: Disabled.
Fast ReRoute: Accept.
Handle: 0200040A.
Accept Forward
Path: Yes Yes
Resv: Yes Yes
PathError: Yes Yes
ResvError: Yes Yes
Setup Priority Hold Priority
TE: 2 2
Non-TE: 5 4
Current Limit
Senders: 2 10
Receivers: 2 10
Conversations: 2 10
Group bandwidth (bps): 100K 200K
Per-flow b/w (bps): N/A 10M
Ethernet2/1:
Policy for ID: voice
Preemption Scope: Unrestricted.
Local Override: Disabled.
Fast ReRoute: Accept.
Handle: 0200040B.
Accept Forward
Path: Yes Yes
Resv: Yes Yes
PathError: Yes Yes
ResvError: Yes Yes
Setup Priority Hold Priority
TE: 2 2
Non-TE: 5 4
Current Limit
Senders: 2 10
Receivers: 2 10
Conversations: 2 10
Group bandwidth (bps): 100K 200K
Per-flow b/w (bps): N/A 10M
Generic policy settings:
Default policy: Accept all
Preemption: Disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 47. show ip rsvp policy local detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Global
Location of the local policy. Global--Local policy configured for the entire router.
Policy for ID
A global local policy defined for an application ID alias named voice.
Preemption Scope
Describes which classes of RSVP quality of service (QoS) reservations can be preempted by other classes of RSVP QoS reservations
on the same interface.
Unrestricted means that a reservation using an application ID such as voice can preempt any other class of reservation on
the same interface as that reservation, even other nonvoice reservations.
Local Override
Overrides any remote policy by enforcing the local policy in effect.
Disabled--Not active.
Enabled--Active.
Fast ReRoute
State of Fast ReRoute for Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)/traffic engineering (TE) label switched paths (LSPs).
Accept--Messages being accepted.
Do not accept--Messages requesting Fast Reroute service are not being accepted.
Handle
Internal database ID assigned to the security association by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Accept, Forward
State of RSVP messages.
Path, Resv, PathError, ResvError
Types of RSVP messages being accepted and forwarded.
Yes--Messages are being accepted and forwarded.
No--Messages are not being accepted or forwarded.
Setup Priority, Hold Priority
Preemption priorities. Setup Priority indicates the priority of a reservation when it is initially installed. Hold Priority
indicates the priority of a reservation after it has been installed.
N/A means preemption priorities are not configured.
TE
The preemption priority of TE reservations. Values for Setup Priority and Hold Priority range from 0 to 7 where 0 is considered
the highest priority.
Non-TE
The preemption priority of non-TE reservations. Values for Setup Priority and Hold Priority range from 0 to 65535 where 65535
is considered the highest priority.
Current, Limit
The present number and the highest number of these parameters allowed.
Senders
The number of current PATH states accepted and/or approved by this policy.
Receivers
The number of current RESV states accepted by this policy.
Conversations
The number of active bandwidth requests approved by the local policy.
Group bandwidth (bps)
Amount of bandwidth configured for a class of reservations in bits per second (bps).
Per-flow b/w (bps)
Amount of bandwidth configured for each reservation in bits per second (bps).
Ethernet2/1
Local policy configured for a specific interface on the router.
Generic policy settings
Policy settings that are not specific to the local policy.
Default policy: ‘Accept all’ means that all RSVP messages are accepted and forwarded. ‘Reject all’ means that all RSVP messages
are rejected.
Preemption: ‘Disabled’ means that RSVP should not implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote
policy. ‘Enabled’ means that RSVP should implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote policy.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvppolicylocal
Determines how to perform authorization on RSVP requests.
show ip rsvp policy vrf
To display information for a Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) policy configured with a virtual routing and forwarding
(VRF) instance, use the
showiprsvppolicyvrfcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Unique information that is conveyed in the POLICY-DATA object for RSVP messages.
alias
(Optional) Specifies a string used within the router to reference the identity in RSVP configuration commands and show displays.
The string can have as many as 64 printable characters including quotes and regular expressions (in the range 0x20 to 0x7E).
Note
If you use the “ ” or ? characters as part of the alias or locator string itself, you must type the CTRL/V key sequence before
entering the embedded “ ” or ? characters. The alias is never transmitted to other routers.
local
(Optional) A local policy.
acl
(Optional) Access control list (ACL) for the local policy.
acl
(Optional) Specifies an ACL. Values for each ACL are 1 to 199.
default
(Optional) A default policy.
detail
(Optional) Detailed information for the VRF.
acl
(Optional) Access control list (ACL) for the local policy.
acl
(Optional) Specifies an ACL. Values for each ACL are 1 to 199.
default
(Optional) A default policy.
identity
(Optional) An application ID.
alias
(Optional) Specifies a string used within the router to reference the identity in RSVP configuration commands and show displays.
The string can have as many as 64 printable characters including quotes and regular expressions (in the range 0x20 to 0x7E).
Note
If you use the “ ” or ? characters as part of the alias or locator string itself, you must type the CTRL/V key sequence before
entering the embedded “ ” or ? characters. The alias is never transmitted to other routers.
interface
(Optional) An interface for the VRF.
interface-type
(Optional) An interface name for the VRF.
origin-as
(Optional) An autonomous system (AS) for the VRF.
as-number
(Optional) An AS. Values for each autonomous system are 1 to 65535.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.0(1)M
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvppolicyvrf command to display the policies configured for VRFs.
Examples
The following example shows an ACL local policy that is configured for a specified VRF:
Router# show ip rsvp policy vrf myVrf1 local acl 101
A=Accept F=Forward
VRF: myVrf1
Global:
Path:AF Resv:AF PathErr:AF ResvErr:AF ACL(s): 101
Ethernet0/0:
Path:AF Resv:AF PathErr:AF ResvErr:AF ACL(s): 101
Generic policy settings:
Default policy: Accept all
Preemption: Disabled
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 48. show ip rsvp policy vrf Field Descriptions
Field
Description
A=Accept
Accept the message.
F=Forward
Forward the message.
VRF
Name of the VRF.
Global: Global policies configured for the VRF.
Path: AF--Accept and forward these messages.
Resv: AF--Accept and forward these messages.
PathErr--Accept and forward these messages.
ResvErr--Accept and forward these messages.
ACL(s)--Access control list number.
Ethernet0/0--The interface configured for the VRF.
Generic policy settings
Policy settings that are not specific to COPS or the local policy.
Default policy: Accept all means all RSVP messages are accepted and forwarded. Reject all means all RSVP messages are rejected.
Preemption: Disabled means that RSVP should not implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote
policy. Enabled means that RSVP should implement any preemption decisions required by a particular local or remote policy.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvppolicyvrf
Configures an RSVP policy for a VRF.
show ip rsvp precedence
To display IP precedence information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) interfaces, use the
showiprsvpprecedencecommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvpprecedence [typenumber]
Syntax Description
type
(Optional) Type of interface.
number
(Optional) Number of the interface.
Command Modes
User EXEC(>) Privileged EXEC(#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.0(1)M
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To obtain IP precedence information about a specific interface configured to use RSVP, specify the interface name with the
show ip rsvp precedence command. To obtain IP precedence information about all interfaces enabled for RSVP on the router,
use the show ip rsvp precedence command without specifying an interface name.
Examples
The following example shows the IP precedence information for the interaces on which RSVP is enabled:
Router# show ip rsvp precedence ethernet 0/1
Interface name Precedence Precedence TOS TOS
conform exceed conform exceed
Ethernet0/0 - - - -
Ethernet0/1 - - - -
Ethernet1/1 - - 4 -
Ethernet1/2 3 - - -
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 49. show ip rsvp precedence Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface name
Displays the interface details.
Precedence conform
Displays the IP precedence conform information for an interface.
Note
The Precedence conform value specifies an IP precedence value in the range from 0 to 7 for traffic that conforms to the RSVP
flowspec.
Precedence exceed
Displays the IP precedence exceed information for an interface.
Note
The Precedence exceed value specifies an IP Precedence value in the range from 0 to 7 for traffic that exceeds the RSVP flowspec.
TOS conform
Displays the IP type of service (ToS) conform information for an interface.
Note
The TOS conform value specifies a ToS value in the range from 0 to 31 for traffic that conforms to the RSVP flowspec.
TOS exceed
Displays the IP type of service (ToS) exceed information for an interface.
Note
The TOS exceed value specifies a ToS value in the range from 0 to 31 for traffic that exceeds the RSVP flowspec.
Related Commands
Command
Description
show ip rsvp
Displays RSVP-related information.
showiprsvpinterface
Displays RSVP-related interface information.
showiprsvptos
Displays IP TOS information for RSVP enabled interfaces.
show ip rsvp request
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP)-related request information currently in the database, use the
showiprsvprequestcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
Syntax for T, 12.2S, 12.2SB, 12.2(33)SRD, and Earlier Releases
13 for IPv4 point-to-multipoint (P2MP) TE LSP tunnel sessions.
all
(Optional) Specifies all types of RSVP sessions.
destinationip-address
(Optional) Specifies the destination IP address.
hostname
(Optional) Hostname of the destination.
dst-portport-number
(Optional) Specifies the destination port number. Valid destination port numbers can be in the range of 0 to 65535.
lsp-idlsp-id
(Optional) Specifies the label switched path ID. Valid numbers can be in the range of 0 to 65535.
senderip-address
(Optional) Specifies the IP address of the tunnel head.
hostname
(Optional) Hostname of the tunnel head.
sourceip-address
(Optional) Specifies the source IP address of the source.
hostname
(Optional) Hostname of the source.
src-portport-number
(Optional) Specifies the source port number. Valid source port numbers can be in the range of 0 to 65535.
tunnel-idtunnel-id
(Optional) Specifies the tunnel ID number. Valid numbers can be in the range of 0 to 65535.
vrf*
(Optional) Displays all the configured virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instances.
vrfvrf-name
(Optional) Name of a specified VRF.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2. The
detail keyword was added to display additional request information.
12.0(22)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.0(22)S. This command was enhanced to show Fast Reroute information
when a link-state packet (LSP) is actively using a backup tunnel that terminates at this node (that is, when a node is the
merge point.) The command is supported on the Cisco 10000 series Edge Services Router (ESR).
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.2(33)SRC
The command output was modified to display RSVP aggregation information.
12.4(20)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(20)T.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
12.2(33)SRE
This command was modified. Thesession-type keyword was added to display specific types of tunnels. The output was modified to display Multiprotocol (MPLS) TE P2MP information.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvprequest command to display the RSVP reservations currently being requested upstream for a specified interface or all interfaces.
The received reservations may differ from requests because of aggregated or refused reservations. If desired, information
for only a single tunnel or a subset of tunnels can be displayed.
Limiting the Display
When hundreds or thousands of tunnels exist and you are interested in only a few, you can display the output for only a single
tunnel or a subset of tunnels. To request a limited display, enter the
showiprsvprequest command with the appropriate keyword (called an output filter):
destination,
dst-port,
source, and
src-port. You can enter any or all of the output filters, and you can enter them whether or not you specify the
detail keyword.
You can also limit the display to a particular VRF by using the
showiprsvprequestvrfvrf-namecommand.
Examples
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvprequest command when RSVP aggregation is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp request
To From Pro DPort Sport Next Hop I/F Fi Serv BPS
192.168.5.1 192.168.2.1 TCP 222 222 192.168.40.1 Se1/0 FF RATE 80K
192.168.50.1 192.168.40.1 0 46 0 10.10.10.4 Se1/0 FF LOAD 300K
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 50. show ip rsvp request Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the end-to-end (E2E) receiver or deaggregator.
