Frame Relay Commands

This module provides CLI commands for configuring Frame Relay services on the Cisco ASR 9000 Series Router.

To use commands of this module, you must be in a user group associated with a task group that includes appropriate task IDs. If the user group assignment is preventing you from using any command, contact your AAA administrator for assistance.

clear frame-relay multilink interface

To clear the multilink frame-relay (MFR) statistics for the given interface or location, use the clear frame-relay multilink interface command in EXEC mode.

clear frame-relay multilink interface {type interface-path-id | all [location node id]}

Syntax Description

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

all

Clears MFR statistics for all interfaces

location node-id

(Optional) Clears MFR statistics for all interfaces at the location specified by node-id . The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

No specific guidelines impact the use of this command.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

execute

Examples

The following example shows how to use the clear frame-relay multilink interface command to clear the multilink frame-relay protocol and internal statistics on an interface:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# clear frame-relay multilink interface serial 0/1/0/0
   

clear frame-relay lmi interface

To clear the LMI statistics for the given interface or location, use the clear frame-relay lmi command in EXEC mode.

clear frame-relay lmi interface {type interface-path-id | all [location node id]}

Syntax Description

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

all

Clears LMI statistics for all interfaces

location node-id

(Optional) Clears LMI statistics for all interfaces at the location specified by node-id . The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

No specific guidelines impact the use of this command.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

execute

Examples

The following example shows how to use the clear frame-relay lmi command to clear the LMI counters on an interface:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# clear frame-relay lmi interface pos 0/1/0/0
   

encap (PVC)

To change the encapsulation for a Frame Relay permanent virtual circuit (PVC), use the encap command in Frame Relay PVC configuration mode. To restore default encapsulation from the Frame Relay main interface, use the no form of this command.

encap {cisco | ietf}

Syntax Description

cisco

(Optional) Uses Cisco encapsulation, which is a 4-byte header, with 2 bytes to identify the data-link connection identifier (DLCI) and 2 bytes to identify the packet type.

ietf

(Optional) Sets the encapsulation method to comply with the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard (RFC 1490). Use this keyword when connecting to equipment that belongs to a vendor other than Cisco across a Frame Relay network.

Command Default

The default encapsulation keyword is Cisco.

When this command is not configured, encapsulation is inherited from the Frame Relay main interface.

Command Modes

Frame Relay PVC configuration (config-fr-vc)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set encapsulation on PVC data-link connection identifier (DLCI) 16 for Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) subinterface 0/4/0/1.1:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface POS 0/4/0/1.1 l2transport
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# pvc 16
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-fr-vc)# encap ietf
  

encapsulation frame-relay

To enable Frame Relay encapsulation, use the encapsulation frame-relay command in interface configuration mode. To disable Frame Relay encapsulation, use the no form of this command.

encapsulation frame-relay [ietf]

Syntax Description

ietf

(Optional) Sets the encapsulation method to comply with the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) standard (RFC 1490). Use this keyword when connecting to equipment from another vendor across a Frame Relay network.

Command Default

The default encapsulation method is Cisco.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the encapsulation frame-relay command to connect an interface to a Frame Relay network. When this command is configured, outgoing packets are encapsulated with a Frame Relay header and Frame Relay headers are removed from incoming packets to the interface.

A Cisco or IETF encapsulation method controls the Network Layer Protocol Identifier (NLPID) that is added to outgoing packets on the interface. The encapsulation method enabled for an outgoing packet can be changed for each data-link connection identifier (DLCI) per subinterface by using the encap (PVC) command in Frame Relay PVC configuration mode.

When the encapsulation frame-relay command is configured, LMI is enabled by default. To disable LMI use the frame-relay lmi disable command.

The following restrictions apply to the encapsulation frame-relay command upon configuration or removal of the command on an interface:

  • When configuring this command, Layer 3 and Layer 2 configurations are not allowed on the interface.
  • Before removing this command, all Frame Relay subinterfaces and LMI configuration should be deleted from the interface.

The encapsulation frame-relay command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

interface

read, write

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows Frame Relay encapsulation configured on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) 0/3/0/1:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface POS 0/3/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# encapsulation frame-relay ietf
   

frame-relay intf-type

To configure the interface type of the User-Network Interface (UNI), use the frame-relay intf-type command in interface configuration mode. To change the configuration, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay intf-type {dce | dte | nni}

Syntax Description

dce

Router functions as a switch connected to a router.

dte

Router is connected to a Frame Relay network.

nni

Router is connected to a NNI signaling interface.

Command Default

DTE

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Release 4.2.1

The nni keyword was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay intf-type command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a DCE switch type on the interface:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/4/0/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dce
   

frame-relay lmi disable

To disable the Frame Relay Local Management Interface (LMI), use the frame-relay lmi disable command in interface configuration mode. To reenable LMI, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi disable

Syntax Description

This command has no keywords or arguments.

Command Default

LMI is enabled.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay lmi disable command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a DCE switch type on the interface:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/4/0/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi disable
   

frame-relay lmi-n391dte

To set the full status polling interval, use the frame-relay lmi-n391dte command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default interval value, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-n391dte polling-cycles

Syntax Description

polling-cycles

Number of Line Integrity Verification (LIV) exchanges performed before requesting a full status message. Range is from 1 to 255. The default is 6.

Command Default

The full status polling interval is 6.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the frame-relay lmi-n391dte command to set the full status message polling interval. This command is relevant only when the interface type is data terminal equipment (DTE).

Two message types are supported: status inquiry and status. Status inquiry messages are sent from DTE to DCE. Status messages are sent from DCE to DTE (in response to a status inquiry). The Status (Full) and LIV report types are contained within these messages, and typically there is one status transaction for every five LIV transactions.

This command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows that one out of every four status inquiries generated requests a full status response from the DCE on the interface:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dte
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-n391dte 4
   

frame-relay lmi-n392dce

To set the error threshold on a DCE interface, use the frame-relay lmi-n392dce command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-n392dce threshold

Syntax Description

threshold

Error threshold value. Range is from 1 to 10. Default is 3.

Command Default

The DCE error threshold is 3.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

N392 errors must occur within the number defined by the N393 event count for the link to be declared down. Therefore, the threshold value for this command must be less than the count value defined in the frame-relay lmi-n393dce command.