From
IP address of the E2E sender or aggregator.
Pro
Protocol code.
TCP indicates Transmission Control Protocol.
Code 0 indicates an aggregate reservation.
DPort
Destination port number.
DSCP for aggregate reservations.
Sport
Source port number.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Next Hop
IP address of the next hop.
Aggregator for E2E reservations mapped onto aggregates.
Next hop RSVP node for aggregate or E2E reservations onto an interface.
I/F
Interface of the next hop.
Fi
Filter (Wildcard Filter, Shared Explicit, or Fixed Filter).
Serv
Service (value can be
rate or
load).
BPS
The rate, in bits per second, in the RSVP reservation request for a reservation.
Note
In the example, the top one is the E2E reservation signaled at 80 bps and the corresponding aggregate request at 300 bps.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvprequestdetail command when RSVP aggregation is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp request detail
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.5.1, Source is 192.168.2.1,
Protocol is TCP, Destination port is 222, Source port is 222
Prev Hop: 192.168.40.1 on Serial1/0
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Guaranteed-Rate
Average Bitrate is 80K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 5K bytes
Request ID handle: 0100040E.
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
Priorities - preempt: 0, defend: 0
PSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x19000407]
RSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x17000409]
3175 Aggregation: RSVP 3175 AggResv 192.168.40.1->192.168.50.1_ef(46)
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.50.1, Source is 192.168.40.1,
Protocol is 0 , Destination port is 46, Source port is 0
Prev Hop: 10.10.10.4 on Serial1/0
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 300K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 300K bytes
Request ID handle: 0100040B.
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
Priorities - preempt: 0, defend: 0
PSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x9000408]
RSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x100040A]
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 51. show ip rsvp request detail--RSVP Aggregation Field Descriptions
Field
Description
RSVP Reservation
Destination--Receiver’s IP address of the E2E RESV message.
Source--Sender’s IP address of the E2E RESV message.
Protocol
Protocol--IP protocol used; TCP--Transmission Control Protocol.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Destination port
Receiver’s port number.
DSCP for aggregate reservations.
Source port
Sender’s port number.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Previous Hop
IP address of the previous hop on the specified interface.
Note
This is the aggregator’s IP address in the case of an E2E reservation mapped onto an aggregate as seen at the deaggregator.
Reservation Style
Multi-reservations sharing of bandwidth; values include Fixed-Filter, Shared-Explicit, and Wildcard-Filter.
QoS Service
Type of quality of service (QoS) configured; values include Guaranteed-Rate and Controlled-Load.
Average Bitrate
Average rate requested, in bits per second, for the data.
Maximum Burst
Largest amount of data allowed in kilobytes.
Request ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the request by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy
Policy status: Forwarding--RSVP RESV messages are being accepted and forwarded.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values include Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Priorities
RSVP preemption and hold priorities of the reservation; default is 0.
PSB Handle List
Path state block (PSB) internal database identifier assigned by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
RSB Handle List
Reservation state block (RSB) internal database identifier assigned by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
3175 Aggregation
RSVP aggregation as defined in RFC 3175,
Aggregation of RSVP for IPv4 and IPv6 Reservations .
Note
This E2E reservation is mapped onto an RSVP aggregate reservation with an aggregator (source) IP address of 192.168.40.1,
a destination (deaggregator) IP address of 192.168.50.1, and a DSCP value of expedited forwarding (EF).
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvprequestdetail command when the command is entered on the merge point before and after a failure.
This figure illustrates the network topology for the RSVP configuration example.
Examples
Router# show ip rsvp request detail
RSVP Reservation. Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0,
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 126
Next Hop is 10.1.1.5 on POS0/1
Label is 0
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 0G bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
RRO:
Empty
Examples
Router# show ip rsvp request detail
RSVP Reservation. Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0,
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 126
Next Hop is 10.1.1.5 on POS0/1
Label is 0
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 0G bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
RRO:
Empty
FRR is in progress (we are Merge Point)
RSVP Reservation. Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0,
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 126
Next Hop is 10.0.0.0 on POS0/1
Label is 0
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 0G bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
RRO:
Empty
FRR is in progress (we are Merge Point)
Notice that after the failure, there are two entries for the rerouted LSP.
The first entry continues to show the prefailure information (that is, RESV messages are being sent to 10.1.1.5 on POS0/1).
This state is for the RESV being sent upstream before the failure, in response to path messages sent before the failure. This
state may time out quickly, or it may continue to be refreshed for a few minutes if, for example, an upstream node is unaware
of the failure.
The second entry shows the post-failure information (that is, RESV messages are being sent to 10.0.0.0 on POS0/1). This state
is for the RESV messages being sent upstream after the failure (to the point of local repair [PLR]), and will remain and be
refreshed as long as the LSP is rerouted.
In example 2, the merge point is also the tail of the LSP. There is no record route object (RRO) information because there
are no nodes downstream.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvprequestdetail command, which shows MPLS TE P2MP information:
Router# show ip rsvp request detail
Request:
P2MP ID: 22 Tun ID: 22 Ext Tun ID: 10.1.1.201
Tun Sender: 10.1.1.201 LSP ID: 1 SubGroup Orig: 10.1.1.201
SubGroup ID: 1
S2L Destination : 10.1.1.203
Prev Hop:10.1.1.205 on Ethernet1/1
Label: 17 (incoming)
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 500K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
Request ID handle: 0100042C.
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): MPLS/TE
PSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x1000427]
RSB Handle List [1 elements]: [0x100042B]
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 52. show ip rsvp request--MPLS TE P2MP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
P2MP ID
A 32-bit number that identifies the set of destinations of the P2MP tunnel.
Tun ID
Tunnel identification number.
Ext Tun ID
Extended tunnel identification number.
Tun Sender
IP address of the sender.
LSP ID
Label switched path identification number.
SubGroup Orig
LSP headend router ID address.
SubGroup ID
An incremental number assigned to each sub-LSP signaled from the headend router.
S2L Destination
LSP tailend router ID address.
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvprequestfiltersession-type13command, which shows RSVP RESV requests for point-to-multipoint traffic:
Router# show ip rsvp request filter session-type 13
Destination Tun Sender TunID LSPID P2MP-ID SubID Next Hop I/F BPS
192.168.5.1 10.1.1.201 22 1 22 1 192.168.40.1 Se1/0 80K
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvpreservation
Displays RSVP PATH-related receiver information currently in the database.
showiprsvpsender
Displays RSVP RESV-related receiver information currently in the database.
show ip rsvp reservation
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP)-related receiver information currently in the database, use the
showiprsvpreservationcommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
Syntax for Cisco IOS Release T, 12.2S, 12.2SB, 12.2(33)SRD, Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6, and Earlier Releases
13 for IPv4 point-to-multipoint (P2MP) TE LSP tunnel sessions.
all
(Optional) Specifies all types of RSVP sessions.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2. The
detail keyword was added to display additional reservation information.
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.4(4)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(4)T, and its output was modified to display application ID information.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was modified. The command output was modified to display tunnel-based admission control (TBAC) and RSVP aggregation
information.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
12.2(33)SRE
This command was modified. The
session-type keyword was added to display specific types of tunnels. The output was modified to display MPLS TE P2MP information.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Note
The syntax of the command depends on your platform and release. The
vrfand
* keywords and
vrf-nameargument are not supported on ASR 1000 Series Aggregation Services Routers.
Use the
showiprsvpreservation command to display the current receiver (RESV) information in the database for a specified interface or all interfaces. This
information includes reservations aggregated and forwarded from other RSVP routers.
Limiting the Display
When hundreds or thousands of tunnels exist and you are interested in only a few, you can display the output for only a single
tunnel or a subset of tunnels. To request a limited display, enter the
showiprsvpreservation command with the appropriate keyword (called an output filter):
destination,
dst-port,
source, and
src-port. You can enter any or all of the output filters, and you can enter them whether or not you specify the
detail keyword.
You can also limit the display to a particular VRF by using the
showiprsvpreservationvrfvrf-namecommand.
Examples
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationcommand:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation
To From Pro DPort Sport Next Hop I/F Fi Serv
172.16.1.49 172.16.4.53 1 0 0 172.16.1.49 Se1 FF LOAD
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 53. show ip rsvp reservation Field Descriptions
Field
Descriptions
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code.
DPort
Destination port number.
Sport
Source port number.
Next Hop
IP address of the next hop.
I/F
Interface of the next hop.
Fi
Filter (Wildcard Filter, Shared-Explicit, or Fixed-Filter).
Serv
Service (value can be RATE or LOAD).
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationdetailcommand with application ID information:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.104.3, Source is 192.168.104.1,
Protocol is UDP, Destination port is 4444, Source port is 4444
Next Hop is 192.168.106.2, Interface is ATM1/0.1
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Guaranteed-Rate
Resv ID handle: 0A00040B.
Created: 12:18:32 UTC Sat Dec 4 2004
Average Bitrate is 5K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Status:
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
Priorities - preempt: 5, defend: 2
Application ID: 'GUID=www.cisco.com, VER=10.1.1.2, APP=voice, SAPP=h323'
'/usr/local/bin/CallManager'
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 54. show ip rsvp reservation detail--Application ID Field Descriptions
Field
Descriptions
RSVP Reservation
Destination--Receiver’s IP address of the RESV message.
Source--Sender’s IP address of the RESV message.
Protocol
Protocol--IP protocol used; UDP--User Data Protocol.
Destination port
Receiver’s port number.
Source port
Sender’s port number.
Next Hop
IP address of the next hop.
Interface
Interface type of the next hop.
Reservation Style
Multireservations sharing of bandwidth; values are Fixed-Filter, Shared-Explicit, and Wildcard-Filter.
QoS Service
Type of qulaity of service (QoS) configured; values are Guaranteed-Rate and Controlled Load.
Resv ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the RESV message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Created
Time and date when the reservation was created.
Average Bitrate
Average rate, in bits per second, for the data.
Maximum Burst
Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit
Size of the smallest packet generated by the application, in bytes, including the application data and all protocol headers
at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size
Largest packet allowed in bytes.
Status
Status of the local policy; values are Proxied and Proxy-terminated.
Note
A blank status field means you issued the command on a midpoint for that reservation.
Policy
Policy status: Forwarding--RSVP RESV messages are being accepted and forwarded.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Priorities
Preemption priorities in effect.
preempt: the startup priority; values are 0 to 7 for traffic engineering (TE) reservations with 0 being the highest. Values
are 0 to 65535 for non-TE reservations, with 0 being the lowest.
defend: the hold priority; values are the same as preempt.
Application ID
A quotable string that identifies the sender application and can be used to match on local policies. The string includes
the policy locator in the X.500 Distinguished Name format and the application or filename of the sender application.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationdetailcommandwhenTBACisconfigured:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 10.4.0.1, Source is 10.1.0.1,
Protocol is UDP, Destination port is 100, Source port is 100
Next Hop: 10.4.0.1 on Tunnel1, out of band
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Guaranteed-Rate
Resv ID handle: 0100040D.
Created: 11:59:53 IST Tue Mar 20 2007
Average Bitrate is 10K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Status:
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 55. show ip rsvp reservation detail--TBAC Field Descriptions
Field
Descriptions
RSVP Reservation
Destination--Receiver’s IP address of the RESV message.