The frame-relay lmi-n392dce command is relevant only when the interface type is data communication equipment (DCE).

This command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) failure threshold to 4. The router acts as a Frame Relay DCE switch:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dce
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-n392dce 4
   

frame-relay lmi-n392dte

To set the error threshold on a DTE interface, use the frame-relay lmi-n392dte command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-n392dte threshold

Syntax Description

threshold

Error threshold value. Range is from 1 to 10. The default is 3.

Command Default

The DTE error threshold is 3.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay lmi-n392dte command is relevant only when the interface type is data terminal equipment (DTE).

This command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) failure threshold to 4. The router acts as a Frame Relay DTE switch.


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1 
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dte
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-n392dte 4
   

frame-relay lmi-n393dce

To set the DCE monitored events count, use the frame-relay lmi-n393dce command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-n393dce events

Syntax Description

events

Monitored events count. Range is from 1 to 10. The default is 4.

Command Default

The number of DCE monitored events is 4.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay lmi-n393dce command is used along with the frame-relay lmi-n392dce command to define the condition that causes the link to be declared down.

N392 errors must occur within the events argument count in order for the link to be declared down. Therefore, the events value defined in this command must be greater than the threshold value defined in the frame-relay lmi-n392 dce command.

The frame-relay lmi-n393dce command is relevant only when the interface type is data communication equipment (DCE).

This frame-relay lmi-n393dce command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) monitored events count to 5.


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dce
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-n393dce 5
   

frame-relay lmi-n393dte

To set the monitored event count on a DTE interface, use the frame-relay lmi-n393dte command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-n393dte events

Syntax Description

events

Monitored events count. Range is from 1 to 10. The default is 4.

Command Default

The number of DTE monitored events is 4.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay lmi-n393dte command is relevant only when the interface type is data terminal equipment (DTE).

This frame-relay lmi-n393dte command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) monitored events count to 5.


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dte
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-n393dte 5
  

frame-relay lmi-t391dte

To set the Local Management Interface (LMI) polling interval, use the frame-relay lmi-t391dte command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default interval value, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-t391dte seconds

Syntax Description

seconds

Polling interval between each status inquiry from the DTE end, in seconds. Range is from 5 to 30. The default is 10.

Command Default

The LMI polling interval is 10 seconds.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This frame-relay lmi-t391dte command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

The seconds value defined in this command must be less than the polling verification timer defined in the frame-relay lmi-t392 dce command.

The frame-relay lmi-t391dte command is relevant only when the interface type is data terminal equipment (DCE).

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the LMI polling timer interval to 15 seconds:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dte
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-t391dte 15
   

frame-relay lmi-t392dce

To set the Local Management Interface (LMI) polling verification timer on the DCE, use the frame-relay lmi-t392dce command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-t392dce seconds

Syntax Description

seconds

Polling verification timer, in seconds. The range is from 5 to 30. The default is 15.

Command Default

The LMI polling verification timer is 15 seconds.

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The frame-relay lmi-t392dce command is used along with the frame-relay lmi-t391dte command to define the condition that causes the link to be declared down.

The seconds value defined in this command must be greater than the polling verification timer defined in the frame-relay lmi-t391 dte command.

This frame-relay lmi-n392dce command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) polling timer interval to 30 seconds:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay intf-type dce
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-t392dce 30
   

frame-relay lmi-type

To select the Local Management Interface (LMI) type, use the frame-relay lmi-type command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay lmi-type [ansi | cisco | q933a]

Syntax Description

ansi

(Optional) Uses LMI as defined by ANSI T1.617a-1994 Annex D.

cisco

(Optional) Uses LMI as defined by Cisco (not standard).

q933a

(Optional) Uses LMI as defined by ITU-T Q.933 (02/2003) Annex A.

Command Default

The default is cisco .

Command Modes

Interface configuration (config-if)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

If the DTE is not explicitly configured or the no form is not used after explicit configuration, then the DTE automatically senses the LMI type of the DCE and use that type of LMI.

This frame-relay lmi-type command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set the Local Management Interface (LMI) type to Q.933, Annex A:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/1/0/1
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay lmi-type q933a 
   

frame-relay multilink ack

To configure the MFR acknowledge timeout value for a Frame Relay multilink bundle link, use the frame-relay multilink ack command in interface configuration mode. To revert to the default settings, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink ack ack-timeout

Syntax Description

ack-timeout

Ack timeout value, in seconds. The range is from 1 to 10.

Command Default

The default MFR acknowledge timeout value is 4 seconds.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The frame-relay multilink ack command is supported only on serial interfaces. The frame-relay multilink ack command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or multilink frame relay interfaces.


The frame-relay multilink ack command can be configured only on bundle link interfaces that have been associated with a bundle using the encapsulation frame-relay mfr command.


Note


You can enter the frame-relay multilink ack command at any time without affecting the current state of the interface; however, the configured timeout value does not go into effect until the interface has gone from the down state to the up state. One way to bring the interface down and back up again is by using the shutdown and no shutdown commands in interface configuration mode.


Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the MFR acknowledge timeout value as 2 seconds. for the serial interface 0/3/1/0:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface serial 0/3/1/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink ack 2
   

frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class

To configure the bandwidth class for a Frame Relay multilink bundle interface, use the frame-relay multilink bid bandwidth-class command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class {a | b | c threshold}

Syntax Description

a

Configures bandwidth class A. When one or more member links are up, the bundle interface is up. When all the member links are down, the bundle interface is down.

b

Configures bandwidth class B. When all the member links are up, the bundle interface is up. When any member link is down, the bundle interface is down.

c

Configures bandwidth class C. The bundle link threshold must be configured.

threshold

Minimum number of links that must be up for the bundle interface to be up. The range is 1 to 255.

Command Default

The default is a (Bandwidth Class A).

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Bandwidth class is configurable only under Frame Relay Forum 16.1 (FRF 16.1).


Note


The frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class command is supported only on multilink frame relay interfaces. The frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or serial interfaces.


Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to set a multilink frame relay interface to bandwidth Class C with a threshold of 3:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface Multilink 0/3/1/0/100 
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink bandwidth-class c 3
   

frame-relay multilink bid

To create a name for a Frame Relay multilink bundle interface, use the frame-relay multilink bid command in interface configuration mode. To restore the default setting, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink bid bundle-id-name

Syntax Description

bundle-id-name

Name for the Frame Relay multilink bundle. The bundle identifier (bid ) name identifies the bundle interface at both endpoints. The bid name is exchanged in the information elements to ensure consistent link assignments. The bid name can be up to 50 characters including the null termination character. The bid name is configured at the bundle interface level and is applied to each member link.