Source--Sender’s IP address of the RESV message.
Protocol
Protocol--IP protocol used; UDP--User Data Protocol.
Destination port
Receiver’s port number.
Source port
Sender’s port number.
Next Hop
IP address of the next hop on tunnel interface
with out-of-band signaling .
Reservation Style
Multireservations sharing of bandwidth; values are Fixed-Filter, Shared-Explicit, and Wildcard-Filter.
QoS Service
Type of QoS configured; values are Guaranteed-Rate and Controlled Load.
Resv ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the RESV message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Created
Time and date when the reservation was created.
Average Bitrate
Average rate, in bits per second, for the data.
Maximum Burst
Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit
Size of the smallest packet generated by the application, in bytes, including the application data and all protocol headers
at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size
Largest packet allowed in bytes.
Status
Status of the local policy; values are Proxied and Proxy-terminated.
Note
A blank status field means you issued the command on a midpoint for that reservation.
Policy
Policy status: Forwarding--RSVP RESV messages are being accepted and forwarded.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationdetailcommandwhenRSVPaggregationisconfigured:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.5.1, Source is 192.168.2.1,
Protocol is TCP, Destination port is 222, Source port is 222
Next Hop: 192.168.50.1 on Serial1/0
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Guaranteed-Rate
Resv ID handle: 0600040A.
Created: 20:27:58 EST Thu Nov 29 2007
Average Bitrate is 80K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 5K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
DiffServ Integration: DSCPs: 46
Status:
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
3175 Aggregation: RSVP 3175 AggResv 192.168.40.1->192.168.50.1_ef(46)
RSVP Reservation. Destination is 192.168.50.1, Source is 192.168.40.1,
Protocol is 0 , Destination port is 46, Source port is 0
Next Hop: 10.30.1.1 on Serial1/0
Reservation Style is Fixed-Filter, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Resv ID handle: 03000408.
Created: 20:27:50 EST Thu Nov 29 2007
Average Bitrate is 300K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 300K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 20 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 0 bytes
Status:
Policy: Forwarding. Policy source(s): Default
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 56. show ip rsvp reservation detail--RSVP Aggregation Field Descriptions
Field
Descriptions
RSVP Reservation
Destination--Receiver’s IP address of the RESV message.
Deaggregator for aggregate reservations.
Source--Sender’s IP address of the RESV message.
Aggregator for aggregate reservations.
Protocol
Protocol--IP protocol used; TCP--Transmission Control Protocol.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Destination port
Receiver’s port number.
Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) for aggregate reservations.
Source port
Sender’s port number.
0 for aggregate reservations.
Next Hop
IP address of the next hop on a specified interface.
Deaggregator IP address for E2E reservations mapped onto an aggregate as seen at the aggregator.
None for aggregate reservations as seen at the deaggregator.
Reservation Style
Multireservations sharing of bandwidth; values are Fixed-Filter, Shared-Explicit, and Wildcard-Filter.
QoS Service
Type of QoS Service configured; values are Guaranteed-Rate and Controlled Load.
Resv ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the RESV message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Created
Time and date when the reservation was created.
Average Bitrate
Average rate requested, in bits per second, for the data.
Maximum Burst
Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit
Size of the smallest packet generated by the application, in bytes, including the application data and all protocol headers
at or above the IP level.
Always 0 or 20 on a node configured for RSVP aggregation.
Max Pkt Size
Largest packet allowed in bytes.
Always 0 on a node configured for RSVP aggregation.
Status
Status of the local policy; policy source and preemption values.
Note
A blank status field means you issued the command on a midpoint for that reservation.
Note
Preemption values are shown only if RSVP preemption is enabled on the router.
Policy
Policy status: Forwarding--RSVP RESV messages are being accepted and forwarded.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are default, local, and Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)/traffic engineering (TE).
3175 Aggregation
Aggregated reservation on which this E2E reservation is mapped with source (aggregator) and destination (deaggregator) endpoints,
IP addresses, and aggregate reservation DSCP.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationdetailcommand when the command is entered on the PLR before and after a failure.
This figure illustrates the network topology for the RSVP configuration example.
Examples
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
RSVP Reservation. Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0,
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 126
Next Hop is 10.1.1.4 on POS1/2
Label is 18
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 0G bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
RRO:
10.1.1.5/32, Flags:0x0 (No Local Protection)
Label record: Flags 0x1, ctype 1, incoming label 18
10.1.1.6/32, Flags:0x0 (No Local Protection)
Label record: Flags 0x1, ctype 1, incoming label 0
Examples
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
RSVP Reservation. Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0,
Tun ID: 1 LSP ID: 126
FRR is in progress: (we are PLR) Bkup Next Hop is 10.0.0.1 on POS1/1 Label is 0 Orig Next Hop was 10.1.1.4 on POS1/2
Label was 18
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Average Bitrate is 0G bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
RRO:
10.2.2.1/32, Flags:0x0 (No Local Protection)
Label record: Flags 0x1, ctype 1, incoming label 0
Notice the following (see italicized text) in Examples 1 and 2:
At the PLR, you see “Fast Reroute (FRR) is in progress (we are PLR)” when an LSP has been rerouted (that is, it is actively
using a backup tunnel).
RESV messages arrive on a different interface and from a different next hop after a failure. The prefailure display shows
the original NHOP and arriving interface; the post-failure display shows both the original and the new (Bkup) NHOP and arriving
interface. The label is also shown.
The Record Route Object (RRO) in arriving RESV messages changes after the failure, given that the RESV messages will avoid
the failure (that is, it will traverse different links or hops).
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreservationdetailcommand showing point-to-multipoint information:
Router# show ip rsvp reservation detail
Reservation:
P2MP ID: 22 Tun ID: 22 Ext Tun ID: 10.1.1.201
Tun Sender: 10.1.1.201 LSP ID: 1 SubGroup Orig: 10.1.1.201
SubGroup ID: 1
S2L Destination : 10.1.1.203
Next Hop: 10.0.0.205 on Ethernet0/0
Label: 20 (outgoing)
Reservation Style is Shared-Explicit, QoS Service is Controlled-Load
Resv ID handle: 0100042A.
Created: 09:13:16 EST Tue Jun 30 2009
Average Bitrate is 500K bits/sec, Maximum Burst is 1K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size: 1500 bytes
RRO:
10.1.1.205/32, Flags:0x20 (No Local Protection, Node-id)
Label subobject: Flags 0x1, C-Type 1, Label 20
10.1.1.202/32, Flags:0x20 (No Local Protection, Node-id)
Label subobject: Flags 0x1, C-Type 1, Label 17
10.1.1.203/32, Flags:0x20 (No Local Protection, Node-id)
Label subobject: Flags 0x1, C-Type 1, Label 16
Status:
Policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): MPLS/TE
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 57. show ip rsvp reservation detail--MPLS TE P2MP Field Descriptions
Field
Description
P2MP ID
A 32-bit number that identifies the set of destinations of the P2MP tunnel.
Tun ID
Tunnel identification number.
Ext Tun ID
Extended tunnel identification number.
Tun Sender
IP address of the sender.
LSP ID
Label switched path identification number.
SubGroup Orig
LSP headend router ID address.
SubGroup ID
An incremental number assigned to each sub-LSP signaled from the headend router.
S2L Destination
LSP tailend router ID address.
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpreserverationfiltersession-type13command, which shows RSVP RESV messages for point-to-multipoint traffic:
Clears (refreshes) the values for Hello instance counters.
iprsvpreservation
Enables a router to simulate RSVP RESV message reception from the sender.
showiprsvpsender
Displays RSVP RESV-related receiver information currently in the database.
show ip rsvp sbm
To display information about a Subnetwork Bandwidth Manager (SBM) configured for a specific Resource Reservation Protocol
(RSVP)-enabled interface or for all RSVP-enabled interfaces on the router, use the
showiprsvpsbmcommand in EXEC mode.
(Optional) Detailed SBM configuration information, including values for the NonResvSendLimit object.
interface-typeinterface-number
(Optional) Interface name and interface type for which you want to display SBM configuration information.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(5)T
This command was introduced.
12.1(1)T
The
detail keyword was added.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
Usage Guidelines
To obtain SBM configuration information about a specific interface configured to use RSVP, specify the interface name with
the
showiprsvpsbm command. To obtain information about all interfaces enabled for RSVP on the router, use the
showiprsvpsbm command without specifying an interface name.
To view the values for the NonResvSendLimit object, use the
detail keyword.
Examples
The following example displays information for the RSVP-enabled Ethernet interfaces 1 and 2 on router1:
Router# show ip rsvp sbm
Interface DSBM Addr DSBM Priority DSBM Candidate My Priority
Et1 10.0.0.0 70 yes 70
Et2 10.2.2.150 100 yes 100
The following example displays information about the RSVP-enabled Ethernet interface e2 on router1:
Router# show ip rsvp sbm e2
Interface DSBM Addr DSBM Priority DSBM candidate My Priority
e2 10.2.2.150 100 yes 100
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 58. show ip rsvp sbm Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface
Name of the Designated Subnetwork Bandwidth Manager (DSBM) candidate interface on the router.
DSBM Addr
IP address of the DSBM.
DSBM Priority
Priority of the DSBM.
DSBM Candidate
Yes if the
iprsvpdsbmcandidate command was issued for this SBM to configure it as a DSBM candidate. No if it was not so configured.
My Priority
Priority configured for this interface.
The following example displays information about the RSVP-enabled Ethernet interface 2 on router1. In the left column, the
local SBM configuration is shown; in the right column, the corresponding information for the current DSBM is shown. In this
example, the information is the same because the DSBM won election.
Router# showiprsvpsbmdetailInterface:Ethernet2
Local Configuration Current DSBM
IP Address:10.2.2.150 IP Address:10.2.2.150
DSBM candidate:yes I Am DSBM:yes
Priority:100 Priority:100
Non Resv Send Limit Non Resv Send Limit
Rate:500 Kbytes/sec Rate:500 Kbytes/sec
Burst:1000 Kbytes Burst:1000 Kbytes
Peak:500 Kbytes/sec Peak:500 Kbytes/sec
Min Unit:unlimited Min Unit:unlimited
Max Unit:unlimited Max Unit:unlimited
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 59. show ip rsvp sbm detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Local Configuration
The local DSBM candidate configuration.
Current DSBM
The current DSBM configuration.
Interface
Name of the DSBM candidate interface on the router.
IP Address
IP address of the local DSBM candidate or the current DSBM.
DSBM candidate
Yes if the
iprsvpdsbmcandidate command was issued for this SBM to configure it as a DSBM candidate. No if it was not so configured.
I am DSBM
Yes if the local candidate is the DSBM. No if the local candidate is not the DSBM.
Priority
Priority configured for the local DSBM candidate or the current SBM.
Rate
The average rate, in kbps, for the DSBM candidate.
Burst
The maximum burst size, in KB, for the DSBM candidate.
Peak
The peak rate, in kbps, for the DSBM candidate.
Min Unit
The minimum policed unit, in bytes, for the DSBM candidate.
Max Unit
The maximum packet size, in bytes, for the DSBM candidate.
Related Commands
Command
Description
debugiprsvp
Displays information about SBM message processing, the DSBM election process, and standard RSVP enabled message processing
information.
debugiprsvpdetail
Displays detailed information about RSVP and SBM.
debugiprsvpdetailsbm
Displays detailed information about SBM messages only, and SBM and DSBM state transitions.
iprsvpdsbmcandidate
Configures an interface as a DSBM candidate.
iprsvpdsbmnon-resv-send-limit
Configures the NonResvSendLimit object parameters.
show ip rsvp sender
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) PATH-related sender information currently in the database, use the
showiprsvpsendercommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
13 for IPv4 point-to-multipoint (P2MP) TE LSP tunnel sessions.
all
(Optional) Specifies all types of RSVP sessions.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
11.2
This command was introduced.
12.0(22)S
The command output was modified to display Fast Reroute information, and support was introduced for the Cisco 10000 series
Edge Services Router (ESR).
12.2(18)SXD1
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXD1.
12.4(4)T
The command output was modified to display application ID information.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2(31)SB2
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(31)SB2.
12.2(33)SRB
The command output was modified to display fast local repair (FLR) information.
12.2(33)SRC
The command output was modified to display tunnel-based admission control (TBAC) and RSVP aggregation information.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The
vrfand*keywords and the
vrf-name argument were added.
12.2(33)SRE
This command was modified. The
session-type keyword was added to display specific types of tunnels. The output was modified to display MPLS TE P2MP information.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Note
The syntax of the command depends on your platform and release. The
vrfand
* keywords and
vrf-nameargument are not supported on ASR 1000 Series Aggregaton Services Routers.
Use the
showiprsvpsender command to display the RSVP sender (PATH) information currently in the database for a specified interface or for all interfaces.
The
showiprsvpsendercommandis useful for determining the state of RSVP signaling both before and after a label switched path (LSP) has been fast rerouted.
The
showiprsvpsendercommand is especially useful when used at the point of local repair (PLR) or at the merge point (MP).
Limiting the Display
When hundreds or thousands of tunnels exist and you are interested in only a few, you can display the output for only a single
tunnel or a subset of tunnels. To request a limited display, enter the
showiprsvpsender command with the appropriate keyword (called an output filter):
destination,
dst-port,
source, and
src-port. You can enter any or all of the output filters, and you can enter them whether or not you specify the
detail keyword.
FLR Statistics
Use the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command to display FLR statistics before, during, and after an FLR procedure. This command shows when a path state block
(PSB) was repaired and can be used to determine when the cleanup began after the FLR procedure has finished. However, this
command does not display old PLR or MP segments.
Examples
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsender command:
Router# show ip rsvp sender
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS
172.16.1.49 172.16.4.53 1 0 0 172.16.3.53 Et1 80K
172.16.2.51 172.16.5.54 1 0 0 172.16.3.54 Et1 80K
192.168.50.1 192.168.40.1 0 46 0 none none 17179868160
The tabel below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 60. show ip rsvp sender Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code.
Code 1 indicates an IP protocol such as TCP or User Datagram Protocol (UDP).
Code 0 indicates an aggregate reservation.
DPort
Destination port number.
The Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) for an aggregate reservation.
Sport
Source port number.
0 for an aggregate reservation.
Prev Hop
IP address of the previous hop.
None if the node is an aggregator for this reservation.
I/F
Interface of the previous hop.
None if the node is an aggregator for this reservation.
BPS
As specified in the sender_tspec characteristics of the sender data flow--specified bit rate, in bits per second.
Always 17179868160 for an aggregate reservation.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetailcommand with application IDs configured:
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 61. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions
Field
Descriptions
PATH Session address
Destination IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the destination port.
Protocol--IP protocol used.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Inbound from
IP address of the sender and the interface name.
Note
A blank interface field means that the PATH message originated at the router on which the
show command is being executed (the headend router). A specified interface means that the PATH message originated at an upstream
router.
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values include Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Priorities
Preemption priorities in effect:
preempt--The startup priority; values are 0 to 7 for traffic engineering (TE) reservations with 0 being the highest. Values
are 0 to 65535 for non-TE reservations with 0 being the lowest.
defend--The hold priority; values are the same as for preempt.
Application ID
A quotable string that identifies the sender application and can be used to match on local policies. The string includes
the policy locator in the X.500 Distinguished Name format and the application or filename of the sender application.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message has recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Output on ATM1/0/1
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command before FLR has occurred:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 192.168.101.21, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 1
Sender address: 10.10.10.10, port: 1
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 172.16.31.34 on Et0/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 9K bits/sec, Max. burst: 9K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 01000401.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status:
Output on Ethernet1/0. Policy status: Forwarding. Handle: 02000400
Policy source(s): Default
Path FLR: Never repaired
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 62. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--Before FLR
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the path state block (PSB) enters
the blockaded state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
Output on
interface
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Path FLR
Never repaired--Indicates that the node has never been a point of local repair (PLR) and, therefore, has never repaired the
PSB.
Examples
Note
A node that initiates an FLR procedure is the point of local repair or PLR.
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command at the PLR during an FLR procedure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 192.168.101.21, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 1
Sender address: 10.10.10.10, port: 1
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 172.16.31.34 on Et0/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 9K bits/sec, Max. burst: 9K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 01000401.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status:
Path FLR: PSB is currently being repaired...try later
PLR - Old Segments: 1
Output on Ethernet1/0, nhop 172.16.36.34
Time before expiry: 2 refreshes
Policy status: Forwarding. Handle: 02000400
Policy source(s): Default
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 63. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--at the PLR During FLR
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information including the following:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
Path FLR
PSB is currently being repaired. FLR is in process.
PLR - Old Segments
The number of old segments or interfaces after the PLR initiated the FLR procedure. For each old segment, the following information
displays:
Output on interface--Outbound interface after the FLR and the next-hop IP address.
Time before expiry--Number of PATH messages sent on a new segment before the old route (segment) expires.
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)--Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Examples
Note
The node where the old and new paths (also called segments or interfaces) meet is the merge point (MP).
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command at the MP during an FLR procedure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 192.168.101.21, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 1
Sender address: 10.10.10.10, port: 1
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 172.16.37.35 on Et1/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 9K bits/sec, Max. burst: 9K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 09000406.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status: Proxy-terminated
Path FLR: Never repaired
MP - Old Segments: 1
Input on Serial2/0, phop 172.16.36.35
Time before expiry: 9 refreshes
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 64. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--at the MP During FLR
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
PathFLR
Never repaired--Indicates that the node has never been a PLR and, therefore, has never repaired the PSB.
MP - Old Segments
The number of old segments or interfaces on the MP before the PLR initiated the FLR procedure. For each old segment,the following information displays:
Input on
interface--Inbound interface and the previous-hop IP address.
Time before expiry--Number of PATH messages to be received on other segments before this segment expires.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command at the PLR after an FLR procedure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 192.168.101.21, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 1
Sender address: 10.10.10.10, port: 1
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 172.16.31.34 on Et0/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 9K bits/sec, Max. burst: 9K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 05000401.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status:
Output on Serial3/0. Policy status: Forwarding. Handle: 3B000406
Policy source(s): Default
Path FLR: Started 12:56:16 EST Thu Nov 16 2006, PSB repaired 532(ms) after.
Resv/Perr: Received 992(ms) after.
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 65. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--At the PLR After FLR
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information including the following:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information including the following:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
Path ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
Output on Serial3/0
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
PathFLR
FLR statistics that show when RSVP received the notification from RIB and how long thereafter the PATH message was sent.
This delay can result when the interface on which the PATH message was sent had a wait time configured or when other PSBs
were processed before this one or a combination of both. The statistics also show when an associated RESV or PATHERROR message
was received.
Note
This delay tells you the time when Quality of Service (QoS) was not honored for the specified flow.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command when TBAC is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 10.0.0.3, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 2
Sender address: 10.0.0.1, port: 2
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 10.1.1.1 on Et0/0 every 30000 msecs. Timeout in 189 sec
Traffic params - Rate: 10K bits/sec, Max. burst: 10K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 02000412.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status:
Output on Tunnel1, out of band. Policy status: Forwarding. Handle: 0800040E
Policy source(s): Default
Path FLR: Never repaired
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 66. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--With TBAC
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Note
A blank field means no refreshes have occurred.
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
Output on Tunnel1
Policy status (on the outbound tunnel with out-of-band signaling):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Path FLR
Never repaired--Indicates that the node has never been a point of local repair (PLR) and, therefore, has never repaired the
PSB.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command when RSVP aggregation is configured:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Destination 10.10.10.21, Protocol_Id 17, Don't Police , DstPort 1
Sender address: 10.10.10.11, port: 1
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 10.10.10.34 on Et1/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 10K bits/sec, Max. burst: 10K bytes
Min Policed Unit: 0 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 0F000406.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status:
3175 Aggregation: agg_info : AggResv 10.10.10.34->10.10.10.2_46
Output on Serial2/0. Policy status: Forwarding. Handle: 09000405
Policy source(s): Default
Path FLR: Never repaired
PATH:
Deaggregator 10.10.10.2, DSCP 46, Don't Police
Aggregator address: 10.10.10.34
Path refreshes:
arriving: from PHOP 192.168.34.36 on Et1/0 every 30000 msecs
Traffic params - Rate: 17179868160 bits/sec, Max. burst: 536870784 bytes
Min Policed Unit: 1 bytes, Max Pkt Size 2147483647 bytes
Path ID handle: 1500040A.
Incoming policy: Accepted. Policy source(s): Default
Status: Proxy-terminated
Path FLR: Never repaired
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 67. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--With RSVP Aggregation
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information for E2E reservations:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Always Don’t Police.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Note
A blank field means no refreshes have occurred.
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Always MAX rate possible for aggregate reservations.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Always MAX burst possible for aggregate reservations.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
3175 Aggregation: agg_info
IP address of the aggregated reservation on which this E2E reservation is mapped with specified source (aggregator) and destination
(deaggregator) endpoints and DSCP.
Output on Serial2/0
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Path FLR
Never repaired--Indicates that the node has never been a point of local repair (PLR) and, therefore, has never repaired the
PSB.
PATH
PATH message information for aggregate reservations:
Deaggregator IP address.
Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) value.
Policing.
Always Don’t Police.
Aggregator IP address.
Note
Remaining parameters are defined in the preceding fields.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command under these circumstances:
The command is entered at the PLR before a failure (Example 1).
The command is entered at the PLR after a failure (Example 2).
The command is entered at the MP before a failure (Example 3).
The command is entered at the MP after a failure (Example 4).
The command output shows all senders (Example 5).
The command output shows only senders who have a specific destination (Example 6).
The command output shows more detail about a sender who has a specific destination (Example 7).
This figure illustrates the network topology for the RSVP configuration example.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetail command when it is entered at the PLR before a failure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun ID: 1 Ext Tun ID: 10.2.2.0
Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0, LSP ID: 126
Path refreshes arriving on POS1/0 from PHOP 10.1.1.1
Path refreshes being sent to NHOP 10.1.1.4 on POS1/1
Session Attr::
Setup Prio: 0, Holding Prio: 0
Flags: Local Prot desired, Label Recording, SE Style
Session Name:tagsw4500-23_t1
ERO:
10.1.1.4 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.1.1.5 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.1.1.6 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.2.2.1 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
Traffic params - Rate: 0G bits/sec, Max. burst: 1K bytes
Fast-Reroute Backup info:
Inbound FRR: Not active
Outbound FRR: Ready -- backup tunnel selected
Backup Tunnel: Tu2 (label 0)
Bkup Sender Template:
Tun Sender: 10.0.0.0, LSP ID: 126
Bkup FilerSpec:
Tun Sender: 10.0.0.0, LSP ID 126
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Note
The Flags field is important for Fast Reroute. For information about flags that must be set, see the Flags field description
in the table.