Command Default

By default, the interface name, for example, Multilink 0/4/1/0/1, is used as the bundle identifier.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The frame-relay multilink bid command is supported only on multilink frame relay interfaces. The frame-relay multilink bid command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or serial interfaces.


Regardless of whether you create a bundle identifier name using the frame-relay multilink bid command or whether the system uses the default name for the interface, each bundle should have a unique name.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to create a Frame Relay multilink interface bundle identifier name:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface Multilink 0/3/1/0/100 
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink bid MFRBundle
   

frame-relay multilink hello

To configure the hello interval used by a Frame Relay multilink bundle link, use the frame-relay multilink hello command in interface configuration mode. To reset the name to the default, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink hello hello-interval

Syntax Description

hello-interval

Hello interval for the Frame Relay multilink bundle link, in seconds. The range is from 1 to 180.

Command Default

The default hello interval is 10 seconds.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The frame-relay multilink hello command is supported only on serial interfaces. The frame-relay multilink hello command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or multilink frame relay interfaces.


The frame-relay multilink hello command can be configured only on bundle link interfaces that have been associated with a bundle using the encapsulation frame-relay mfr command.


Note


You can enter the frame-relay multilink hello command at any time without affecting the current state of the interface; however, the configured hello interval value does not go into effect until the interface has gone from the down state to the up state. One way to bring the interface down and back up again is by using the shutdown and no shutdown commands in interface configuration mode.


Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the hello interval value as 10 seconds. for the serial interface 0/3/1/0:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface serial 0/3/1/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink hello 10
  

frame-relay multilink lid

To create a name for a Frame Relay multilink bundle link, use the frame-relay multilink lid command in interface configuration mode. To reset the name to the default, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink lid link-id name

Syntax Description

link-id name

Specifies the name for the Frame Relay multilink bundle link. The link identifier (lid) name can be up to 49 characters long.

Command Default

The name of the physical interface, for example, Serial 0/3/0/0/1/2:0, is used as the lid.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The frame-relay multilink lid command is supported only on serial interfaces. The frame-relay multilink lid command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or multilink frame relay interfaces.


The frame-relay multilink lid command can be configured only on bundle link interfaces that have been associated with a bundle using the encapsulation frame-relay mfr command.


Note


You can enter the frame-relay multilink lid command at any time without affecting the current state of the interface; however, the link identifier name does not go into effect until the interface has gone from the down state to the up state. One way to bring the interface down and back up again is by using the shutdown and no shutdown commands in interface configuration mode.


Thelid name is used to identify the bundle link to peer devices and to enable the devices to identify which bundle links are associated with which bundles. The lid name can also be assigned when the bundle link is created using the encapsulation frame-relay mfr command with the name argument. If a lid name is not assigned, the default lid is the name of the physical interface.

The local and peer lid names do not have to be unique. However, regardless of whether you create a lid name using the frame-relay multilink lid command or the systems uses the default name for the bundle link, each link within a bundle must have a unique name. If the same name is used by different links in the same bundle, the bundles will flap indefinitely.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the lid name as ‘BL1’ for the serial interface 0/3/1/0:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface serial 0/3/1/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink lid BL1
   

frame-relay multilink retry

To configure the retry count for retransmissions for a Frame Relay multilink bundle link, use the frame-relay multilink retry command in interface configuration mode. To reset the name to the default, use the no form of this command.

frame-relay multilink retry retry-count

Syntax Description

retry-count

Retry count for retransmissions. The range is from 1 to 5.

Command Default

The default retry count for retransmissions is 2.

Command Modes

Interface configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines


Note


The frame-relay multilink retry command is supported only on serial interfaces. The frame-relay multilink retry command is not supported on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS) or multilink frame relay interfaces.


The frame-relay multilink retry command can be configured only on bundle link interfaces that have been associated with a bundle using the encapsulation frame-relay mfr command.


Note


You can enter the frame-relay multilink retry command at any time without affecting the current state of the interface; however, the configured retry count value does not go into effect until the interface has gone from the down state to the up state. One way to bring the interface down and back up again is by using the shutdown and no shutdown commands in interface configuration mode.


Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the retry count for retransmissions as 2 on the serial interface 0/3/1/0:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface serial 0/3/1/0
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-if)# frame-relay multilink retry 2
   

pvc (frame relay)

To associate a data-link connection identifier (DLCI) number to a permanent virtual circuit (PVC), and to enter Frame Relay PVC configuration mode, use the pvc command in subinterface configuration mode. To delete the PVC, use the no form of this command.

pvc dlci-number

Syntax Description

dlci-number

DLCI number used to identify the PVC. The range is from 16 to 1007.

Command Default

No PVC is defined.

Command Modes

Subinterface configuration (config-subif)

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Commands available in Frame Relay PVC configuration mode are:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-fr-vc)# ?

  commit    Commit the configuration changes to running
  describe  Describe a command without taking real actions
  do        Run an exec command
  encap     Set the Encapsulation of this PVC
  exit      Exit from this submode
  no        Negate a command or set its defaults
  show      Show contents of configuration
  

The pvc command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to create a PVC with DLCI 16:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# interface pos 0/4/0/0.1 l2transport
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-subif)# pvc 16
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config-fr-vc)#
   

show frame-relay lmi

To display Frame Relay statistics for the Local Management Interface (LMI), use the show frame-relay lmi command in EXEC mode.

show frame-relay lmi [interface type interface-path-id | location node-id]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Interface for which information is to be displayed.Use the interface-path-id argument to specify the interface.

type

(Optional) Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

(Optional) Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

location node-id

(Optional) Displays information about all interfaces on the specified node. The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

Command Default

Frame Relay LMI statistics are displayed for all interfaces enabled for LMI.