Table 68. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--On PLR Before Failure
SessionAttr--Session attributes. Refers to information included in the SESSION_ATTRIBUTE object of arriving PATH messages, such as the
Setup and Holding Priorities, Flags, and the Session Name.
Setup Prio
Setup priority.
Holding Prio
Holding priority.
Flags
An LSP must have the “Local protection desired” flag of the SESSION_ATTRIBUTE object set for the LSP to use a backup tunnel
(that is, in order to receive local protection). If this flag is not set, you have not enabled Fast Reroute for this tunnel
at its headend (by entering the
tunnelmplstraffic-engfast-reroute command). Next-next hop (NNHOP) backup tunnels rely on label recording, so LSPs should have the “label recording desired”
flag set too. This flag is set if the tunnel was configured for Fast Reroute.
ERO--Refers to the EXPLICIT_ROUTE Object (ERO) of the PATH messages. This field displays the contents of the ERO at this node.
As a PATH message travels from the sender (headend) to the receiver (tailend), each node removes its own IP address from the
ERO. The displayed value reflects the remainder of hops between this node and the tail.
Fast-RerouteBackupinfo--Information that is relevant to Fast Reroute for this LSP.
Inbound FRR
If this node is downstream from a rerouted LSP (for example, at a merge point for this LSP), the state is Active.
Outbound FRR
If this node is a PLR for an LSP, there are three possible states:
Active--This LSP is actively using its backup tunnel, presumably because there has been a downstream failure.
No Backup--This LSP does not have local (Fast Reroute) protection. No backup tunnel has been selected for it to use in case
of a failure.
Ready--This LSP is ready to use a backup tunnel in case of a downstream link or node failure. A backup tunnel has been selected
for it to use.
Backup Tunnel
If the Outbound FRR state is Ready or Active, this field indicates the following:
Which backup tunnel has been selected for this LSP to use in case of a failure.
The inbound label that will be prepended to the LSP’s data packets for acceptance at the backup tunnel tail (the merge point).
Bkup Sender Template
If the Outbound FRR state is Ready or Active, SENDER_TEMPLATE and FILTERSPEC objects are shown. These objects will be used
in RSVP messages sent by the backup tunnel if the LSP starts actively using the backup tunnel. They differ from the original
(prefailure) objects only in that the node (the PLR) substitutes its own IP address for that of the original sender. For example,
PATH and PATHTEAR messages will contain the new SENDER_TEMPLATE. RESV and RESVTEAR messages will contain the new FILTERSPEC
object. If this LSP begins actively using the backup tunnel, the display changes.
Bkup FilerSpec
If the Outbound FRR state is Ready or Active, SENDER_TEMPLATE and FILTERSPEC objects are shown. These objects will be used
in RSVP messages sent by the backup tunnel if the LSP starts actively using the backup tunnel. They differ from the original
(prefailure) objects only in that the node (the PLR) substitutes its own IP address for that of the original sender. For example,
PATH and PATHTEAR messages will contain the new SENDER_TEMPLATE. RESV and RESVTEAR messages will contain the new FILTERSPEC
object. If this LSP begins actively using the backup tunnel, the display changes as shown in Example 2.
Examples
If the LSP begins actively using the backup tunnel and the command is entered at the PLR after a failure, the display changes
as shown in the following output.
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun ID: 1 Ext Tun ID: 10.2.2.0
Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0, LSP ID: 126
Path refreshes arriving on POS1/0 from PHOP 10.1.1.1
Path refreshes being sent to NHOP 10.2.2.1 on Tunnel2
Session Attr::
Setup Prio: 0, Holding Prio: 0
Flags: Local Prot desired, Label Recording, SE Style
Session Name:tagsw4500-23_t1
ERO:
10.2.2.1 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.2.2.1 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
Traffic params - Rate: 0G bits/sec, Max. burst: 1K bytes
Fast-Reroute Backup info:
Inbound FRR: Not active
Outbound FRR: Active -- using backup tunnel
Backup Tunnel: Tu2 (label 0)
Bkup Sender Template:
Tun Sender: 10.0.0.0, LSP ID: 126
Bkup FilerSpec:
Tun Sender: 10.0.0.0, LSP ID 126
Orig Output I/F: Et2
Orig Output ERO:
10.1.1.4 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.1.1.5 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.1.1.6 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
10.2.2.1 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
Once an LSP is actively using a backup tunnel, the following changes occur:
PATH refreshes are no longer sent to the original NHOP out the original interface. They are sent through the backup tunnel
to the node that is the tail of the backup tunnel (NHOP or NNHOP).
The ERO is modified so that it will be acceptable upon arrival at the NHOP or NNHOP.
The display shows both the original ERO and the new one that is now being used.
The display shows the original output interface (that is, the interface from which PATH messages were sent for this LSP before
the failure).
Examples
If the same
showiprsvpsender command is entered at the merge point (the backup tunnel tail), the display changes from before to after the failure. The
following is sample output before a failure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun ID: 1 Ext Tun ID: 10.2.2.0
Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0, LSP ID: 126
Path refreshes arriving on POS0/0 from PHOP 10.1.1.5
Session Attr::
Setup Prio: 0, Holding Prio: 0
Flags: Local Prot desired, Label Recording, SE Style
Session Name:tagsw4500-23_t1
Traffic params - Rate: 0G bits/sec, Max. burst: 1K bytes
Fast-Reroute Backup info:
Inbound FRR: Not active
Outbound FRR: No backup tunnel selected
Examples
After a failure, the following changes occur:
The interface and previous hop (PHOP) from which PATH messages are received will change.
The inbound FRR becomes Active.
The original PHOP and the original input interface are displayed as shown in the following output.
The following is sample output after a failure:
Router# show ip rsvp sender detail
PATH:
Tun Dest: 10.2.2.1 Tun ID: 1 Ext Tun ID: 10.2.2.0
Tun Sender: 10.2.2.0, LSP ID: 126
Path refreshes arriving on POS0/1 from PHOP 10.0.0.0 on Loopback0
Session Attr::
Setup Prio: 0, Holding Prio: 0
Flags: Local Prot desired, Label Recording, SE Style
Session Name:tagsw4500-23_t1
Traffic params - Rate: 0G bits/sec, Max. burst: 1K bytes
Fast-Reroute Backup info:
Inbound FRR: Active
Orig Input I/F: POS0/0
Orig PHOP: 10.1.1.5
Now using Bkup Filterspec w/ sender: 10.0.0.0 LSP ID: 126
Outbound FRR: No backup tunnel selected
Notice the following changes:
After a failure, PATH refreshes arrive on a different interface and from a different PHOP.
The original PHOP and input interface are shown under Fast-Reroute Backup information, along with the FILTERSPEC object that
will now be used when sending messages (such as RESV and RESVTEAR).
Examples
In the following example, information about all senders is displayed:
Router# show ip rsvp sender
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS Bytes
10.2.2.1 10.2.2.0 1 1 59 10.1.1.1 Et1 0G 1K
10.2.2.1 172.31.255.255 1 2 9 0G 1K
10.2.2.1 10.2.2.0 1 3 12 10.1.1.1 Et1 0G 1K
10.2.2.1 172.31.255.255 1 3 20 0G 1K
172.16.0.0 172.31.255.255 1 0 23 0G 1K
172.16.0.0 172.31.255.255 1 1 22 0G 1K
172.16.0.0 172.31.255.255 1 1000 22 0G 1K
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 69. show ip rsvp sender Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol code. Code 1 indicates Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP).
DPort
Destination port number.
Sport
Source port number.
Prev Hop
IP address of the previous hop.
I/F
Interface of the previous hop.
BPS
Reservation rate, in bits per second, that the application is advertising it might achieve.
Bytes
Bytes of burst size that the application is advertising it might achieve.
Examples
To show only information about senders having a specific destination, specify the destination filter as shown in the following
output. In this example, the destination is 172.16.0.0.
Router# show ip rsvp sender filter destination 172.16.0.0
To From Pro DPort Sport Prev Hop I/F BPS Bytes
172.16.0.0 172.31.255 1 0 23 0G 1K
172.16.0.0 172.31.255 1 1 22 0G 1K
172.16.0.0 172.31.255 1 1000 22 0G 1K
Examples
To show more detail about the sender whose destination port is 1000 (as shown in Example 6), specify the command with the
destination port filter:
Router# show ip rsvp sender filter detail dst-port 1000
PATH:
Tun Dest 172.16.0.0 Tun ID 1000 Ext Tun ID 172.31.255.255
Tun Sender: 172.31.255.255, LSP ID: 22
Path refreshes being sent to NHOP 10.1.1.4 on Ethernet2
Session Attr::
Setup Prio: 7, Holding Prio: 7
Flags: SE Style
Session Name:tagsw4500-25_t1000
ERO:
10.1.1.4 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
172.16.0.0 (Strict IPv4 Prefix, 8 bytes, /32)
Traffic params - Rate: 0G bits/sec, Max. burst: 1K bytes
Fast-Reroute Backup info:
Inbound FRR: Not active
Outbound FRR: No backup tunnel selected
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsendervrfmyvrfdetail command showing all the senders associated with the VRF named myvrf:
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 70. show ip rsvp sender detail Field Descriptions--With VRF
Field
Descriptions
PATH
PATH message information for E2E reservations:
Destination IP address.
Protocol ID number.
Policing.
Always Don’t Police.
Destination port number.
Sender address
Source IP address of the PATH message.
port--Number of the source port.
Path refreshes
Refresh information:
IP address of the source (previous hop [PHOP]).
Interface name and number.
Frequency, in milliseconds (ms).
Note
A blank field means no refreshes have occurred.
Traffic params
Traffic parameters in effect:
Rate--Speed, in kilobits per second.
Always MAX rate possible for aggregate reservations.
Max. burst--Largest amount of data allowed, in kilobytes.
Always MAX burst possible for aggregate reservations.
Min Policed Unit--Size, in bytes, of the smallest packet generated by the application, including the application data and
all protocol headers at or above the IP level.
Max Pkt Size--Largest packet allowed, in bytes.
PATH ID handle
Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Incoming policy
State of the incoming policy:
Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being accepted, but not forwarded.
Not Accepted--RSVP PATH messages are being rejected.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Status
Status of the local policy:
Proxied--Head.
Proxy-terminated--Tail.
Blockaded--Tail or midpoint and an RESVERROR message have recently been received; therefore, the PSB enters the blockaded
state.
Note
A blank field means none of the above.
Output on Serial2/0
Policy status (on the outbound interface):
Forwarding--Inbound PATH messages are being forwarded.
Not Forwarding--Outbound PATH messages are being rejected.
Handle--Internal database ID assigned to the PATH message by RSVP for bookkeeping purposes.
Policy source(s)
Type of local policy in effect; values are Default, Local, and MPLS/TE.
Path FLR
Never repaired--Indicates that the node has never been a point of local repair (PLR) and, therefore, has never repaired the
PSB.
VRF
Name of the VRF for which senders are displayed.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvpsenderdetailcommand showing point-to-multipoint information:
Enables a router to simulate RSVP PATH message reception from the sender.
showiprsvpreservation
Displays RSVP PATH-related receiver information currently in the database.
show ip rsvp signalling
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) signaling information that optionally includes rate-limiting and refresh-reduction
parameters for RSVP messages, use the
showiprsvpsignallingcommand in EXEC mode.