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The show frame-relay lmi command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

This command is used to check the status enquiry and status message between DCE and DTE.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read

Examples

The following example shows the output from the show frame-relay lmi command:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay lmi

LMI Statistics for interface POS0/1/0/0/ (Frame Relay DCE) LMI TYPE = ANSI
  Invalid Unnumbered Info 0             Invalid Prot Disc 0
  Invalid Dummy Call Ref 0              Invalid Msg Type 0
  Invalid Status Message 0              Invalid Lock Shift 9
  Invalid Information ID 0              Invalid Report IE Len 0
  Invalid Report Request 0              Invalid Keep IE Len 0
  Num Status Enq. Rcvd 9444             Num Status Msgs Sent 9444
  Num Full Status Sent 1578             Num St Enq. Timeouts 41
  Num Link Timeouts 7

LMI Statistics for interface POS0/1/0/1/ (Frame Relay DCE) LMI TYPE = CISCO
  Invalid Unnumbered Info 0             Invalid Prot Disc 0
  Invalid Dummy Call Ref 0              Invalid Msg Type 0
  Invalid Status Message 0              Invalid Lock Shift 0
  Invalid Information ID 0              Invalid Report IE Len 0
  Invalid Report Request 0              Invalid Keep IE Len 0
  Num Status Enq. Rcvd 9481             Num Status Msgs Sent 9481
  Num Full Status Sent 1588             Num St Enq. Timeouts 16
  Num Link Timeouts 4
  
Table 1. show frame-relay lmi Field Descriptions

Field

Description

LMI Statistics

Signaling or LMI specification: CISCO, ANSI, or CCITT.

Note

 

CCITT is LMI as defined by ITU-T Q.933 (02/2003) Annex A.

Invalid Unnumbered Info

Number of received LMI messages with invalid unnumbered information field.

Invalid Dummy Call

Number of received LMI messages with invalid dummy calls.

Invalid Status Message

Number of received LMI messages with invalid status message.

Invalid Information ID

Number of received LMI messages with invalid information identifier.

Invalid Report Request

Number of received LMI messages with invalid report request.

Num Status Enq. Rcvd

Number of LMI status enquiry messages received.

Num Link Timeouts

Number of link timeouts.

Invalid Prot Disc

Number of received LMI messages with invalid protocol discriminator.

Invalid Msg Type

Number or received LMI messages with invalid message type.

Invalid Lock Shift

Number of received LMI messages with invalid lock shift type.

Invalid Report IE Len

Number of received LMI messages with invalid report IE Length.

Invalid Keep IE Len

Number of received LMI messages with invalid report request.

Num Status Msgs Sent

Number of LMI status enquiry messages sent.

Num St Enq. Timeouts

Number of times the status enquiry message was not received within the T392 DCE timer value.

show frame-relay lmi-info

To display Frame Relay information for the Local Management Interface (LMI), use the show frame-relay lmi -info command in EXEC mode.

show frame-relay lmi-info [interface type interface-path-id | location node-id] [detail]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Displays information on the the interface specified by the type interface-path-id argument.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

location node-id

(Optional) Displays information about all interfaces on the specified node. The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

detail

(Optional) Displays managed dcli list.

Command Default

Displays LMI information for all Frame Relay interfaces enabled for LMI.

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The show frame-relay lmi-info command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

This command is used to check the status enquiry and status message between DCE and DTE.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read

Examples

The following example shows sample output for the show frame-relay lmi-info command:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay lmi-info

LMI IDB Info for interface Multilink0/3/0/0/2
  ifhandle:             0x6176840
  Interface type:       DTE
  Interface state:      UP
  Line Protocol:        UP
  LMI type (cnf/oper):  AUTO/CISCO
  LMI type autosense:   OFF
  Interface MTU:        1504
  -------------- DTE -------------
  T391:                 10s
  N391: (cnf/oper):     6/5
  N392: (cnf/oper):     3/0
  N393:                 4
  My seq#:              83
  My seq# seen:         83
  Your seq# seen:       82
  -------------- DCE -------------
  T392:                 15s
  N392: (cnf/oper):     3/0
  N393:                 4
  My seq#:              0
  My seq# seen:         0
  Your seq# seen:       0
LMI IDB Info for interface Multilink0/3/0/0/1
  ifhandle:             0x6186240
  Interface type:       DTE
  Interface state:      UP
  Line Protocol:        UP
  LMI type (cnf/oper):  AUTO/CISCO
  LMI type autosense:   OFF
  Interface MTU:        1504
  -------------- DTE -------------
  T391:                 10s
  N391: (cnf/oper):     6/5
  N392: (cnf/oper):     3/0
  N393:                 4
  My seq#:              83
  My seq# seen:         83
  Your seq# seen:       82
  -------------- DCE -------------
  T392:                 15s
  N392: (cnf/oper):     3/0
  N393:                 4
  My seq#:              0
  My seq# seen:         0
  Your seq# seen:       0
   
Table 2. show frame-relay lmi-info Field Descriptions

Field

Description

DTE

T391

Local Management Interface polling interval

N391

Full status polling interval

N392

Error threshold value

N393

DTE monitored events count

DCE

T392

Local Management Interface polling verification timer

N392

Error threshold value

N393

DCE monitored events count

show frame-relay multilink

To display the multilink Frame-Relay (MFR) information about the given interface along with MFR protocol and internal statistics, use the show frame-relay multilink interface command in EXEC mode.

show frame-relay multilink [detail [location node id] | interface type interface-path-id [detail | verbose] | location node id | verbose [location node id]]

Syntax Description

detail

(Optional) Displays Interface Descriptor Block (IDB) information and Feasible Successor Metrics (FSM) statistics.

location node-id

(Optional) Displays information about all interfaces on the specified node. The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

interface

(Optional) Interface for which you want to display information.