(Optional) Rate-limiting parameters for signalling messages.
refreshreduction
(Optional) Refresh-reduction parameters and settings.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvpsignallingcommand witheithertherate-limitor therefreshreduction keyword to display rate-limiting parameters or refresh-reduction parameters, respectively.
Examples
The following command shows rate-limiting parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling rate-limit
Rate Limiting:enabled
Max msgs per interval:4
Interval length (msec):20
Max queue size:500
Max msgs per second:200
Max msgs allowed to be sent:37
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 72. show ip rsvp signalling rate-limit Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Rate Limiting: enabled (active) or disabled (not active)
The RSVP rate-limiting parameters in effect including the following:
Max msgs per interval = number of messages allowed to be sent per interval (timeframe).
Interval length (msecs) = interval (timeframe) length in milliseconds.
Max queue size = maximum size of the message queue in bytes.
Max msgs per second = maximum number of messages allowed to be sent per second.
The following command shows refresh-reduction parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling refresh reduction
Refresh Reduction:enabled
ACK delay (msec):250
Initial retransmit delay (msec):1000
Local epoch:0x74D040
Message IDs:in use 600, total allocated 3732, total freed 3132
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 73. show ip rsvp signalling refresh reduction Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Refresh Reduction: enabled (active) or disabled (not active)
The RSVP refresh-reduction parameters in effect including the following:
ACK delay (msec) = how long in milliseconds before the receiving router sends an acknowledgment (ACK).
Initial retransmit delay (msec) = how long in milliseconds before the sending router retransmits a message.
Local epoch = the RSVP process identifier that defines a local router for refresh reduction and reliable messaging; randomly
generated each time a node reboots or the RSVP process restarts.
Message IDs = the number of message identifiers (IDs) in use, the total number allocated, and the total number available
(freed).
Related Commands
Command
Description
cleariprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Clears the counters recording dropped messages.
cleariprsvpsignallingrefreshreduction
Clears the counters recording retransmissions and out-of-order messages.
debugiprsvprate-limit
Displays debug messages for RSVP rate-limiting events.
iprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Controls the transmission rate for RSVP messages sent to a neighboring router during a specified amount of time.
iprsvpsignallingrefreshreduction
Enables refresh reduction.
show ip rsvp signalling blockade
To display the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) sessions that are currently blockaded, use the
showiprsvpsignallingblockadecommand in EXEC mode.
(Optional) IP address of the destination of a reservation.
Command Default
If you enter the
showiprsvpsignallingblockadecommand without a keyword or an argument, the command displays all the blockaded sessions on the router.
Command Modes
EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
Use the show ip rsvp signalling blockade command to display the RSVP sessions that are currently blockaded.
An RSVP sender becomes blockaded when the corresponding receiver sends a Resv message that fails admission control on a router
that has RSVP configured. A ResvError message with an admission control error is sent in reply to the Resv message, causing
all routers downstream of the failure to mark the associated sender as blockaded. As a result, those routers do not include
that contribution to subsequent Resv refreshes for that session until the blockade state times out.
Blockading solves a denial-of-service problem on shared reservations where one receiver can request so much bandwidth as
to cause an admission control failure for all the receivers sharing that reservation, even though the other receivers are
making requests that are within the limit.
Examples
The following example shows all the sessions currently blockaded:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling blockade
To From Pro DPort Sport Time Left Rate
192.168.101.2 192.168.101.1 UDP 1000 1000 27 5K
192.168.101.2 192.168.101.1 UDP 1001 1001 79 5K
192.168.101.2 192.168.101.1 UDP 1002 1002 17 5K
225.1.1.1 192.168.104.1 UDP 2222 2222 48 5K
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 74. show ip rsvp signalling blockade Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
To
IP address of the receiver.
From
IP address of the sender.
Pro
Protocol used.
DPort
Destination port number.
Sport
Source port number.
Time Left
Amount of time, in seconds, before the blockade expires.
Rate
The average rate, in bits per second, for the data.
The following example shows more detail about the sessions currently blockaded:
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 75. show ip rsvp signalling blockade detail Command Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Session address
Destination IP address of the reservation affected by the blockade.
port
Destination port number of the reservation affected by the blockade.
Protocol
Protocol used by the reservation affected by the blockade; choices include User Datagram Protocol (UDP) and TCP.
Sender address
Source IP address of the reservation affected by the blockade.
port
Source port number of the reservation affected by the blockade.
Admission control error location
IP address of the router where the admission control error occurred.
Flowspec that caused blockade
Parameters for the flowspec that caused the blockade.
Average bitrate
The average rate, in bits per second, for the flowspec.
Maximum burst
The maximum burst size, in bytes, for the flowspec.
Peak bitrate
The peak rate, in bps, for the flowspec.
Minimum policed unit
The minimum policed unit, in bytes, for the flowspec.
Maximum packet size
The maximum packet size, in bytes, for the flowspec.
Requested bitrate
The requested rate, in bits per second, for the flowspec.
Slack
Time, in milliseconds, allocated to a router for scheduling delivery of packets.
Blockade ends in
Time, in seconds, until the blockade expires.
show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair
To display fast-local-repair (FLR)-specific information maintained by Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP), use the
showiprsvpsignallingfast-local-repair command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays information about FLR procedures.
detail
(Optional) Displays additional information about FLR procedures.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(33)SRB
This command was introduced.
15.0(1)M
This command was modified. The output was changed to display the virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) name for which the
FLR was triggered on the point of local repair (PLR).
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.6.
Usage Guidelines
Use the
showiprsvpsignallingfast-local-repair command to display the FLR and RSVP message pacing rates that are configured.
Use the
showiprsvpsignallingfast-local-repairstatisticscommand to display the FLR procedures and related information including the following:
The process number
The state
The start time
The number of path state blocks (PSBs) repaired
The repair rate
The Routing Information Base (RIB) notification process time
The repair time of the last PSB
Use the
showiprsvpsignallingfast-local-repairstatisticsdetailcommand to display detailed information about FLR procedures including the following:
The time of the routing notification
The elapsed time for processing all notifications in the queue
The rate and pacing unit (the refresh spacing in ms) used
The number of PSBs repaired
The number of times RSVP has suspended
For each run, the following information appears:
The time that the run started relative to the start of the procedure
The time that RSVP suspended again
The number of notifications processed in this run
For each neighbor, the following information appears:
The delay of the first PATH message sent to this neighbor
The delay of the last PATH message sent to this neighbor
Examples
Examples
The following example displays information about the FLR rate:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair
Fast Local Repair: enabled
Max repair rate (paths/sec): 400
Max processed (paths/run): 1000
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 76. show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Fast Local Repair
FLR state. Values are the following:
enabled--FLR is configured.
disabled--FLR is not configured.
Max repair rate (paths/sec)
Maximum repair rate, in paths per second.
Max processed (paths/run)
Maximum notification elements processed, in paths per run.
Examples
The following example displays information about FLR procedures:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair statistics
Fast Local Repair: enabled
Max repair rate (paths/sec): 1000
Max processed (paths/run): 1000
FLR Statistics:
FLR State Start #PSB Repair RIB Proc Last
Proc. Time Repair Rate Time PSB
1 DONE 15:16:32 MET Wed Oct 25 2006 2496 1000 91(ms) 3111(ms)
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 77. show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair statistics Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Fast Local Repair
FLR state. Values are the following:
enabled--FLR is configured.
disabled--FLR is not configured.
Max repair rate (paths/sec)
Maximum repair rate, in paths per second.
Max processed (paths/run)
Maximum notification elements processed, in paths per run.
FLR Statistics
FLR-related information.
FLR Proc.
FLR procedure number. The last 32 procedures are listed from the most recent to the oldest; they are numbered from 1 to 32.
State
Current state of the FLR procedure. Values are the following:
DONE--The FLR procedure is complete.
IN PROGRESS--The FLR procedure is incomplete.
Start Time
Time when RSVP received the routing notification.
#PSB Repair
Number of PSBs repaired.
Repair Rate
Repair rate used, in paths per second.
RIB Proc Time
Time that RSVP spent to process all RIB notifications and schedule the path refreshes, in microseconds (us), milliseconds
(msec or ms), or seconds (sec).
Note
The value is converted to fit the column width; however, seconds are rarely used because RSVP RIB notification processing
is very fast.
Last PSB
Elapsed time, in microseconds (us), milliseconds (msec or ms), or seconds (sec), between the start of an FLR procedure and
when RSVP sent the last PATH message.
Note
The value is converted to fit the column width; however, seconds are rarely used because RSVP RIB notification processing
is very fast.
Examples
The following example displays detailed information about FLR procedures:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair statistics detail
Fast Local Repair: enabled
Max repair rate (paths/sec): 1000
Max processed (paths/run): 1000
FLR Statistics:
FLR 1: DONE
Start Time: 15:16:32 MET Wed Oct 25 2006
Number of PSBs repaired: 2496
Used Repair Rate (msgs/sec): 1000
RIB notification processing time: 91(ms)
Time of last PSB refresh: 3111(ms)
Time of last Resv received: 4355(ms)
Time of last Perr received: 0(us)
Suspend count: 2
Run Number Started Duration
ID of ntf. (time from Start)
2 498 81(ms) 10(ms)
1 998 49(ms) 21(ms)
0 1000 0(us) 22(ms)
FLR Pacing Unit: 1 msec
Affected neighbors:
Nbr Address Interface Relative Delay Values (msec) VRF
10.1.2.12 Et0/3 [500 ,..., 5000 ] vrf1
10.1.2.12 Et1/3 [500 ,..., 5000 ] vrf2
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 78. show ip rsvp signalling fast-local-repair statistics detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Fast Local Repair
FLR state. Values are the following:
enabled--FLR is configured.
disabled--FLR is not configured.
Max repair rate (paths/sec)
Maximum repair rate, in paths per second.
Max processed (paths/run)
Maximum notification elements processed, in paths per run.
FLR Statistics
FLR-related information.
FLR 1
FLR procedure number and current state. The last 32 procedures are listed from the most recent to the oldest; they are numbered
from 1 to 32. Values for the state are the following:
DONE--The FLR procedure is complete.
IN PROGRESS--The FLR procedure is incomplete.
Start Time
Time when RSVP received the routing notification.
Number of PSBs repaired
Total PSBs repaired.
Used Repair Rate (msgs/sec)
Repair rate used, in messages per second.
RIB notification processing time
Time, in milliseconds (ms), that RSVP spent to process all RIB notifications.
Time of last PSB refresh
Elapsed time, in milliseconds (ms), between the start of an FLR procedure and when RSVP sent the last PATH refresh message.
Time of last Resv received
Elapsed time, in milliseconds (ms), between the start of an FLR procedure and when RSVP received the last RESV message.
Time of last Perr received
Elapsed time, in microseconds (us), between the start of an FLR procedure and when RSVP received the last PATHERROR message.
Suspend count
Number of times that RSVP has suspended during a specific procedure.
Note
If this value is nonzero, details for each run are shown.
Run ID
Identifier (number) for each time that RSVP has run.
Number of ntf.
Number of notifications (PSBs) processed in a run.
Started (time from Start)
Time, in milliseconds (ms), that the run began relative to the start of the FLR procedure.
Duration
Length of time, in milliseconds (ms), for the run.
FLR Pacing Unit
Frequency, in milliseconds (msec), for RSVP message pacing; that is, how often a PATH message is sent. The value is rounded
down.
Affected neighbors
Neighbors involved in the FLR procedure.
Nbr Address
IP address for each neighbor involved in a procedure.
Interface
Interface for the neighbor.
Relative Delay Values
Times, in milliseconds (msec), when the PSB refreshes were sent.
Note
In the sample display, there is a 1-msec pacing unit; therefore, PSBs to 10.1.2.12 have been sent with delays of 1 msec from
500, 501, 502, 503, ... 2995. If a 5-msec pacing unit were used, the delays would be 500, 505, 510,... 2990, 2995.
VRF
VRF name for which the FLR was triggered on the PLR.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprsvpsignallingfast-local-repairnotifications
Configures the number of notifications that are processed before RSVP suspends.
iprsvpsignallingfast-local-repairrate
Configures the repair rate that RSVP uses for an FLR procedure.
iprsvpsignallingfast-local-repairwait
Configures the delay used to start an FLR procedure.
iprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Controls the transmission rate for RSVP messages sent to a neighboring router during a specified amount of time.
show ip rsvp signalling rate-limit
To display the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) rate-limiting parameters, use the
showiprsvpsignallingrate-limit command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
12.0(24)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.0(24)S.
12.0(29)S
The command output was modified to show the revised rate-limiting parameters.
12.2(28)SB
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(28)SB.
12.2(18)SXF5
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(18)SXF5.
12.2(33)SRB
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRB.
Cisco IOS XE Release 2.3
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS XE Release 2.3.
Examples
The following command shows the rate-limiting parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling rate-limit
Rate Limiting:
Burst: 1
Limit: 20
Maxsize: 500
Period <msec>: 5
Max rate <msgs/sec>: 2
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 79. show ip rsvp signalling rate-limit Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Rate Limiting
The RSVP rate-limiting parameters are enabled or disabled. They include the following:
Burst-Number of messages sent each period from the queue.
Limit-Maximum number of messages sent each period from the queue.
Maxsize-Maximum size of the message queue, in bytes.
Period (msec)-Interval (time frame) in milliseconds.
Max rate (msgs/sec)-Maximum number of messages allowed to be sent per second.
Related Commands
Command
Description
cleariprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Clears (sets to zero) the number of messages that were dropped because of a full queue.
debugiprsvprate-limit
Displays debug messages for RSVP rate-limiting events.
iprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Controls the transmission rate for RSVP messages sent to a neighboring router during a specified amount of time.
show ip rsvp signalling refresh
To display the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) signaling refresh behavior parameters for RSVP messages, use the showiprsvpsignallingrefresh command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
Specifies the time interval between steady refresh messages.
misses
Specifies the number of refreshes that are not received during the trigger state timeout.
reduction
Specifies the RSVP refresh reduction parameters and settings.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>)
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(13)T
This command was introduced.
12.2(24)T
Theinterval and misses keywords were added.
12.2(33)SXH
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SXH.
12.2(33)SRC
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRC.
Usage Guidelines
Use the showiprsvpsignallingrefresh command to display the refresh behavior parameters.
Examples
The following example shows the refresh interval parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling refresh interval
Refresh interval (msec): 30000
The following example shows the refresh misses parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling refresh misses
Refresh misses: 4
The following example shows the refresh reduction parameters:
Router# show ip rsvp signalling refresh reduction
Refresh Reduction: disabled
ACK delay (msec): 250
Initial retransmit delay (msec): 1000
Local epoch: 0x6975F6
Message IDs: in use 0, total allocated 0, total freed 0
Related Commands
Command
Description
cleariprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Clears the counters recording dropped messages.
debugiprsvprate-limit
Displays debug messages for RSVP rate-limiting events.
iprsvpsignallingrate-limit
Controls the transmission rate for RSVP messages sent to a neighboring router during a specified amount of time.
show ip rsvp snooping
To display a list of VLANs in which Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) snooping is enabled, use the
show ip rsvp snooping
command in privileged EXEC mode.
show ip rsvp snooping
Syntax Description
This command has no arguments or keywords.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.2(44)SE
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
You can use the
ip rsvp snooping command to enabled RSVP snooping on the required VLANs. The
show ip rsvp snooping command allows you to view how many VLANs have RSVP snooping enabled in them. VLAN details are optional and are visible only
on platforms that support per-VLAN snooping. If VLAN details are not specified in the
ip rsvp snooping command, snooping will be enabled on all VLANs and the
show ip rsvp snooping command indicates the same.
Examples
The following sample output displays a list of VLANs in which RSVP snooping is enabled:
Device# show ip rsvp snooping
*May 29 09:06:27.597: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by consoleoping
RSVP Snooping is enabled on this Vlans
----------------------------------------
VLan 70 VLan 71 VLan 72
VLan 73 VLan 74
----------------------------------------
The following sample output shows that RSVP snooping is enabled on all VLANs:
Device# show ip rsvp snooping
RSVP snooping is enabled globally.
Related Commands
Command
Description
ip rsvp snooping
Enables RSVP snooping in a specific set of VLANs.
show ip rsvp tos
To display IP type of service (ToS) information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) interfaces, use the
showiprsvptoscommand in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvptos [typenumber]
Syntax Description
type
(Optional) Type of interface.
number
(Optional) Number of the interface.
Command Modes
User EXEC(>) Privileged EXEC(#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.0(1)M
This command was introduced.
Usage Guidelines
To obtain IP ToS information about a specific interface configured to use RSVP, specify the interface name with the show
ip rsvp tos command. To obtain IP ToS information about all interfaces enabled for RSVP on the router, use the show ip rsvp
tos command without specifying an interface name.
Examples
The following example shows the IP ToS information for the interaces on which RSVP is enabled:
Router# show ip rsvp tos ethernet 0/1
Interface name Precedence Precedence TOS TOS
conform exceed conform exceed
Ethernet0/0 - - - -
Ethernet0/1 - - - -
Ethernet1/1 - - 4 -
Ethernet1/2 3 - - -
The table below describes the fields shown in the display.
Table 80. show ip rsvp tos Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface name
Displays the interface details.
Precedence conform
Displays the IP precedence conform information for an interface.
Note
The Precedence conform value specifies an IP precedence value in the range from 0 to 7 for traffic that conforms to the RSVP
flowspec.
Precedence exceed
Displays the IP precedence exceed information for an interface.
Note
The Precedence exceed value specifies an IP Precedence value in the range from 0 to 7 for traffic that exceeds the RSVP flowspec.
TOS conform
Displays the IP type of service (ToS) conform information for an interface.
Note
The TOS conform value specifies a ToS value in the range from 0 to 31 for traffic that conforms to the RSVP flowspec.
TOS exceed
Displays the IP type of service (ToS) exceed information for an interface.
Note
The TOS exceed value specifies a ToS value in the range from 0 to 31 for traffic that exceeds the RSVP flowspec.
Related Commands
Command
Description
show ip rsvp
Displays RSVP-related information.
showiprsvpinterface
Displays RSVP-related interface information.
showiprsvpprecedence
Displays IP precedence information for RSVP enabled interfaces.
show ip rsvp transport
To display information about Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) transport protocol (TP) sessions, use the
showiprsvptransport command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
showiprsvptransport {clients | statistics}
Syntax Description
clients
Displays information about RSVP clients that initiated the TP sessions.
statistics
Displays statistics for RSVP TP sessions.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
15.1(3)T
This command was introduced.
15.1(1)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)S.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiprsvptransportstatistics command:
Router# show ip rsvp transport statistics
RSVP Transport Statistics:
Transport Statistics: 2
Start Time: 05:57:42 IST Thu Nov 5 2009
Destination: 10.1.1.2, Protocol_Id: 6, DstPort: 22
Client_id: 1, Initiator_Id: 10.1.1.1
Source: 10.1.1.1, SrcPort: 11, Instance_Id: 9999
Outgoing interface: Ethernet1/0
Event type: RSVP_TP_EVENT_SESSION_DOWN
Transport Statistics: 1
Start Time: 05:57:16 IST Thu Nov 5 2009
Destination: 10.1.1.2, Protocol_Id: 6, DstPort: 22
Client_id: 1, Initiator_Id: 10.1.1.1
Source: 10.1.1.1, SrcPort: 11, Instance_Id: 9999
Incoming interface: Ethernet0/0
TP data: example1
Event type: RSVP_TP_EVENT_MSG_RCVD
Received message type: Path
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 81. show ip rsvp transport statistics Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Transport Statistics
Displays the buffer size, in megabye (MB), which is used to store information about the RSVP TP statistics.
Start Time
Displays the time from when the router started recording RSVP statistics.
Destination
Destination address to where the PATH message is sent.
Protocol_Id
Identifier that is used to configure RSVP as transport protocol.
DstPort
Destination port to which the PATH message is sent.
Client_id
Identification number of the client that initiates RSVP as a transport protocol.
Initiator_Id
Hostname or IP address that identifies the node initiating the transport service request.
Source
Source address from where the PATH message is sent.
SrcPort
Source port from which the PATH message is sent.
Instance_Id
Instance ID that identifies the transport service request from a particular client application and from a particular initiator.
Incoming interface
Interface type and number from which the PATH messages are sent.
TP data
Transport protocol data.
Event type
Type of event that has occurred.
Received message type
Type of messages being sent.
The following example shows how to display the RSVP client ID and client type information:
Router# show ip rsvp transport clients
Client-ID Type
1 CLI
Related Commands
Command
Description
showiprsvptransportsender-host
Displays RSVP PATH state information.
show ip rsvp transport sender
To display Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) PATH state information, use the
showiprsvptransportsender command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
The command output was modified to include information related to the Distributed Compressed Real-Time Transport Protocol
(dCRTP) feature.
12.3(11)T
The command output was modified to include information related to the Enhanced Compressed Real-Time Transport Protocol (ECRTP)
feature.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
Usage Guidelines
The
detail keyword is not available with the
showiprtpheader-compression command on a Route Switch Processor (RSP). However, the
detail keyword is available with the show ip rtp header-compression command on a Versatile Interface Processor (VIP). Enter the
show ip rtp header-compression interface-type interface-number detail command on a VIP to retrieve detailed information regarding
RTP header compression on a specific interface.
Examples
The following example displays statistics from ECRTP on an interface:
Router# show ip rtp header-compression
RTP/UDP/IP header compression statistics:
Interface Serial2/0 (compression on, IETF, ECRTP)
Rcvd: 1473 total, 1452 compressed, 0 errors, 0 status msgs
0 dropped, 0 buffer copies, 0 buffer failures
Sent: 1234 total, 1216 compressed, 0 status msgs, 379 not predicted
41995 bytes saved, 24755 bytes sent
2.69 efficiency improvement factor
Connect: 16 rx slots, 16 tx slots,
6 misses, 0 collisions, 0 negative cache hits, 13 free contexts
99% hit ratio, five minute miss rate 0 misses/sec, 0 max
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 84. show ip rtp header-compression Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface
Type and number of interface.
Rcvd
Received statistics described in subsequent fields.
total
Number of packets received on the interface.
compressed
Number of packets received with compressed headers.
errors
Number of errors.
status msgs
Number of resynchronization messages received from the peer.
dropped
Number of packets dropped.
buffer copies
Number of buffers that were copied.
buffer failures
Number of failures in allocating buffers.
Sent
Sent statistics described in subsequent fields.
total
Number of packets sent on the interface.
compressed
Number of packets sent with compressed headers.
status msgs
Number of resynchronization messages sent from the peer.
not predicted
Number of packets taking a non-optimal path through the compressor.
bytes saved
Total savings in bytes due to compression.
bytes sent
Total bytes sent after compression.
efficiency improvement factor
Compression efficiency.