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

verbose

(Optional) Displays IDB information, FSM statistics and internal statistics.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

No specific guidelines impact the use of this command.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read

Examples

The following example shows how to display the multilink Frame-Relay information for all interfaces:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay multilink

Bundle interface: Multilink0/3/0/0/1, ifhandle 0x060322c0
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A

    Member Links:
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up


Bundle interface: Multilink0/3/0/0/2, ifhandle 0x06032280
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A

    Member Links:
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up


Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0, ifhandle 0x060323c0
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x060322c0


Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0, ifhandle 0x06032380
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x060322c0


Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0, ifhandle 0x06032340
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x06032280


Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0, ifhandle 0x06032300
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x06032280
  

The following example shows how to display detailed multilink Frame-Relay information for all interfaces, including IDB information and FSM statistics:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay multilink detail

Bundle interface: Multilink0/3/0/0/1, ifhandle 0x060322c0
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A
      nodeid:             0x838
      group:              1
      my_bid:             Multilink0/3/0/0/1
      peer_bid:           Multilink0/6/0/0/1
      magic:              0x696d8a95
      flags:              0x0
      im_state:           3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:      3  [Up]
      is_owned_resource:  Y
      is_zombie:          N
      active_mbr_count:   2
      cfg_bid:
      bw_class:           1
      bw_class_threshold: 0


    =============== Member Links ===============

    Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/2:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:09 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.003 (0 secs 3999988 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6235     Hello Rx:                 6236
      Hello Ack Tx:             6236     Hello Ack Rx:             6235
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6236     Ack Timer expiry:            1

    Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/1:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:01 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.004 (0 secs 4999985 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6234     Hello Rx:                 6237
      Hello Ack Tx:             6237     Hello Ack Rx:             6234
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6235     Ack Timer expiry:            1



Bundle interface: Multilink0/3/0/0/2, ifhandle 0x06032280
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A
      nodeid:             0x838
      group:              2
      my_bid:             Multilink0/3/0/0/2
      peer_bid:           Multilink0/6/0/0/2
      magic:              0x303c008f
      flags:              0x0
      im_state:           3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:      3  [Up]
      is_owned_resource:  Y
      is_zombie:          N
      active_mbr_count:   2
      cfg_bid:
      bw_class:           1
      bw_class_threshold: 0


    =============== Member Links ===============

    Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/4:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:00 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.004 (0 secs 4999985 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6236     Hello Rx:                 6235
      Hello Ack Tx:             6235     Hello Ack Rx:             6236
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6237     Ack Timer expiry:            1

    Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/3:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:01 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.003 (0 secs 3999988 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6236     Hello Rx:                 6237
      Hello Ack Tx:             6237     Hello Ack Rx:             6236
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6237     Ack Timer expiry:            1

Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0, ifhandle 0x060323c0
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x060322c0
  Local bid: Multilink0/3/0/0/1  Peer bid: Multilink0/6/0/0/1
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/1:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:00 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.004 (0 secs 4999985 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6235     Hello Rx:                 6237
      Hello Ack Tx:             6237     Hello Ack Rx:             6235
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6236     Ack Timer expiry:            1

Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0, ifhandle 0x06032380
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x060322c0
  Local bid: Multilink0/3/0/0/1  Peer bid: Multilink0/6/0/0/1
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/2:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:00 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.003 (0 secs 3999988 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6236     Hello Rx:                 6237
      Hello Ack Tx:             6237     Hello Ack Rx:             6236
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6237     Ack Timer expiry:            1

Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0, ifhandle 0x06032340
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x06032280
  Local bid: Multilink0/3/0/0/2  Peer bid: Multilink0/6/0/0/2
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/3:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/3:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:02 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.003 (0 secs 3999988 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6236     Hello Rx:                 6237
      Hello Ack Tx:             6237     Hello Ack Rx:             6236
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6237     Ack Timer expiry:            1

Member interface: Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0, ifhandle 0x06032300
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/3/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x06032280
  Local bid: Multilink0/3/0/0/2  Peer bid: Multilink0/6/0/0/2
      my_lid:         Serial0/3/0/0/1/4:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/6/0/0/1/4:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:01 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.004 (0 secs 4999985 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 2
      Add Link Ack Tx:             2     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                 6236     Hello Rx:                 6235
      Hello Ack Tx:             6235     Hello Ack Rx:             6236
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:       6237     Ack Timer expiry:            1
  

The following example shows how to display detailed multilink Frame Relay information for all interfaces, including IDB information and FSM statistics, on a Cisco 2-Port Channelized OC-12c/DS0 SPA:

RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay multilink detail
Fri Mar 25 14:04:05.425 UTC
Bundle interface: Multilink0/2/1/0/1, ifhandle 0x04002840 
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A
      nodeid:             0x829
      group:              1
      my_bid:             Multilink0/2/1/0/1
      peer_bid:           Multilink0/2/1/0/1
      magic:              0x75b06726
      flags:              0x0
      im_state:           3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:      3  [Up]
      is_owned_resource:  Y
      is_zombie:          N
      active_mbr_count:   2
      cfg_bid:            
      bw_class:           1

      bw_class_threshold: 0


    =============== Member Links ===============

    Serial0/2/1/0/1/2:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/2/1/0/1/2:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/2/1/0/1/2:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:06 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.002 (0 secs 2999991 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 2     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                    2     Hello Rx:                    2
      Hello Ack Tx:                2     Hello Ack Rx:                2
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             1
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:          2     Ack Timer expiry:            0

    Serial0/2/1/0/1/1:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/2/1/0/1/1:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/2/1/0/1/1:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:06 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.002 (0 secs 2999991 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 2     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                    2     Hello Rx:                    2
      Hello Ack Tx:                2     Hello Ack Rx:                2
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             1
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:          2     Ack Timer expiry:            0



Bundle interface: Multilink0/2/1/0/2, ifhandle 0x04002880 
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A
      nodeid:             0x829
      group:              2
      my_bid:             Multilink0/2/1/0/2
      peer_bid:           Multilink0/2/1/0/2
      magic:              0x41f1f15a
      flags:              0x0
      im_state:           3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:      3  [Up]
      is_owned_resource:  Y
      is_zombie:          N
      active_mbr_count:   2
      cfg_bid:            
      bw_class:           1
      bw_class_threshold: 0


    =============== Member Links ===============

    Serial0/2/1/0/1/4:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/2/1/0/1/4:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/2/1/0/1/4:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:06 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.002 (0 secs 2999991 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 2     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                    2     Hello Rx:                    2
      Hello Ack Tx:                2     Hello Ack Rx:                2
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             1
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:          2     Ack Timer expiry:            0

    Serial0/2/1/0/1/3:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
      my_lid:         Serial0/2/1/0/1/3:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/2/1/0/1/3:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:06 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.002 (0 secs 2999991 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 2     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                    2     Hello Rx:                    2
      Hello Ack Tx:                2     Hello Ack Rx:                2
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             1
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:          2     Ack Timer expiry:            0

The following example shows how to display detailed multilink Frame Relay information for all interfaces, including IDB information and FSM statistics, on a Cisco 4-Port Channelized T3 SPA:

RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay multilink detail
Member interface: Serial0/0/0/0/1:0, ifhandle 0x00005180 
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/0/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x00005280 
  Local bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/1  Peer bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/1
      my_lid:         Serial0/0/0/0/1:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/0/0/0/1:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:06 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.001 (0 secs 1999994 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                21692     Hello Rx:                21690
      Hello Ack Tx:            21690     Hello Ack Rx:            21692
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:      21693     Ack Timer expiry:            1



Member interface: Serial0/0/0/0/2:0, ifhandle 0x000051c0 
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/0/0/0/1 with ifhandle 0x00005280 
  Local bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/1  Peer bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/1
      my_lid:         Serial0/0/0/0/2:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/0/0/0/2:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:03 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.001 (0 secs 1999994 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                21688     Hello Rx:                21694
      Hello Ack Tx:            21694     Hello Ack Rx:            21688
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:      21689     Ack Timer expiry:            1



Member interface: Serial0/0/0/0/3:0, ifhandle 0x00005200 
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/0/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x000052c0 
  Local bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/2  Peer bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/2
      my_lid:         Serial0/0/0/0/3:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/0/0/0/3:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:03 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.001 (0 secs 1999994 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                21694     Hello Rx:                21689
      Hello Ack Tx:            21689     Hello Ack Rx:            21694
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:      21695     Ack Timer expiry:            1



Member interface: Serial0/0/0/0/4:0, ifhandle 0x00005240 
  HW state = Up, link state = Up
  Member of bundle interface Multilink0/0/0/0/2 with ifhandle 0x000052c0 
  Local bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/2  Peer bid: Multilink0/0/0/0/2
      my_lid:         Serial0/0/0/0/4:0
      peer_lid:       Serial0/0/0/0/4:0
      flags:          0x0
      fsm_state:      3  [Up]
      im_state:       3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:  3  [Up]
      cause:          0  [None]
      retry_count:    0
      in_loopback:    No
      bc_init_rcvd:   Yes
      bc_owned_res:   Yes
      cc_owned_res:   Yes
      is_parent_up:   Yes
      Last Packet Tx: 00:00:00 ago
      Round trip:     00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Min Round trip: 00:00.000 (0 secs 999997 nsecs)
      Max Round trip: 00:00.001 (0 secs 1999994 nsecs)
      cfg_lid:        
      mfr_t_hello:    10
      mfr_t_ack:      4
      mfr_retry_max:  2
      --------------- Member Link Statistics ---------------
      Add Link Tx:                 3     Add Link Rx:                 1
      Add Link Ack Tx:             1     Add Link Ack Rx:             1
      Add Link Rej Tx:             0     Add Link Rej Rx:             0
      Remove Link Tx:              0     Remove Link Rx:              0
      Remove Link Ack Tx:          0     Remove Link Ack Rx:          0
      Hello Tx:                21691     Hello Rx:                21689
      Hello Ack Tx:            21689     Hello Ack Rx:            21691
      Loopback Detected:           0     Invalid Pkts Rx:             0
      Bundle Mismatch:             0     Expired Ack Rx:              0
      Hello Timer expiry:      21692     Ack Timer expiry:            1



Bundle interface: Multilink0/0/0/0/1, ifhandle 0x00005280 
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A
      nodeid:             0x808
      group:              1
      my_bid:             Multilink0/0/0/0/1
      peer_bid:           Multilink0/0/0/0/1
      magic:              0x48bac00c
      flags:              0x0
      im_state:           3  [Up]
      fsm_req_state:      3  [Up]
      is_owned_resource:  Y
      is_zombie:          N
      active_mbr_count:   2
      cfg_bid:            
      bw_class:           1
      bw_class_threshold: 0

The following example shows how to display the multilink Frame-Relay information for the interface at location 0/3/0/0/1:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay multilink interface multilink 0/3/0/0/1

Bundle interface: Multilink0/3/0/0/1, ifhandle 0x060322c0
    Member Links: 2 active, 0 inactive
    State = Up,   BW Class = A

    Member Links:
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/2:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
    Serial0/3/0/0/1/1:0,   HW state = Up, link state = Up
  

show frame-relay pvc

To display statistics about Frame Relay permanent virtual circuits (PVCs), use the show frame-relay pvc command in EXEC mode.

show frame-relay pvc [interface type interface-path-id | location node-id] [dlci-number]

Syntax Description

interface

(Optional) Interface for which information is to be displayed. Use the type and interface-path-id arguments to specify the interface.

type

(Optional) Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (?) online help function.

interface-path-id

(Optional) Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

location node-id

(Optional) Displays information about all interfaces on the specified node. The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

dlci-number

(Optional) DLCI number used to identify the PVC. The range is from 16 to 1007.

Command Default

Information for all Frame Relay interfaces and PVCs is displayed.

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The show frame-relay pvc command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

This command is used to check the status of PVCs on interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read

Examples

The following example shows the output from the show frame-relay pvc command:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay pvc

PVC Statistics for interface POS0/3/2/0 (Frame Relay DCE)

              Active     Inactive      Deleted       Static
  Local          4           0            0             0
  Switched       0           0            0             0
  Dynamic        0           0            0             0

DLCI = 612, DLCI USAGE = LOCAL, ENCAP = CISCO, INHERIT = TRUE, PVC STATUS = ACT
VE, INTERFACE = POS0/3/2/0.1
  input pkts 0          output pkts 0           in bytes 0
  out bytes 0           dropped pkts 0          in FECN packets 0
  in BECN pkts 0        out FECN pkts 0         out BECN pkts 0
  in DE pkts 0          out DE pkts 0
  out bcast pkts 0      out bcast bytes 0
  pvc create time 00:00:00      last time pvc status changed 00:00:00

DLCI = 613, DLCI USAGE = LOCAL, ENCAP = CISCO, INHERIT = TRUE, PVC STATUS = ACT
VE, INTERFACE = POS0/3/2/0.2
  input pkts 0          output pkts 0           in bytes 0
  out bytes 0           dropped pkts 0          in FECN packets 0
  in BECN pkts 0        out FECN pkts 0         out BECN pkts 0
  in DE pkts 0          out DE pkts 0
  out bcast pkts 0      out bcast bytes 0
  pvc create time 00:00:00      last time pvc status changed 00:00:00