Connect
Connect statistics described in subsequent fields.
rx slots
Total number of receive slots.
tx slots
Total number of transmit slots.
misses
Total number of misses.
collisions
Total number of collisions.
negative cache hits
Total number of negative cache hits.
free contexts
Number of available context resources.
hit ratio
Percentage of received packets that have an associated context.
five minute miss rate
Number of new flows found per second averaged over the last five minutes.
max
Highest average rate of new flows reported.
Related Commands
Command
Description
iprtpcompression-connections
Specifies the total number of RTP header compression connections supported on the interface.
iprtpheader-compression
Enables RTP header compression.
show ip tcp header-compression
To display TCP/IP header compression statistics, use the
showiptcpheader-compression command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays details of each connection. This keyword is available only in privileged EXEC mode.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
10.0
This command was introduced.
12.4
This command was integrated into Cisco Release 12.4 and its command output was modified to include additional compression
statistics.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
12.4(15)T12
This command was modifed. Support was added for the special Van Jacobson (VJ) format of TCP header compression.
Examples
The following is sample output from the
showiptcpheader-compression command:
Router# show ip tcp header-compression
TCP/IP header compression statistics:
Interface Serial2/0 (compression on, IETF)
Rcvd: 53797 total, 53796 compressed, 0 errors, 0 status msgs
0 dropped, 0 buffer copies, 0 buffer failures
Sent: 53797 total, 53796 compressed, 0 status msgs, 0 not predicted
1721848 bytes saved, 430032 bytes sent
5.00 efficiency improvement factor
Connect: 16 rx slots, 16 tx slots,
1 misses, 0 collisions, 0 negative cache hits, 15 free contexts
99% hit ratio, five minute miss rate 0 misses/sec, 0 max
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 85. show ip tcp header-compression Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface Serial2/0 (compression on, IETF)
Interface type and number on which compression is enabled.
Rcvd:
Received statistics described in subsequent fields.
total
Total number of TCP packets received on the interface.
compressed
Total number of TCP packets compressed.
errors
Number of packets received with errors.
status msgs
Number of resynchronization messages received from the peer.
dropped
Number of packets dropped due to invalid compression.
buffer copies
Number of packets that needed to be copied into bigger buffers for decompression.
buffer failures
Number of packets dropped due to a lack of buffers.
Sent:
Sent statistics described in subsequent fields.
total
Total number of TCP packets sent on the interface.
compressed
Total number of TCP packets compressed.
status msgs
Number of resynchronization messages sent from the peer.
not predicted
Number of packets taking a nonoptimal path through the compressor.
bytes saved
Total savings in bytes due to compression.
bytes sent
Total bytes sent after compression.
efficiencyimprovement factor
Improvement in line efficiency because of TCP header compression, expressed as the ratio of total packet bytes to compressed
packet bytes. The ratio should be greater than 1.00.
Connect:
Connection statistics described in subsequent fields.
rxslots
Total number of receive slots.
txslots
Total number of transmit slots.
misses
Indicates the number of times a match could not be made. If your output shows a large miss rate, then the number of allowable
simultaneous compression connections may be too low.
collisions
Total number of collisions.
negative cache hits
Total number of negative cache hits.
Note
This field is not relevant for TCP header compression; it is used for Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) header compression.
free contexts
Total number of free contexts.
Note
Free contexts (also known as connections) are an indication of the number of resources that are available, but not currently
in use, for TCP header compression.
hit ratio
Percentage of times the software found a match and was able to compress the header.
Five minute miss rate 0 misses/sec
Calculates the miss rate over the previous five minutes for a longer-term (and more accurate) look at miss rate trends.
max
Maximum value of the previous field.
The following example for Cisco IOS Release 12.4(15)T12 shows that the TCP special VJ format is enabled:
Router# show ip tcp header-compression serial 5/0 detail
TCP/IP header compression statistics:
DLCI 100 Link/Destination info: ip 10.72.72.2
Configured:
Max Header 60 Bytes, Max Time 50 Secs, Max Period 32786 Packets, Feedback On, Spl-VJ On
Negotiated:
Max Header 60 Bytes, Max Time 50 Secs, Max Period 32786 Packets, Feedback On, Spl-VJ On
TX contexts:
Related Commands
Command
Description
ipheader-compressionspecial-vj
Enables the special VJ format of TCP header compression.
iptcpcompression-connections
Specifies the total number of TCP header compression connections that can exist on an interface
special-vj
Enables the special VJ format of TCP header compression so that context IDs are included in compressed packets.
show ip vrf
To display the set of defined Virtual Private Network (VPN) routing and forwarding (VRF) instances and associated interfaces,
use the
showipvrf command in user EXEC or privileged EXEC mode.
(Optional) Displays concise information on the VRFs and associated interfaces.
detail
(Optional) Displays detailed information on the VRFs and associated interfaces.
interfaces
(Optional) Displays detailed information about all interfaces bound to a particular VRF or any VRF.
id
(Optional) Displays the VPN IDs that are configured in a PE router for different VPNs.
vrf-name
(Optional) Name assigned to a VRF.
Command Default
When you do not specify keywords or arguments, the command shows concise information about all configured VRFs.
Command Modes
User EXEC (>) Privileged EXEC (#)
Command History
Release
Modification
12.0(5)T
This command was introduced.
12.0(17)ST
This command was modified. The id keyword was added. The VPN ID information was added to the output of the show ip vrf detail
command.
12.2(4)B
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(4)B.
12.2(8)T
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(8)T.
12.3(6)
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.3(6). The command shows the downstream VRF for each associated Virtual
access interface (VAI).
12.2(27)SBC
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(27)SBC.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
Usage Guidelines
Use this command to display information about VRFs. Two levels of detail are available:
The
briefkeyword (or no keyword) displays concise information.
The
detail keyword displays all information.
To display information about all interfaces bound to a particular VRF, or to any VRF, use the interfaces keyword. To display
information about VPN IDs assigned to a PE router, use the id keyword.
When you use the
showipvrf command, interface and subinterface names are truncated in the output. For example, GigabitEthernet3/1/0.100 is displayed
as Gi3/1/0.100.
Examples
Cisco IOS T Train, Cisco IOS SB Train, Cisco IOS B Train, and Cisco IOS SX Train
The following example displays information about all the VRFs configured on the router, including the downstream VRF for
each associated VAI. The lines that are highlighted (for documentation purposes only) indicate the downstream VRF.
Router# show ip vrf
Name Default RD Interfaces
v1 20:20 Gi0/2.4294967291
Gi0/2.4294967293
Gi0/2.4294967294
Gi0/2.4294967295
vpn152-1 152:1 Lo1
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 86. show ip vrf Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Name
Specifies the VRF name.
Default RD
Specifies the default route distinguisher.
Interfaces
Specifies the network interface.
The following example displays detailed information about all of the VRFs configured on the router, including all of the
VAIs associated with each VRF:
Router# show ip vrf detail vpn152-1
VRF vpn152-1; default RD 152:1; default VPNID <not set>
VRF Table ID = 2
Interfaces:
Lo1
Connected addresses are not in global routing table
Export VPN route-target communities
RT:152:1
Import VPN route-target communities
RT:152:1
No import route-map
No export route-map
VRF label distribution protocol: not configured
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 87. show ip vrf detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
default VPNID
Specifies the VPN ID that uniquely identifies every VPN in the network.
VRF Table ID
Uniquely identifies the VRF routing table.
Interfaces
Specifies the network interfaces.
Export VPN route-target communities
Specifies VPN route-target export communities.
Import VPN route-target communities
Specifies VPN route-target import communities.
VRF label distribution protocol
MPLS label distribution protocol in the VRF context. This is required when VRF is configured for Carrier Supporting Carrier
(CSC). This could be LDP (enabled via the
mplsip command on the VRF interface) or BGP (enabled via the
send-label command in the router bgp VRF address-family configuration mode).
The following example shows the interfaces bound to a particular VRF:
Router# show ip vrf interfaces
Interface IP-Address VRF Protocol
Gi0/2.4294967291 unassigned v1 down
Gi0/2.4294967293 unassigned v1 down
Gi0/2.4294967294 unassigned v1 down
Gi0/2.4294967295 unassigned v1 down
Lo1 10.1.1.1 vpn152-1 up
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 88. show ip vrf interfaces Field Descriptions
Field
Description
Interface
Specifies the network interfaces for a VRF.
IP-Address
Specifies the IP address of a VRF interface.
VRF
Specifies the VRF name.
Protocol
Displays the state of the protocol (up or down) for each VRF interface.
Cisco IOS SR Train
The following example displays output from the
showipvrf command with the
detail keyword. The information shown is for a VRF named vpn1.
Router# show ip vrf detail vpn1
VRF vpn1 (VRF Id = 1); default RD 1:1; default VPNID <not set>
Interfaces:
Lo1 Lo99 Et0/0
VRF Table ID = 1
Export VPN route-target communities
RT:1:1
Import VPN route-target communities
RT:1:1 RT:2:1
No import route-map
No export route-map
VRF label distribution protocol: not configured
VRF label allocation mode: per-prefix
The table below describes the significant fields shown in the display.
Table 89. show ip vrf detail Field Descriptions
Field
Description
VRF ID
Uniquely identifies the VRF within the router.
VRF label allocation mode
Indicates the type of label mode used based on the route types.
Related Commands
Command
Description
importmap
Configures an import route map for a VRF.
ipvrf
Configures a VRF routing table.
ipvrfforwarding(interfaceconfiguration)
Associates a VRF with an interface or subinterface.
rd
Creates routing and forwarding tables for a VRF.
route-target
Creates a route-target extended community for a VRF.
vpnid
Assigns a VPN ID to a VRF.
show lane qos database
Note
Effective with Cisco IOS Release 15.1M, the showlaneqosdatabasecommand is not available in Cisco IOS software.
To display the contents of a specific LAN Emulation (LANE) quality of service (QoS) database, use the showlaneqosdatabasecommand in privileged EXEC mode.
showlaneqosdatabasename
Syntax Description
name
Specifies the QoS over LANE database to display.
Command Default
This command is not configured by default.
Command Modes
Privileged EXEC
Command History
Release
Modification
12.1(2)E
This command was introduced.
12.2(14)S
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(14)S.
12.2(33)SRA
This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(33)SRA.
12.2SX
This command is supported in the Cisco IOS Release 12.2SX train. Support in a specific 12.2SX release of this train depends
on your feature set, platform, and platform hardware.
15.1M
This command was removed.
Examples
This example shows how to display the contents of a QoS over LANE database for a Catalyst 5000 family ATM Module:
ATM# show lane qos database user1
QOS: user1
configured cos values: 5-7, usage: 1
dst nsap: 47.0091810000000061705B0C01.00E0B0951A40.0A
pcr: 500000, mcr: 100000
This example shows how to display the contents of a QoS over LANE database for a Cisco 4500, 7200, or 7500 series router:
Router# show lane qos database user2
QOS: user2
configured cos values: 5-7, usage: 1
dst nsap: 47.0091810000000061705B0C01.00E0B0951A40.0A
pcr: 500000, mcr: 100000
Related Commands
Command
Description
atm-address
Specifies the QoS parameters associated with a particular ATM address.
laneclientqos
Applies a QoS over LANE database to an interface.
laneqosdatabase
Begins the process of building a QoS over LANE database.