DLCI = 614, DLCI USAGE = LOCAL, ENCAP = CISCO, INHERIT = TRUE, PVC STATUS = ACT
VE, INTERFACE = POS0/3/2/0.3
  input pkts 0          output pkts 0           in bytes 0
  out bytes 0           dropped pkts 0          in FECN packets 0
  in BECN pkts 0        out FECN pkts 0         out BECN pkts 0
  in DE pkts 0          out DE pkts 0
  out bcast pkts 0      out bcast bytes 0
  pvc create time 00:00:00      last time pvc status changed 00:00:00

DLCI = 615, DLCI USAGE = LOCAL, ENCAP = CISCO, INHERIT = TRUE, PVC STATUS = ACT
VE, INTERFACE = POS0/3/2/0.4
  input pkts 0          output pkts 0           in bytes 0
  out bytes 0           dropped pkts 0          in FECN packets 0
  in BECN pkts 0        out FECN pkts 0         out BECN pkts 0
  in DE pkts 0          out DE pkts 0
  out bcast pkts 0      out bcast bytes 0
  pvc create time 00:00:00      last time pvc status changed 00:00:00
  

The following example shows the output for a specific frame-relay PVC:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay pvc 613

DLCI = 613, DLCI USAGE = LOCAL, ENCAP = CISCO, INHERIT = TRUE, PVC STATUS = ACTI
VE, INTERFACE = POS0/3/2/0.2
  input pkts 0          output pkts 0           in bytes 0
  out bytes 0           dropped pkts 0          in FECN packets 0
  in BECN pkts 0        out FECN pkts 0         out BECN pkts 0
  in DE pkts 0          out DE pkts 0
  out bcast pkts 0      out bcast bytes 0
  pvc create time 00:00:00      last time pvc status changed 00:00:00
  
Table 3. show frame-relay pvc Field Descriptions

Field

Description

DLCI

One of the DLCI numbers for the PVC.

DLCI USAGE

Lists SWITCHED when the router or access server is used as a switch, or LOCAL when the router or access server is used as a DTE device.

ENCAP

Type of encapsulation.

INHERIT

Encapsulation type for the PVC is inherited from the main interface.

PVC STATUS

Status of the PVC: ACTIVE, INACTIVE, or DELETED.

INTERFACE

Specific subinterface associated with this DLCI.

input pkts

Number of packets received on this PVC.

output pkts

Number of packets sent on this PVC.

in bytes

Number of bytes received on this PVC.

out bytes

Number of bytes sent on this PVC.

dropped pkts

Number of incoming and outgoing packets dropped by the router at the Frame Relay level.

in FECN pkts

Number of packets received with the FECN bit set.

in BECN pkts

Number of packets received with the BECN bit set.

out FECN pkts

Number of packets sent with the FECN bit set.

out BECN pkts

Number of packets sent with the BECN bit set.

in DE pkts

Number of DE packets received.

out DE pkts

Number of DE packets sent.

out bcast pkts

Number of output broadcast packets.

out bcast bytes

Number of output broadcast bytes.

pvc create time

Time at which the PVC was created.

last time pvc status changed

Time at which the PVC changed status.

shaping drops

Number of packets dropped by the traffic-shaping process.

Fragment Counters

Displays whether fragment counters are enabled or disabled on the PVC. Fragment counters are disabled by default. Use the fragment-counter command to enable collection of these statistics.

show frame-relay vcm-info interface

To display Virtual Circuit (VC) manager information for a given interface, use the show frame-relay vcm-info interface command in EXEC mode.

show frame-relay vcm-info interface type interface-path-id [vc dlci]

Syntax Description

type

Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

vc

(Optional) Specifies a VC on the interface.

dlci

(Optional) Data-link Connection Identifier number. Range is from 0 to 1023.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

No specific guidelines impact the use of this command.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read

Examples

The following example shows how to display Virtual Circuit (VC) manager information for the multlink interface 0/1/0/0:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show frame-relay vcm-info interface multilink 0/3/0/0/1

VCM IDB:Multilink0_3_0_0_1
==================================
IDB type:               IFT_MAIN
<main specific>
  i/f term type:        L3
  i/f handle:           0x06186240
  BW:                   0x00000c00
  OIR insert:           F
VC chkpt oid:           0x00000000
proto info:             500323c8 [ptr]
proto fn table:         500323d4 [ptr]
i/f type:               0x00000037 [IFT_MULTILINK]
i/f state:              0x00000003 [up]
i/f basecaps num:       0x0000004c [fr]
i/f basecaps state:     0x00000003 [up]
VCM states:             5002c708 [ptr]
in db:                  T
chkpt:                  F
datapath info           0 [0 bytes]
partner info            50016d98 [16 bytes]
  encaps type:          IETF
  intf type:            DTE
non chkptd info         0 [0 bytes]
  

show interfaces (frame relay)

To display statistics about Frame Relay interfaces, use the show interfaces command in EXEC mode.

show interfaces [summary | [type interface-path-id] [brief | description | detail | accounting [rates]]] [location node-id]

Syntax Description

summary

(Optional) Displays a summary of interface information by interface type.

type

(Optional) Interface type. For more information, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

interface-path-id

(Optional) Physical interface or virtual interface.

Note

 

Use the show interfaces command to see a list of all interfaces currently configured on the router.

For more information about the syntax for the router, use the question mark (? ) online help function.

brief

(Optional) Displays brief information about each interface (one line per interface).

description

(Optional) Displays an interface description.

detail

(Optional) Displays detailed information about each interface. This is the default.

accounting

(Optional) Displays the number of packets of each protocol type that have been sent through the interface.

rates

(Optional) Displays interface accounting rates.

location node-id

(Optional) Displays information about all interfaces on the specified node. The node-id argument is entered in the rack/slot/module notation.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

EXEC mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced

Usage Guidelines

The show interfaces (Frame Relay) command is available on Packet-over-SONET/SDH (POS), serial, and multilink interfaces.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows the output from the show interfaces command when the interface is configured with Frame Relay encapsulation:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show interfaces pos 0/1/0/0

POS0/1/0/0 is up, line protocol is up 
  Hardware is Packet over SONET/SDH
  Internet address is Unknown
  MTU 4474 bytes, BW 622080 Kbit
     reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
  Encapsulation FRAME-RELAY, crc 32, controller loopback not set,
  LMI enq sent  0, LMI stat recvd 0, LMI upd recvd 0
  LMI enq recvd 9463, LMI stat sent  9463, LMI upd sent  0, DCE LMI up
  LMI DLCI 0  LMI type is ANSI Annex D  frame relay DCE 
  Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
  5 minute input rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
  5 minute output rate 0 bits/sec, 0 packets/sec
     20934 packets input, 1508069 bytes, 1151 total input drops
     0 drops for unrecognized upper-level protocol
     Received 0 broadcast packets, 0 multicast packets
              0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles, 0 parity
     1151 input errors, 1058 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 93 ignored, 0 abort
     19590 packets output, 990924 bytes, 0 total output drops
     Output 0 broadcast packets, 0 multicast packets
     0 output errors, 0 underruns, 0 applique, 0 resets
     0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
   
Table 4. show interfaces Field Descriptions

Field

Description

Interface name

Displays the name of the current interface. In the example, the interface name is POS0/1/0/0.

Interface state

Displays the state of the interface. In the example, the interface is in the administratively up state.

Line protocol state

Displays the state of the Layer 2 line protocol. This field may be different from the interface state if, for example, a keepalive failure has brought down the Layer 2.

Note

 

The line protocol state is not the same as the protocol state displayed in the show ip interfaces command, because it is the state of Layer 2 (media) rather than Layer 3 (IP protocol).

Hardware

Displays the current hardware type.

Internet address is n.n.n.n/n

Displays the Layer 2 address (MAC address for Ethernet interfaces).

Note

 

Enter the mac-address command to configure the hardware address.

MTU

Displays the maximum transmission unit (MTU) for the interface. The MTU is the maximum packet size that can be transmitted over the interface.

Note

 

The MTU field indicates the interface MTU. Enter the mtu command to configure a lower MTU value at the layer 3 level.

BW

Displays the bandwidth of the interface in kbps.

reliability

Displays the proportion of packets that are not dropped and do not have errors.

Note

 

The reliability is shown as a fraction of 255.

txload

Indicates the traffic flowing out of the interface as a proportion of the bandwidth.

Note

 

The txload is shown as a fraction of 255.

rxload

Indicates the traffic flowing into the interface as a proportion of the bandwidth.

Note

 

The rxload is shown as a fraction of 255.

Encapsulation

Layer 2 encapsulation installed on the interface.

CRC

Indicates the length of the cyclic redundancy check (CRC), in bytes.

Note

 

Enter the pos crc command to configure the CRC.

controller loopback

Indicates that the hardware was configured as controller loopback.

LMI enq sent

Number of LMI enquiry messages sent.

LMI stat recvd

Number of LMI status messages received.

LMI upd recvd

Number of LMI updated messages received.

LMI enq recvd

Number of LMI enquiry messages received.

LMI stat sent

Number of LMI status messages sent.

LMI upd sent

Number of LMI updated messages sent.

DCE LMI

Displays the state of the DCE LMI.

LMI DLCI

Displays the LMI DLCI identifier.

LMI type

Displays the LMI type.

Last clearing

Time at which the counters that measure cumulative statistics (such as number of bytes transmitted and received) shown in this report were last reset to zero. Note that variables that might affect routing for example, load and reliability) are not cleared when the counters are cleared.

5 minute input rate5 minute output rate

Average number of bits and packets transmitted per second in the last 5 minutes.

The 5-minute input and output rates should be used only as an approximation of traffic per second during a given 5-minute period. These rates are exponentially weighted averages with a time constant of 5 minutes. A period of four time constants must pass before the average is within two percent of the instantaneous rate of a uniform stream of traffic over that period.

packets input

Total number of error-free packets received by the system.

bytes

Total number of bytes, including data and MAC encapsulation, in the error-free packets received by the system.

Received...broadcasts

Total number of broadcast or multicast packets received by the interface

runts

Number of packets that are discarded because they are smaller than the minimum packet size of the medium.

giants

Number of packets that are discarded because they exceed the maximum packet size of the medium

input errors

Total number of no buffer, runts, giants, CRCs, frame, overrun, ignored, and terminated counts. Other input-related errors can also increment the count, so that this sum might not balance with the other counts.

CRC

Cyclic redundancy checksum generated by the originating station or far-end device does not match the checksum calculated from the data received. On a serial link, CRCs usually indicate noise, gain hits, or other transmission problems on the data link.

frame

Number of packets received incorrectly having a CRC error and a noninteger number of octets. On a serial line, this is usually the result of noise or other transmission problems.

overrun

Number of times the serial receiver hardware was unable to hand received data to a hardware buffer because the input rate exceeded the receiver's ability to handle the data.

ignored

Number of received packets ignored by the interface because the interface hardware ran low on internal buffers. Broadcast storms and bursts of noise can cause the ignored count to be increased.

abort

Illegal sequence of one bits on a serial interface. This usually indicates a clocking problem between the serial interface and the data link equipment.

carrier transitions

Number of times the carrier detect signal of a serial interface has changed state. For example, if data carrier detect (DCD) goes down and comes up, the carrier transition counter will increment two times. Indicates modem or line problems if the carrier detect line is changing state often.

snmp-server traps frame-relay pvc

To enable Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) trap notifications for a Frame Relay permanent virtual circuit (PVC), use the snmp-server traps frame-relay pvc command in Global Configuration mode. To disable SNMP notifications for a FR PVC, use the no form of this command.

snmp-server traps frame-relay pvc [interval seconds]

Syntax Description

interval seconds

(Optional) Minimum period between successive traps. The range is from 1 to 3600.

Command Default

seconds : 30

Command Modes

Global Configuration mode

Command History

Release

Modification

Release 4.0.0

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

Use the snmp-server traps frame-relay pvc command to enable trap requests for a Frame Relay PVC. This command is used with the snmp-server host command. Use the snmp-server host command to specify which host or hosts receive SNMP notifications.

See Implementing SNMP on Cisco IOS XR Software in System Management Configuration Guide for Cisco ASR 9000 Series Routers for detailed information about SNMP configuration tasks and commands.

Task ID

Task ID

Operations

snmp

read, write

fr

read, write

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the router to send SNMP trap notifications for a Frame Relay PVC:


RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# snmp-server host 12.26.25.61 traps public udp-port 5000 
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# snmp-server community public RW
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(config)# snmp-server traps frame-relay pvc interval 50